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Michael Pipkins focuses on public integrity, governance, constitutional issues, and political developments affecting Texans. His investigative reporting covers public-record disputes, city-government controversies, campaign finance matters, and the use of public authority. Pipkins is a member of the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ). As an SPJ member, Pipkins adheres to established principles of ethical reporting, including accuracy, fairness, source protection, and independent journalism.

Council

Ethics Probe Into Former Fate Council Members Moves Forward

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Darcy Wack a Mole

Fate, TX – The political aftershocks from Fate’s bruising recall election are still rattling City Hall, even after two council members were shown the door. A formal ethics complaint was filed on the very last day former council members Codi Chinn and Mark Harper held office, and has escalated into an official city investigation.

During the May 18, 2026 executive session, the Fate City Council met behind closed doors to discuss two ethics complaints filed by Darcy Gildon, the Rockwall County Precinct 4 Chair and a known participant in the recall effort against Chinn. According to the posted agenda, the complaints involved Chinn and Harper, and were discussed in Executive Session with legal counsel.

After returning to open session, council members voted on two matters tied to the complaints. First, the council voted to establish jurisdiction over both ethics complaints, effectively allowing the process to move forward. Second, the council approved an extension of the original June 1 deadline for an initial determination, directing that a final report be received by July 6, 2026. The outside law firm Messer & Fort was identified as the investigating party.

On May 14, four days before the executive session, Chinn publicly posted portions of the complaint against her on Facebook. In the post, she wrote:

“I was transparent while in office and I don’t plan to change anything now that I’m not in office any longer.”

The complaint itself alleges Chinn violated the Fate City Charter and Code of Ethics by directly engaging with city employees, directing them to document complaints, organizing those complaints, and preparing to present them to council outside the authority of the city manager or a formal council vote. This is presumably all in association with the complaints and dismissal of DPS Chief Lyle Lombard.

[Codi Chinn Post on Facebook]

According to the complaint posted by Chinn, she allegedly instructed employees to “write it all down, put it on a timeline,” later describing [her] plans to organize statements in a chronological way. Stating, “I’m going to have organized everything… put it together like in a chronological way… what everybody has said… kind of like mixed together, not just one person’s statement.” She went on to say, “I don’t want to just show y’all what the statements are… I need to have it presented in a way that protects their identity.” Shortly thereafter, an “anonymous” letter was sent to Chinn, she claims, that made accusations against Lombard.

The ethics complaint argues that those actions may have crossed the line from legislative oversight into unauthorized administrative or investigatory conduct.

The complaint cites Charter Section 3.09(5), which states council members shall interact with city staff solely through the city manager and shall not give orders to employees privately or publicly. It also references Charter Section 3.05(11), concerning council authority to investigate official conduct only after a formal council vote, and Code of Ethics Section 2-309(10), which bars officials from appearing to exercise administrative authority.

Chinn’s public release of the complaint has created another layer of controversy.

Although she had technically already been removed from office at the time of her Facebook post, there remains a serious legal and ethical question over whether confidential executive session-related materials or discussions remain protected after a member leaves office. Texas law generally imposes confidentiality obligations regarding certain executive session matters, but the boundaries become less clear when an official is no longer serving.

The city has not publicly accused Chinn of violating confidentiality laws, nor has any formal allegation regarding disclosure been announced.

The complaint against former Councilman Mark Harper was also discussed in executive session Monday night, though details surrounding that filing have not yet been publicly released in full. However, sources familiar with the matter say the complaint against him may also relate to his involvement in the dismissal of Lombard. Harper was accused by City Manager Michael Kovacs, of threatening to fire him, if he didn’t fire the Chief.

Former Councilman Mark Harper could not be reached for comment prior to publication. Darcy Gildon also could not be reached for comment.

The investigation now moves into the hands of Messer & Fort, an outside legal firm retained to conduct the review. The firm is expected to provide findings to the city council by July 6.

