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The ending will be the only way to judge whatโ€™s going on in the Texas House right now, after a political operative with a well-supported political action committee made an unsubstantiated claim that the Republican speaker offered House floor access in return for attacking 10 named Republicans in the 2020 primaries.

At the end of this escapade, House Speaker Dennis Bonnen will either have the confidence of the members of the House or not, and the judgment of people outside the Capitol will probably flow from that.

Heโ€™s got time to get there โ€” and is probably already wondering why anyone is taking the accusation seriously. But his House has been restive over still-unanswered questions and because the accusation created some opportunities for political mischief inside and outside the Republican membership of the House.

For the better part of a week, itโ€™s been a bumpy ride.

Last Thursday, Michael Quinn Sullivan recounted a June meeting in which, he said, Bonnen and state Rep. Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, offered up House media credentials for Sullivanโ€™s organization in return for help defeating 10 incumbent Republicans. Sullivan is a conservative/libertarian political activist who heads Empower Texans, sometimes writes for its Texas Scorecard website, and is persistently critical of Bonnen and other Republicans in state government. He has offered no evidence to support his story. Bonnen has strongly denied the allegation, in a letter to Sullivan in June, an email to Republican members last week and a news release this week. Burrows has burrowed, making no public comment. At least one Democrat, Trey Martinez Fischer, wrote to his colleagues asking for financial campaign support for two Democrats mentioned in Sullivanโ€™s letter.

Itโ€™s not their first rodeo, and Bonnenโ€™s reputation isnโ€™t the only one on the line here. When the legislative session ended, Bonnen called on members of the House to stay out of one anotherโ€™s races โ€” even in those involving incumbents from the other party. And he dismissed criticism of the results from Sullivan and others in the political peanut gallery.

โ€œYou will never please or appease those folks, and Iโ€™m sure as hell not going to waste my time trying,โ€ Bonnen said at the time.

โ€œI am incredibly comfortable with my conservative record. But more significantly, they are a group that you are fooling yourself and you are not respecting your constituents, you are not respecting this institution, if you are chasing their wants and their desires because you will never meet their wants and their desires. They are a group that is based on attacks and disrespect to raise money. They are not based on issue ideology.โ€

As you might imagine, the chatter among members has been high for the past week. Burrowsโ€™ silence has raised some eyebrows, especially because Bonnen said he included the chairman of the Republican caucus as a witness to his meeting with Sullivan. One might think the job of a witness is to testify. That hasnโ€™t happened.

Bonnen, in his news release, put part of the blame on the news media โ€” a way of blaming those paying attention to this for giving it their attention. If thatโ€™s the problem, he should have included the members of the House who are giving it their attention. Itโ€™s not everybody, but itโ€™s not nobody, either. At least 10 of them are watching every move.

The speaker has managed to point the attention back to his accuser. Itโ€™s Sullivanโ€™s move.

So far, Sullivan hasnโ€™t followed up with an official complaint, or with any evidence to back his allegations that the speaker offered to trade House media credentials for election help against 10 fellow Republicans. If his was a journalistic endeavor, as he has sometimes claimed, it would publish what itโ€™s got โ€” everything from his original letter to Bonnen (he included Bonnenโ€™s in his first blog post, but not his own letter) to any other evidence that might support his writings.

Whatever the labels, itโ€™s unfolding like a political campaign: attack, parry, attack, etc.

Dripping things out as he has is not untypical for a political campaign, and unless thereโ€™s a criminal charge to support at the bottom of this โ€” Sullivanโ€™s original contention was that he was offered a government favor for political work โ€” then this is all about the politics of the Texas House. The latest catnip he offered was in a second blog post that attempts to lure Burrows into the spotlight to back Bonnenโ€™s story.

It would be interesting to hear from Burrows, but itโ€™s not essential at this point. Sullivan himself has to put up, or shut up โ€” to bring the evidence.

To quote former Texas Speaker Gib Lewisโ€™ challenge to accusers who, at the time, were throwing charges at him without proof: โ€œChirp or get off the perch.โ€

Sullivan thinks Bonnenโ€™s reputation is at stake. Maybe so. But so is Sullivanโ€™s โ€” and that of his organization.

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Ross Ramsey co-founded The Texas Tribune in 2009 and served as its executive editor until his retirement in 2022. He wrote regular columns on politics, government and public policy. Before joining the...