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Official Documents

RPT’s Mission

To promote a conservative philosophy of government:

By promoting conservative principles; and

By providing the infrastructure through which those who share our conservative principles can get involved in the political process, run for and be elected to public office, and govern according to our principles when elected.

What Republicans Believe

A platform is the formal declaration of the principles on which a party stands and makes it appeal to voters. Basically, it is the Party’s statement of beliefs on certain issues. As explained below, the RPT platform is passed at the state convention in June of even-numbered years.

Becoming A Republican

Texas does not have registration by political party. A voter becomes a Republican by voting in the Republican Primary or Republican Primary Run-Off.

Primary Process

Political parties hold a primary election in March of even numbered years.

Currently, only two parties hold primaries – the Republican Party and the Democrat Party.
In Texas, registered voters may vote in either political party’s primary; however, a voter may vote in only one party’s primary in each election cycle.

If a voter votes in one party’s primary, he may not vote in the other party’s run-off election in that same year. Registered voters who do not vote in the primary election may vote in a run-off election of either party that year.

Republican Primary voters elect the Republican candidates who will appear on the general election ballot, their precinct chairmen, and their county chairmen. Thus, primary voters have a greater influence on the final outcome of the general election than those who only vote in the general election.

Those who vote in the Republican primary election (either in person or by mail) can then attend the various Republican Party conventions held that year.

Political Party Conventions

In Texas, parties hold their own conventions in election years. In even-numbered years, Texas Republicans hold precinct conventions, county or senatorial district conventions, a state convention, and in presidential years, a national convention.
The purposes of the conventions are to:

  • Choose delegates and alternates to the next higher convention level, when applicable; and
  • Consider resolutions or statements on policy issues to send to the next higher convention and/or for eventual inclusion in the state or national Party platform.
2026 1st Quarter Meeting
2025 4th Quarter Meeting
2025 October 11 Special Meeting
2025 3rd Quarter Meeting
2025 August 15-16 Special Meeting
2025 August 9 Special Meeting
2025 2nd Quarter Meeting
2025 1st Quarter Meeting
2024 4th Quarter Meeting
2024 3rd Quarter Meeting
2024 1st Quarter Meeting
2023 4th Quarter Meeting
2023 3rd Quarter Meeting
2023 1st Quarter Meeting
2023 2nd Quarter Meeting
2022 4th Quarter Meeting
2022 September 14 Special Meeting
2022 3rd Quarter Meeting
2022 August 16 Special Meeting
2022-2024 Organizational Meeting
2022 Pre-Convention SREC Meeting
2022 April 26 Special Meeting
2022 1st Quarter Meeting
2021 4th Quarter Meeting
2021 3rd Quarter Meeting
2021 2nd Quarter Meeting
2020 4th Quarter Meeting
2020 3rd Quarter Meeting
2020 2nd Quarter Meeting
2020 1st Quarter Meeting
2019 4th Quarter Meeting
2019 3rd Quarter Meeting
2019 2nd Quarter Meeting
2019 1st Quarter Meeting
2018 4th Quarter Meeting
2018 3rd Quarter Meeting
6/16/2018 2018-2020 SREC Organizational Meeting
6/13/2018 Pre-Convention SREC Meeting
2018 2nd Quarter Meeting
2018 1st Quarter Meeting
2017 4th Quarter Meeting
2017 3rd Quarter Meeting
9/22/2017 Special SREC Meeting
2017 2nd Quarter Meeting
2017 1st Quarter Meeting
2016 4th Quarter Meeting
2016 3rd Quarter Meeting
8/6/2016 Special SREC Meeting
Previous Officials Committee minutes are available to SREC members upon request

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Stan Lambert

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Stan Lambert

WHEREAS, Rule No. 44 of the Republican Party of Texas states that “a County or District Executive

Committee may, after no less than seven (7) days’ notice and invitation to the Officeholder to appear

and be provided time to speak before a County or District Executive Committee, by a two-thirds (2/3)

vote of those constituent Executive Committee Precinct Chairs present and voting, but in no case by

less than a majority of constituent Precinct Chairs of the County Executive Committee (CEC) in full,

adopt a resolution censuring a Republican public Officeholder representing all or a portion of that

County or District for three (3) or more actions taken during the Officeholder’s current term in

opposition to the core principles of the Republican Party of Texas defined in the Preamble of the Party

Platform as described in Rule No. 43A or to the Legislative Priorities adopted at the most recent State