For many residents, the dispute has become less about technical charter language and more about the increasingly bitter political divide that has overtaken local government in Fate. Supporters of the recall effort argue ethics enforcement is necessary to restore trust and proper governance. They seek to remind citizens that the root of all this controversy lies with Chinn, and her actions regarding the dismissal of Chief Lombard. Critics, meanwhile, view the complaints as the latest phase in a long-running political purge aimed at silencing dissenting voices.

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Election

MAGA Base Gets Its Champion as Trump Endorses Ken Paxton

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Trump Knights Paxton

Texas — When Donald Trump finally weighed in on the Texas Republican Senate runoff, the political class expected the usual outcome. They assumed Trump would follow the whispers of Washington consultants, donor networks, and the familiar chorus of establishment Republicans who have spent years defending John Cornyn.

Instead, Trump did something that stunned the insiders. He listened to the base.

In a move that has electrified grassroots conservatives across the Lone Star State, Trump endorsed Ken Paxton in the Republican Senate runoff, sending a clear signal that the America First movement in Texas will not be dictated by the same political machinery that has dominated the GOP for decades.

In a post on Truth Social this afternoon, President Trump posted, “…Therefore, Ken Paxton has my Complete and Total Endorsement to be the next United States Senator from the Great State of Texas – KEN PAXTON WILL NEVER LET YOU DOWN!

For many Texans, the endorsement felt less like a routine political decision and more like a long awaited course correction.

Because the first round of the primary already exposed something the establishment tried desperately to ignore. Despite spending roughly sixteen times more money than Paxton, Cornyn barely managed to limp into the runoff with a narrow lead. Federal Election Commission filings showed Cornyn’s campaign spending roughly $78 per vote, compared to Paxton’s lean $5 per vote.

Those numbers revealed the reality behind the race. Cornyn’s support was built on money and institutional backing, while Paxton’s momentum came from something far harder to manufacture, genuine enthusiasm among Republican voters.

For weeks, political insiders predicted Trump would side with the establishment. The pressure campaign was intense. Longtime Republican figures including Tom DeLay, Bill Flores, Pete Olson, Rick Perry, Mac Thornberry, and Lamar Smith all lined up behind Cornyn.

In Washington circles, the assumption was simple. Trump would eventually fall in line with the familiar power structure that has dominated Texas Republican politics for years.

Instead, he did the opposite.

By endorsing Paxton, Trump effectively sided with the voters rather than the gatekeepers who have long attempted to manage the party from the top down. For grassroots conservatives, the decision carried enormous symbolic weight.

Paxton has spent much of the past decade building a reputation as one of the most aggressive legal challengers to federal overreach in the country. As Texas attorney general, he repeatedly filed lawsuits against federal policies involving immigration enforcement, regulatory authority, and executive power.

Those confrontations made Paxton a hero among many conservative voters who view the courts as one of the few arenas where states can resist federal expansion.

Cornyn’s long Senate career has been defined by the kind of dealmaking that Washington celebrates but grassroots conservatives increasingly distrust. Critics often point to his central role negotiating federal gun legislation following the Robb Elementary School shooting, legislation that included incentives for states to adopt red flag style firearm restrictions.

Immigration policy has also been a dividing line. Many activists argue Cornyn failed to aggressively support border wall construction during key congressional negotiations, a point that has become politically radioactive in a state dealing with record levels of illegal crossings.

Those policy disputes created a widening gap between Cornyn and the Republican base.

Trump’s endorsement of Paxton suggests the former president recognized that gap and chose to stand with the movement that propelled him into the White House in the first place.

The most remarkable part of Trump’s endorsement may not be who he backed. It is that he refused to follow the predictable path the political establishment expected.

By endorsing Paxton, he effectively told the establishment something it rarely hears in Washington. “Go #### Yourself!” The grassroots movement that reshaped the Republican Party is still very much in charge.

For many Texans, the decision confirmed something they have long believed about Trump. Despite relentless pressure from consultants and insiders, he remains uniquely attuned to the energy of the voters who built the America First movement.

And in Texas, that movement clearly chose its champion.

If the runoff becomes a referendum on whether Republican voters want an establishment senator or a combative defender of the MAGA agenda, Trump’s endorsement leaves little doubt where the momentum lies.

The political class may be surprised. The grassroots are not.

