Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

$
Karl Rove
Karl Rove
stated on March 9, 2010 in his autobiography:

“Kay Bailey Hutchison was elected state treasurer, succeeding Ann Richards. Democrats then abolished the position … Hutchison later became a U.S. senator.”

False
By W. Gardner Selby
March 19, 2010

Karl Rove writes that Democrats abolished state treasurer’s office after she won it and she later became senator

Karl Rove, the Texas-steeped consultant who guided George W. Bush through nearly two terms as governor and two more as president, recently issued a barbed claim about Democrats paying back Kay Bailey Hutchison.

Rove, whose clients before Bush bid for governor included Hutchison, writes in his autobiography, “Courage and Consequence, My Life as a Conservative in The Fight”: “Kay Bailey Hutchison was elected state treasurer, succeeding Ann Richards. Democrats then abolished the position, which made me wonder if political payback is about the only grounds on which Democrats abolish government posts. Hutchison later became a U.S. senator.” The book was released March 9.

Rove correctly reflects on Hutchison winning election as state treasurer in 1990, succeeding Richards, who won election as governor.

However, we’re intrigued by Rove’s statements about what happened next: According to him, Democrats then abolished the treasurer’s position. Later, Hutchison was elected to the U.S. Senate.

Rove told us he stands by his account.

Chronologically speaking, for starters, it’s not so: Hutchison won her Senate seat in June 1993 while still serving as state treasurer, and the treasury remained a stand-alone agency after Hutchison left for Washington. Richards appointed an East Texas Democrat, Martha Whitehead, to serve out Hutchison’s term. Whitehead won election in her own right in 1994.

So when — and how — was the treasurer’s job abolished?

According to legislative records, the Democratic-majority 1995 Legislature proposed a constitutional amendment abolishing the agency and shifting its operations elsewhere.

Contrary to Rove’s take, it wasn’t a move backed solely by Democrats. Senate Joint Resolution 1 was authored by Sen. Rodney Ellis, D-Houston, and sponsored in the House by Reps. Mark Stiles, D-Beaumont, and Bill Siebert, R-San Antonio. The proposed amendment cleared the Senate by 23-7 with five Republicans and two Democrats voting “no” and the House by 107-18 with several Republicans who voted “no” saying afterward they’d intended to vote “yes,” according to Senate and House journals.

Texas voters approved the change by 69 percent to 31 percent in November 1995. And Whitehead–who’d campaigned for election vowing to eliminate the agency—marked her last day in office Aug. 31, 1996 by scraping her name and title off the glass front of the agency’s Austin headquarters. “I am the last treasurer of the State of Texas,” she said.

Another Democrat, State Comptroller John Sharp, had proposed the agency’s abolition in a report issued in 1994, after Hutchison was already in the Senate. His report called the treasury a “bureaucracy with an annual operating budget of more than $11 million whose most important tasks are duplicated elsewhere across state government… Consolidating the bulk of the State Treasury’s responsibilities with those of the Comptroller’s office would cut costs, improve services and maintain accountability. It would also offer Texans the chance to prove that they’re serious about reducing the size of their state government.”

How does Rove’s statement shape up?

As noted, he’s correct that Hutchison succeeded Richards as treasurer. But he’s wrong about the order of subsequent events, and assigns an unsupported motive—that Democrats abolished the agency because a Republican had its top spot. Some Republicans backed the abolition, too, and it was Hutchison’s Democratic successor whose stint in the office came to a sign-scraping close.

We rate Rove’s poor job of retelling history as False.

Our Sources

Associated Press, "150-year-old Treasury scratched into history," published in Austin American-Statesman, Aug. 31, 1996

E-mail, Dana Perino, spokeswoman for Karl Rove, March 17, 2010

Interview, Karl Rove, March 18, 2010

Texas House Journal, Record Vote 471 (SJR 1), May 19, 1995

Texas Senate Journal, March 16, 1995 (votes on SJR 1)

Karl Rove, "Courage and Consequence, My Life as a Conservative in The Fight," 2010, p. 58

State Comptroller of Public Accounts, Texas Performance Review,"Gaining Ground, General Government," accessed March 17, 2010

Texas Secretary of State, "Historical Election Results, 1995 Constitutional Amendment Election," accessd March 17, 2010

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by W. Gardner Selby
Donald Trump
stated on October 22, 2018 a rally for Republican candidates in Houston
Says Beto O’Rourke "voted to shield MS-13 gang members from deportation."
Mostly False
Ted Cruz
stated on September 21, 2018 a debate at Southern Methodist University
Says Beto O’Rourke described police as "modern-day Jim Crow."
Mostly False
Beto O'Rourke
stated on September 21, 2018 a debate at Southern Methodist University
Says he "did not try to leave the scene of the accident" that led to his arrest for driving while intoxicated.
Mostly False
Ted Cruz
stated on August 28, 2018 an online video ad
Says Beto O’Rourke "voted against" Hurricane Harvey "tax relief."
Mostly True
M.J. Hegar
stated on August 21, 2018 an interview on Spectrum Cable's "Capital Tonight"
Says U.S. Rep. John Carter "hasn’t held a town hall in five years."
Mostly True
Beto O'Rourke
stated on July 26, 2018 an ad in the Houston Defender
Says "black Americans have 10 times less wealth than white Americans."
Mostly True

Beto O’Rourke arrested in 1990s for burglary and DWI

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
stated on January 7, 2026 a press briefing

stated on January 14, 2026 a statement

Social Media
stated on February 14, 2026 social media posts



stated on January 20, 2026 an op-ed


Donald Trump
stated on February 3, 2026 remarks in the Oval Office


Social Media
stated on February 8, 2026 social media posts





Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
stated on stated on November 17, 2025 in remarks at George Washington University:

Donald Trump
stated on February 2, 2026 an interview with Dan Bongino