Convention as described in Rule No. 34(c)”; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 71 of the Taylor County Republican

Party at the meeting of the Taylor County Republican Party Executive Committee meeting August 28,

2025, passed a “Resolution to Censure Representative Stan Lambert,” which identified, among other

grievances, the following eight actions taken during the Officeholder’s current term (which began on

January 14, 2025) in violation of the Principles or Legislative Priorities of the Republican Party

of Texas:

1. At the May 2024 Republican Party of Texas State Convention, delegates approved Plank

213(a), which calls “for Republican members to vote as a unified body for their selected

Speaker…”; on December 6, 2024, the RPT passed the “Texas House GOP Caucus Resolution”

stating in part that “efforts to elect a Speaker with Democrat votes will be considered…

violations of the Platform and of the Legislative Priorities”; on December 7, 2024, the House

Republican Caucus selected David Cook as its nominee for Speaker of the Texas House; on

January 14, 2025, despite the Party’s plank, the RPT’s resolution, and the Caucus’ vote,

Representative Lambert split from fifty-two Republicans and joined forty-nine Democrats to

elect Dustin Burrows as House Speaker; Burrows gained the position with more Democrat

votes than Republican votes; furthermore, the RPT’s Principle 5 is “Personal accountability and

responsibility”; Representative Lambert is accountable to the voters of HD 71, voters who

helped give Republicans a twenty-six seat majority in the Texas House; uniting with the

minority party to elect the Speaker undermines the mandate given to the Republican majority,

especially following the resounding 2024 victory of President Donald J. Trump (Record Votes 2

and 3); and

2. On May 12, 2025, Representative Lambert voted in favor of HB 2858, a bill establishing a

temporary guest worker program in Texas; even though the legislation failed passage to

13. 4. 5. engrossment, Representative Lambert’s support of the bill is in opposition to Principle 9, “A

free enterprise society unencumbered by government interference and subsidies”; bringing in

guest workers is government interference in the Texas job market, and American workers

should always be the priority; furthermore, voting in favor of HB 2858 is inappropriate during a

legislative session when the Legislative Priority that received the highest number of weighted

votes at the 2024 Republican Party of Texas State Convention was “Border Enforcement”

(Record Vote 2198); and

RPT Legislative Priority #4 states that “the Republican-controlled Texas Legislature shall end

the practice of awarding committee chairmanships to Democrats and require all committees to

be majority Republican”; on January 23, 2025, the House considered HR 4, the House Rules,

which included a provision designating all committee vice chairs to be solely from the minority

party as well as creating minority party subcommittee chairs with sweeping new powers; before

any amendments could be proposed, Representative Jared Patterson moved the Previous

Question on adoption of HR 4, which ended all debate; forty-six Republicans, including

Representative Lambert, seconded the motion, and the motion prevailed; in response to this

vote, RPT issued a resolution stating, “the Republican Party of Texas considers a vote in favor

of Previous Question on HR 4 to be a violation of the Legislative Priority to Ban Democrat

Chairs for the purposes of censure under Republican Party of Texas Rule No. 44,” as it

circumvented the true intent of the priority because a vice chair is still a chair; not only did

Representative Lambert’s action violate Legislative Priority #4, but voting in favor of the

Previous Question also cut off any opportunity for amendments or debate on the new House

Rules; this is a violation of RPT Principle 1, “…we support the strict adherence to the original

language and intent of the Declaration of Independence and Constitutions of the United States

and of Texas” (“All political power is inherent in the people, and all free governments are

founded on their authority,” Texas Constitution Article 1, Section 2); this action deprived the

people of proper representation by denying their Representatives the opportunity to debate the

384 pages of new House Rules, which were released just hours before the vote (Record

Vote 9); and

On April 22 and April 23, 2025, Representative Lambert voted in favor of Democrat authored

HB 805; this legislation would direct the Public Utility Commission (PUC) to study the impacts

of existing interconnections of electric transmission service facilities in the state to such

facilities in Mexico and the potential impacts of establishing new such interconnections; the

study would have to include the impacts and potential impacts on transmission and distribution

networks and retail customers in the state and Mexico; though the Senate never took up the

bill, voting in favor of HB 805 is a violation of Legislative Priority #6, “Secure the Electric

