Conservative group Empower Texans sues lawmaker to gain state House media credentials
By Emma Platoff, Texas Tribune
Months after being denied media credentials for the Texas House, the conservative organization Texas Scorecard a product of Empower Texans, a Tea Party-aligned political advocacy group with one of the states best-funded political action committees has filed a First Amendment lawsuit arguing that its rejection from the lower chamber constitutes unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination.
Before the legislative session kicked off in January, two employees of Texas Scorecard, Brandon Waltens and Destin Sensky, applied for media credentials in both chambers of the Legislature. In the Senate, their credentials were granted; in the House, they were denied. The two chambers follow similar rules about who is allowed special journalistic access to the floor, and both prohibit lobbyists. But the chambers political atmospheres are different.
House Administration Chair Charlie Geren, a Fort Worth Republican who has sparred with Empower Texans and its PAC in the past, told the group in a January rejection letter that it was ineligible for media credentials because the organization you are employed by, Texas Scorecard, has a close association with a general-purpose political committee (GPAC) and that the organizations website prominently displays advocacy on policy matters before the legislature. As evidence of the groups affiliation with the PAC, Geren cited the organizations' shared address but by the time Gerens letter was issued, the lawsuit claims, they no longer shared that address.
Empower Texans PAC has backed primary opponents to Geren and has given Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who leads the Texas Senate, more than $850,000 in the last five years.
Read more:
https://www.texastribune.org/2019/04/17/empower-texans-sues-charlie-geren-gain-access-house-media-credential/