Texas
Governor Perry calls indictment politically motivated
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[August 18, 2014]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN Texas (Reuters) - Texas Governor
Rick Perry, a possible Republican presidential candidate in 2016, said
on Saturday an indictment against him for abuse of power was a political
move that he intends to fight.
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Perry was indicted on Friday by a grand jury in Travis County, a
Democratic stronghold in the heavily Republican state, on two counts
of abuse of power and coercion over a funding veto he made last year
that was seen as being intended to force a local prosecutor to
resign.
"This indictment amounts to nothing more than an abuse of power and
I cannot and I will not allow that to happen," Perry told reporters
in Austin, Texas. He added he stood by the veto that led to charges
being laid against him.
A probe was launched last year after Perry vetoed $7.5 million in
funding for an integrity unit that is part of the Travis County
district attorney's office.
The veto was seen as hardball politics to force out county District
Attorney Rosemary Lehmberg, a Democrat, after she pleaded guilty to
drunken driving and remained in office.
If convicted of the first-degree felony, Perry could be sentenced to
between five and 99 years in jail while a conviction on the other
charge can bring between two and 10 years in jail, a prosecutor
said.
Perry is expected to survive the court battle but the trial could
drag on for months, casting a shadow over his campaign and scaring
away major donations, said Mark Jones, a political science professor
at Rice University in Houston.
In the short run, Perry could use the legal battle to win support
during Republican primaries by portraying himself as a staunch
conservative being targeted in a politically motivated prosecution
launched by Democrats, Jones said.
"This comes as Perry was gaining traction due to the immigration
issue that saw him rise from an also-ran to a third-tier candidate
in the Republican presidential race," Jones said.
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Republicans have long charged that they have been targeted by the
Public Integrity Unit, run out of the Travis County prosecutor's
office. The unit has investigated prominent Republicans including
former U.S. House of Representatives Majority Leader Tom DeLay.
After flaming out in the 2012 presidential race, Perry had been
mounting a political comeback that gained him national attention for
attacking President Barack Obama by saying he had not done enough to
secure the border with Mexico.
Perry, the longest-serving governor in the state's history and the
first indicted in the state in about a century, was forced to exit
the 2012 presidential race after gaffes including when he lost his
train of thought during a debate and could not recall which
government departments he wanted to abolish.
He is not seeking re-election as governor and will step down next
year.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Additional reporting by Jonathan Allen
in New York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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