Grid”; instead of providing a basis for Texas not to connect to Mexico’s grid, the study

proposed by this bill could be used as a basis by future legislatures to encourage even more

connection to Mexico’s grid as demand for power increases; for the security of Texas, RPT

supports an independent power grid (Record Votes 343 and 392); and

On April 30 and May 1, 2025, Representative Lambert voted in favor of HB 1359, creating a

state program to assist low-income individuals in paying for rising home energy costs; though

well intentioned, subsidies can disincentivize energy conservation and even lead to increased

energy consumption, placing further strain on the Texas Power grid; support for HB 1359

opposes Legislative Priority #6, “Secure the Electric Grid”; Plank 47 of the 2024 RPT Platform

26. 7. 8. supports a solution to rising energy costs and scarcity of power, namely, greater energy

production through the free market (Record Votes 1079 and 1149); and

On May 8, 2025, the House debated Representative Shaheen’s Amendment #4 to SB 17,

relating to foreign entities purchasing real estate in Texas; the amendment added the wording

“and is not lawfully present and residing in the United States at the time the individual

purchases, acquires, or holds the interest”; several representatives pointed out that this

amendment actually made possible the sale of real property to an individual in the United

States legally under a visa, when, in fact, the individual is actually domiciled in a designated

country that poses a risk to Texas and the United States; and despite their warnings,

Representative Lambert voted to adopt Amendment #4, which stripped SB 17 of the true intent

of Legislative Priority #7, “Texas is Not for Sale” (Record Vote 1848); and

During the House sessions on April 29 and April 30, 2025, Representative Lambert voted in

favor of HB 366, which criminalizes political advertising about “an officeholder, candidate, or

political committee,” that contains altered media without a disclosure by anyone who spends

$100 or more in a reporting period; support for this legislation violates Principle 1, “…we

support the strict adherence to the original language and intent of the Declaration of

Independence and Constitutions of the United States and of Texas,” both of which declare no

law will be enacted restricting the freedom of speech; and HB 366 represents further

encroachment upon the free speech rights of Texas voters (Record Votes 834 and 981); and

Representative Lambert’s vote to pass HR 4 without amendments resulted in Rule 4, Sec. 8A

(Pg. 262) as well as Rule 5, Sec. 19A (Pg. 266), requiring face masks that comply with the

recommendations of the Centers for Disease Control for committee and subcommittee meetings

and House or House Gallery attendance; these rules oppose the Republican Party of Texas’

2024 Platform Preamble declaration: “We strive to preserve the freedom given to us by God”

and Principle 8, “Preserving individual, Texan, and American sovereignty and freedom”;

furthermore, mask mandates not only infringe on personal freedom when implemented for

public health or safety reasons but also create an environment where individuals can utilize

masks for personal concealment with a greater degree of social acceptance; concealment of

one’s identity is not compatible with being in an important public space like the Texas Capitol

(Record Vote 10); and

WHEREAS, the Taylor County Republican Party provided notice to Representative Stan Lambert’s

office and an opportunity to speak prior to the vote taking place; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 71 of the Taylor County Republican

Party Executive Committee passed the resolution of censure of Representative Stan Lambert by both a

two-thirds (2/3) majority of those present and voting and a 50% majority of all constituent Precinct

Chairs, even those not in attendance; and

WHEREAS, the term of office for Representative Stan Lambert expires after the 2026 Primary and

General Elections, and he would be eligible to run for reelection to his House seat in the 2026 election

and also eligible to run for any other partisan office in the 2026 election; and

3WHEREAS, in discussing resolutions of censure passed by a County Executive Committee, Rule No.

44 of the Republican Party of Texas states in part that “such a resolution may include a request to

impose the penalties below to the SREC. The SREC must confirm or deny penalties prior to early

voting of the Republican Primary Election in which the Officeholder is seeking election.

Penalties:

If such a request is included, after not less than fourteen (14) days’ notice and opportunity to

the Officeholder to appear and be provided time to speak before the SREC in response to the

request. The SREC, by a three-fifths (3/5) vote of the full membership, may vote to concur with

the resolution of censure and impose one or more of the following penalties:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any

level that demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with

respect to the named Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided

to the Officeholder’s campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the

Officeholder files an application to run for any public office in the Republican Party

Primary Election following the censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be

authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%) of the Party’s general fund on voter

education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the original censure resolution

verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage.