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Election

“MAGA Mayes” vs. “RINO Roy” for Texas Attorney General

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MAGA Mayes vs RINO Roy

OPINION – Texas conservatives have seen this movie before. A polished Republican talks tough on the Constitution, quotes the Founders on cue, rails against Washington corruption, and convinces voters he is one of the good guys. Then the pressure hits. The cameras come on. The media starts demanding blood. And suddenly the “fighter” voters elected folds faster than a lawn chair at a church picnic.

That is the growing fear surrounding Congressman Chip Roy as speculation intensifies over the Texas Attorney General race. For many grassroots conservatives, Roy is not simply another establishment Republican. He represents something more dangerous, a Republican who knows exactly how conservatives think, exactly what they want to hear, and exactly when to abandon them to protect his standing with the political class.

That perception hardened permanently after January 6.

While Democrats, corporate media, and anti Trump Republicans launched a coordinated political assault against President Donald Trump, Roy joined the feeding frenzy at the exact moment conservatives expected Republicans to stand firm. On January 13, 2021, Roy took to the House floor and declared Trump’s conduct was “clearly impeachable.” The comments were widely covered by outlets including CNN and The Texas Tribune.

At the time, Democrats were aggressively pushing impeachment while left wing media outlets painted millions of Trump supporters as domestic extremists. Conservatives across the country watched banks deplatform citizens, federal agencies ramp up investigations, and political dissent become increasingly criminalized. And there was Chip Roy, sounding almost indistinguishable from the Republicans conservatives had spent years fighting against.

Worse still, Roy’s rhetoric placed him in alignment with some of the most despised anti Trump Republicans in modern history, including Liz Cheney and Congressman Thomas Massie. Cheney ultimately became the public face of the January 6 Committee, a committee many conservatives viewed as less interested in truth than in politically destroying Trump and intimidating his supporters. Roy may not have joined that committee, but to many voters, he helped legitimize the narrative driving it.

This matters because the Attorney General’s office is not ceremonial. The Texas AG is often the final line of defense against federal overreach, politically motivated prosecutions, censorship efforts, and constitutional violations. Every time a city government wants to object to an open records request by a citizen, they need the permission of the AG. Conservatives are not looking for another Republican who caves once the editorial boards and Sunday shows begin screeching. They want someone willing to absorb political punishment without turning on the movement that elected him.

That is why Texas State Senator Mays Middleton is gaining traction among MAGA conservatives. Known by supporters as “MAGA Mayes,” Middleton has cultivated a reputation as an unapologetic America First conservative. He backed election integrity legislation, border enforcement measures, anti-ESG policies, and efforts to stop taxpayer funded lobbying by local governments. More importantly, he has not spent the past several years publicly distancing himself from the voters who dominate today’s Republican base.

To many conservatives, the contrast is glaring. Middleton looks like a man preparing for political combat. Roy increasingly looks like a man carefully managing his reputation with DC insiders while hoping Texas voters forget what happened in 2021.

And conservatives should ask themselves an uncomfortable question. If Roy was willing to publicly break with Trump during the biggest coordinated political attack against conservatives in modern history, what happens when the next crisis arrives? What happens when federal agencies pressure Texas? What happens when media outlets begin demanding prosecutions, investigations, or compromise? Does Roy suddenly rediscover his “constitutional concerns” while conservatives once again get thrown under the bus?

Roy’s defenders will point to his conservative voting record, and that’s fair. He has opposed Biden administration policies and marketed himself as a constitutional hardliner. But conservative voters are increasingly learning that voting scorecards mean very little when pressure reveals someone’s instincts.

And Roy’s instincts, at the defining moment, were not to protect the movement. They were to condemn it alongside people who openly despised it.

Texas conservatives have spent years warning about Republicans who campaign like MAGA warriors back home while quietly serving the priorities of the donor class and establishment once inside Washington. Many now fear Chip Roy fits that mold perfectly, polished, articulate, deeply ambitious, and ultimately unreliable when the stakes become uncomfortable.

The time has come to end the political careers of all who oppose the People, those who oppose the MAGA agenda.

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