Civil SocietyFederalJudicialTexas Challenges Biden’s ‘WOTUS’ Regulations on Wetlands Amid Pending Supreme Court Case
The legal dispute over the WOTUS has drawn on for two decades and may be resolved this year in a U.S. Supreme Court case.
The legal dispute over the WOTUS has drawn on for two decades and may be resolved this year in a U.S. Supreme Court case.
The lawsuit has dragged on since November 2020 after and was a theme of Paxton's opponents' campaigns.
More than 2,000 ballots cast in Harris County under a court order keeping polls open late on election day must be reported separately from election totals.
In response to recently found body camera footage, Sheriff Waybourn’s office suggested the attorney general is the best to investigate possible crimes.
A federal judge allowed a lawsuit that seeks to exempt Texas-made firearms suppressors from federal registration requirements to move forward.
In its response, the financial company objected to the accusations of oil and gas divestment made by the state attorneys general.
Two of the state's top Republicans exchanged fire just days before the GOP runoff election.
The Texas attorney general has yet to weigh in on whether random numbering of electronic ballots complies with requirements in state law.
The Texas legislature earmarked $3 billion of its American Rescue Plan Act funds for "property tax relief" in 2023.
The court heard arguments in a case in which the Ysleta del Sur Pueblo is seeking the right to regulate its own gambling activities.
“There is no evidence that long-term mental health outcomes are improved or that rates of suicide are reduced by hormonal or surgical intervention.”
Until Paxton seeks a court judgment that the new bill is constitutional, the law can't change the suppressor purchase process.