Penalty 3: Authorize and direct the State Chairman or any County Chairman to refuse

to accept any application for a place on the ballot of a Republican Primary Election for

a period of twenty-four (24) months following adoption of the censure and imposition of

said remedy”; and

WHEREAS, in its resolution of censure, the Taylor County Republican Party requested that the SREC

concur with the resolution of censure and that the SREC impose “all applicable penalties set forth in

Rule No. 44 of the Republican Party of Texas, including but not limited to, refusing to accept any

application from him for a place on the ballot of the Republican Primary Election for the period of

twenty-four (24) months following adoption of the censure”; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee concurs with the

violations of Republican Party of Texas Principles and Legislative Priorities stated in the resolution of

censure passed by the constituent Precinct Chairs of Texas House District 71 of the Taylor County

Republican Party and identified in this resolution; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas imposes Penalty 1 and Penalty 2

identified in Rule No. 44 on Representative Stan Lambert as follows:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any level that

demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with respect to the named

Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided to the Officeholder’s

campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the Officeholder files an

4application to run for any public office in the Republican Party Primary Election following the

censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%)

of the Party’s general fund on voter education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the

original censure resolution verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that nothing in this Resolution shall be construed to prohibit the use of

Party resources to encourage voting for Republican Party nominees or officeholders collectively, so

long as Representative Stan Lambert is not identified by name.

Passed by the State Republican Executive Committee, October 11, 2025

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Jared Patterson

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Jared Patterson

WHEREAS, Rule No. 44 of the Republican Party of Texas states that “a County or District Executive

Committee may, after no less than seven (7) days’ notice and invitation to the Officeholder to appear

and be provided time to speak before a County or District Executive Committee, by a two-thirds (2/3)

vote of those constituent Executive Committee Precinct Chairs present and voting, but in no case by

less than a majority of constituent Precinct Chairs of the County Executive Committee (CEC) in full,

adopt a resolution censuring a Republican public Officeholder representing all or a portion of that

County or District for three (3) or more actions taken during the Officeholder’s current term in

opposition to the core principles of the Republican Party of Texas defined in the Preamble of the Party

Platform as described in Rule No. 43A or to the Legislative Priorities adopted at the most recent State

Convention as described in Rule No. 34(c)”; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 106 of the Denton County Republican

Party, at the meeting of the Denton County Republican Party Executive Committee meeting on

September 4, 2025, passed a “Resolution of Censure State Representative Jared Patterson (HD 106),”

which identified, among other grievances, the following nine actions taken during the Officeholder’s

current term (which began on January 14, 2025) in violation of the Principles or Legislative Priorities

of the Republican Party of Texas:

1. On January 14, 2025, Representative Jared Patterson did not vote for the Republican Caucus

nominee David Cook for Speaker of the House, but instead voted for Representative Dustin

Burrows, a willful disregard for RPT Principal 5 “Personal Accountability and Responsibility”

and a clear violation of the 2024 RPT Platform wherein Republican members were to vote as a

“unified body” for the Caucus selected Speaker (Record Votes 2 and 3); and

2. On January 23, 2025, Representative Jared Patterson voted to pass HR 4 without amendments

(Record Vote 10), which resulted in introducing Rule 16, Special Rule, Sec. 7 Rule 4, Sec. 8A,

on Page 262 of the House Rules, as well as Rule 16, Special Rule, Sec. 13 Rule 5, Sec. 19A, on

Page 266, which require face masks that comply with the recommendations of the Centers of

Disease Control for committee and subcommittee meetings, and for House or House Gallery

attendance, which are actions in opposition to Legislative Priority #8 “End Federal Overreach,”

which demands that Texans not be faced with any medical mandate; and

3. On January 23, 2025, Representative Jared Patterson moved the Previous Question on adoption

of HR 4 (Record Vote 9), introducing standing subcommittees that could be chaired and indeed

came to be chaired by the minority party, and thereby ending the debate at that time, a decision

14. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. that made impossible to amend HR 4 to remove the rule and making this vote an action in

opposition to Legislative Priority #4, “No Democrat Committee Chairs”; and

On April 30, 2025, Representative Jared Patterson voted in favor of HB 366 (Record Vote 982),

“relating to required disclosures on certain political advertising that contains altered media;

creating a criminal offense,” a vote in violation of RPT Principle 1, “…we support the strict

adherence to the original language and intent of the Declaration of Independence and

Constitutions of the United States and of Texas”; RPT Principle 3, “Preserving individual,

Texan and American Sovereignty and freedom”; and RPT Principle 4, “Limiting government

power to those items enumerated in the United States and Texas Constitutions” by chilling free

speech protected by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution; and

