From KERA News:
U.S. Rep. Chip Roy and state Sen. Mayes Middleton are headed for a primary runoff election in May for the GOP attorney general nomination.
The Associated Press called the race for the two top Republican vote-getters Tuesday evening. Neither reached the 50% threshold to avoid a runoff in a field that included state Sen. Joan Huffman and former Ken Paxton aide Aaron Reitz, both of whom trailed the frontrunners.
Meanwhile, early results for the Democratic primary show state Sen. Nathan Johnson from Dallas in the lead, but still short of what’s needed to avoid a runoff.
However, the results of that race remained too close to call late Tuesday night because of problems at the polls in Dallas, where a judge ordered polling sites to remain open an extra two hours — an order that was later put on hold by the Texas Supreme Court.
Johnson had about 49% of the vote as of Tuesday evening. Former Galveston Mayor Joe Jaworski and Dallas attorney Tony Box both hovered around 25%.
Ken Paxton, the current Attorney General, reshaped the mostly non-political office into a platform for conservative values known for frequent litigation and investigations. Paxton is headed to a runoff election in the GOP U.S. Senate primary against incumbent John Cornyn.
A new direction?
The next Attorney General will have the opportunity to maintain the status quo Paxton has set or chart a new course.
Both Middleton and Roy have campaigned on their conservative records and connections to President Donald Trump. Middleton is the author of bills including Senate Bill 8, which requires people in public schools, universities, government buildings, prisons and jails to use restrooms and locker rooms that match the sex listed on their birth certificate, not their gender identity. Protesters at the state Capitol called him “the bathroom bigot,” Middleton told KERA in a previous interview.
The Attorney General sets the tone for Texas politics, the state senator said.
“The AG is not just some lawyer, they’re not just an appellate attorney,” Middleton said. “You’re setting the conservative agenda for this entire state.”
That includes hardline stances on immigration and “Sharia law.” Muslim groups have asserted that Republicans mischaracterize Sharia law to promote an anti-Muslim bias. Paxton has launched multiple investigations and filed lawsuits targeting the proposed Muslim-oriented housing development in North Texas formerly known as EPIC City. Now called The Meadow, the community has faced multiple state and federal investigations, including a Justice Department probe that was closed in June after the developer said it would emphasize the community’s inclusivity in its marketing materials.
Roy founded “The Sharia Free America Caucus” in Congress alongside Rep. Keith Self, a fellow Texas Republican who represents most of Collin County in North Texas. He said at a Republican Attorneys Association debate ahead of the primary that he would prioritize going after Muslim organizations if elected.
“I will go after the 600-plus organizations that are advancing Sharia, undermining Western civilization, using the full power of the Office of Attorney General,” Roy said.






