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Gov. Greg Abbottโ€™s Thursday morning endorsement of state Rep. Dustin Burrows of Lubbock is a signal that the Republican establishment in Texas is trying to close ranks in advance of the 2020 elections.

Burrows and House Speaker Dennis Bonnen met in June with a Republican activist who has since accused them of offering long-sought media passes to the House floor in return for help defeating 10 Republican House incumbents.

Bonnen has denied that allegation from Michael Quinn Sullivan, who heads a group called Empower Texans, a platform from which he regularly goads the stateโ€™s elected Republicans as insufficiently conservative.

And until he did a 15-minute interview with Chad Hasty on KFYO Radio in Lubbock on Thursday, Burrows had spent the last month in his own personal version of the federal witness protection program, studiously saying nothing publicly about the meeting. Sullivan made his accusations public four weeks ago, revealing a few days later that he had recorded the meeting. Since then, he has played the tape for a select group of legislators, party officials, consultants and activists, but he hasnโ€™t made his recording available to the public.

Burrowsโ€™ emergence into the public eye included an announcement that heโ€™ll seek another term and news of the Abbott endorsement. Asked if he had offered media credentials for writers affiliated with Sullivanโ€™s organization, he said he had not. (Sullivan has written that Bonnen was the one who offered credentials, and Bonnen has denied that.) Burrows talked about the Texas Rangersโ€™ investigation initiated this month by the House General Investigating Committee, said he hadnโ€™t talked to investigators yet, and said their entrance into the situation takes it โ€œout of politicsโ€™ hands.โ€

โ€œI am glad theyโ€™re going to take a look at this, and theyโ€™re going to say what I think I already know at the end, which is there was nothing illegal done in that meeting,โ€ Burrows said.

He also joined a chorus asking for โ€œfull unedited complete immediate release of the tapes,โ€ a group that includes Abbott, Bonnen, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, a number of state legislators and the head of the state GOP.

โ€œThe idea that the people holding them somehow want to protect the Republican Party is honestly kind of laughable, given that, I think, if you look at their history, itโ€™s really been not to help the Republican Party,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd so, I hope theyโ€™ll come out soon.โ€

That would give the GOP a chance to put this fiasco to bed. Itโ€™s clear they think itโ€™s dangerous. Patrick said this week on the Mark Davis radio show in Dallas that Republicans could lose some seats in the elections, if they donโ€™t get this behind them. โ€œWe don’t have to lose many seats to lose the House to the Democrats, and this could play a part in that.โ€

It has already stirred some local Republican groups, and the members of the House who elected Bonnen have split roughly into groups: A few have said the speaker should resign, a larger group has said โ€” often via social media โ€” that he should be forgiven. Most members have kept their traps shut, staying out of the limelight while they see how things play out.

Theyโ€™re trying to hold it all together. Burrows pointed out what he called the โ€œirony of thingsโ€ โ€” that he and Bonnen were trying to mend splits within the GOP in 2020.

โ€œThe reason that, you know, I got invited to go in the meeting, and the reason Mr. Sullivan wanted a meeting, was to discuss the importance of 2020, reflecting on 2018 elections and, you know, Ted Cruz nearly being defeated, that we lost a lot of judges, which I think is going to affect the judiciary, and we lost 12 good members of the Republican House,โ€ Burrows told Hasty.

He said he and Bonnen implored Sullivan not to go after Republican incumbents. โ€œThatโ€™s not what we want you to do. Letโ€™s focus on 2020. We do not need to lose the House ahead of redistricting. But if youโ€™re going to, why are you going after the conservatives that actually agree with you? Why are you going against all Republicans? Why arenโ€™t you going after the ones who disagree with you? You know, if thatโ€™s what youโ€™ve got to do, do that.โ€

The discussion turned to the Houseโ€™s defeat of legislation that would have prevented local governments from using taxpayer money to hire lobbyists to represent them in Austin โ€” a top priority of the state GOP and of the stateโ€™s top officials.

He said he pointed out some people who oppose that legislation and others who might be convinced to change their minds in the future. โ€œAnd it was very off the cuff. From that, thatโ€™s where these names came from.โ€

That doesnโ€™t harmonize well with the party lineโ€š with closing ranks. Burrowsโ€™ list of names, however it came together, still has the Texas House twitching.

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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...