On May 5, 2025, Representative Jared Patterson voted in favor of HB 104 (Record Vote 1392),

relating to the creation of the Texas Future Fund and the Texas Future Fund Investment Review

Board and to the permissible uses of money in the Texas Future Fund. This creation would

significantly increase state spending and also grow government with another committee, an

action in opposition to RPT Principle 4, “Limiting government power to those items

enumerated in the United States and Texas Constitutions,” and RPT Principle 9, “A free

enterprise society unencumbered by government interference or subsidies”; and

On May 8, 2025, Representative Jared Patterson voted in favor of amendment #4 (Record Vote

1848) on SB 17, which weakened the bill by allowing Chinese nationals and other hostile

foreign actors to enter the United States on tourist visas and buy Texas land, rendering SB 17

ineffective and thereby making a vote for this amendment an action in opposition to Legislative

Priority #7,“Texas Is Not For Sale”, and to RPT Principle 3, “Preserving individual, Texan, and

American sovereignty and freedoms”; and

On May 26, 2025, Representative Jared Patterson voted in favor of SB 22, “relating to the

Texas moving image industry incentive program and the establishment and funding of the

Texas moving image industry incentive fund” (Record Vote 3545), RPT Platform Principle 5,

“Personal Accountability and Responsibility,” and RPT Platform Principle 9, “A free enterprise

society unencumbered by government interference or subsidies”; the vote is in conflict with the

2024 RPT Platform opposing industry-specific subsidies and favoring free markets; corporate

welfare contradicts limited government; and

On April 10, 2025 (Record Vote 154), April 15, 2025 (Record Vote 174), and May 31, 2025

(Record Vote 4101), Representative Jared Patterson voted in favor of SB 1, the Texas State

Budget, which increased the budget by 43%, significantly increasing state spending and

expanding government operations, votes in opposition to RPT Principle 4, “Limiting

government power to those items enumerated in the United States and Texas Constitutions,”

and RPT Principle 9, “A free enterprise society unencumbered by government interference or

subsidies”; and

On May 28, 2025, Representative Jared Patterson voted in favor of amendment #1, (Record

Vote 3938) to delay election integrity on SB 2753, weakening the bill and moving

implementation to 2027 in opposition to Legislative Priority #2, “Secure Texas Elections”; and

2WHEREAS, the Denton County Republican Party provided notice to Representative Jared Patterson’s

office and an opportunity to speak prior to the vote taking place; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 106 of the Denton County Republican

Party Executive Committee passed the resolution of censure of Representative Jared Patterson by both

a two-thirds (2/3) majority of those present and voting and a 50% majority of all constituent Precinct

Chairs, even those not in attendance; and

WHEREAS, the term of office for Representative Jared Patterson expires after the 2026 Primary and

General Elections, and he would be eligible to run for reelection to his House seat in the 2026 election

and also eligible to run for any other partisan office in the 2026 election; and

WHEREAS, in discussing resolutions of censure passed by a County Executive Committee, Rule No.

44 of the Republican Party of Texas states in part that “such a resolution may include a request to

impose the penalties below to the SREC. The SREC must confirm or deny penalties prior to early

voting of the Republican Primary Election in which the Officeholder is seeking election.

Penalties:

If such a request is included, after not less than fourteen (14) days’ notice and opportunity to

the Officeholder to appear and be provided time to speak before the SREC in response to the

request. The SREC, by a three-fifths (3/5) vote of the full membership, may vote to concur with

the resolution of censure and impose one or more of the following penalties:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any

level that demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with

respect to the named Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided

to the Officeholder’s campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the

Officeholder files an application to run for any public office in the Republican Party

Primary Election following the censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be

authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%) of the Party’s general fund on voter

education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the original censure resolution

verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage.

Penalty 3: Authorize and direct the State Chairman or any County Chairman to refuse

to accept any application for a place on the ballot of a Republican Primary Election for

a period of twenty-four (24) months following adoption of the censure and imposition of

said remedy”; and

WHEREAS, in its resolution of censure, the Denton County Republican Party requested that the SREC

concur with the resolution of censure and that the SREC impose “all applicable penalties set forth in

Republican Party of Texas Rule No. 44, including but not limited to Penalty 3, refusal to accept any

application for a place on the ballot of a Republican Primary Election for a period of twenty-four (24)

months following adoption of the censure”; now

3THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee concurs with the

violations of Republican Party of Texas Principles and Legislative Priorities stated in the resolution of

censure passed by the constituent Precinct Chairs of Texas House District 106 of the Denton County

Republican Party and identified in this resolution; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas imposes Penalty 1 and Penalty 2

identified in Rule No. 44 on Representative Jared Patterson as follows:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any level that

demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with respect to the named

Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided to the Officeholder’s

campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the Officeholder files an

application to run for any public office in the Republican Party Primary Election following the

censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%)

of the Party’s general fund on voter education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the

original censure resolution verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that nothing in this Resolution shall be construed to prohibit the use of

Party resources to encourage voting for Republican Party nominees or officeholders collectively, so

long as Representative Jared Patterson is not identified by name.

Passed by the State Republican Executive Committee, October 11, 2025

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Angelia Orr

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Angelia Orr

WHEREAS, Rule No. 44 of the Republican Party of Texas states that “a County or District Executive

Committee may, after no less than seven (7) days’ notice and invitation to the Officeholder to appear

and be provided time to speak before a County or District Executive Committee, by a two-thirds (2/3)

vote of those constituent Executive Committee Precinct Chairs present and voting, but in no case by

less than a majority of constituent Precinct Chairs of the County Executive Committee (CEC) in full,

adopt a resolution censuring a Republican public Officeholder representing all or a portion of that

County or District for three (3) or more actions taken during the Officeholder’s current term in

opposition to the core principles of the Republican Party of Texas defined in the Preamble of the Party

Platform as described in Rule No. 43A or to the Legislative Priorities adopted at the most recent State

Convention as described in Rule No. 34(c)”; and

WHEREAS, the Republican Party of Bosque County, within Texas House District 13, passed a

resolution to censure State Representative Angelia Orr under the provisions of Rule No. 44 and

requested the concurrence of the SREC; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 13 of the Leon County Republican Party,

at the meeting of the Leon County Republican Party Executive Committee on August 21, 2025, passed

a “Resolution to Censure Angelia Orr HD 13 Representative to the Texas House,” which identified,

among other grievances, the following six actions taken during the Officeholder’s current term (which

began on January 14, 2025) in violation of the Principles or Legislative Priorities of the Republican

Party of Texas:

1. On January 14, 2025, Representative Orr did not vote for the elected Republican Caucus

nominee David Cook for Speaker of the House as specified by then caucus rules; but instead

voted for Representative Dustin Burrows (Record Vote 2, Record Vote 3), knowing Dustin

Burrows had already negotiated the vote of the Democrats and committed to appointing

Democrats as committee chairs, in violation of Republican Party Legislative Priority No. 4 “No

Democrat Chairs”; and

2. On January 23, 2025:

(a) First Representative Orr seconded the motion of “Previous Question” and then

voted for “Previous Question,” the so-called “nuclear option,” wherein debate

was cut off and excluded Republican perfecting amendments to the proposed

House Rules (HR 4), which run 384 pages (Record Vote 9). The proposal was

13. 4. 5. 6. provided to the House Representatives at 4:30 a.m., only hours before most

Representatives would arrive at the Capitol and begin finding the email, and

(b) Voted in favor of the same HR 4 (Record Vote 10), House Rules of Procedure

that created subcommittees that were in previous sessions parts of other

standing committees and that also enabled Speaker Dustin Burrows to appoint

Democrats as vice chairs to all committees in violation of Republican Party of

Texas Principle 1 “…we support the strict adherence to the original language and

intent of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitutions of the United

States and of Texas” in that it denied representation to the constituents of HD 13

through a healthy debate and amendment process as called for by both the United

States and Texas Constitutions, and in violation of RPT Legislative Priority No. 4

“No Democrat Chairs”; and

Representative Orr cast her vote in favor of SB 22 (Record Vote 3545) to implement and fund a

movie industry incentive fund which provides $250 million annually and $2.5 Billion over 10

years in subsidies to the movie industry – managed by the Governor’s Office, with zero

legislative appropriation needed to spend it. The legislation also allocates money for these

subsidies instead of eliminating property tax, as previously promised to the people of Texas.

This action violates RPT Principle 9 “A free enterprise society unencumbered by government

interference or subsidies”; and

Representative Orr voted in favor of floor amendment #1 to SB 12, which would have

preserved DEI-related language in public education policy, in violation of RPT Principle 4

“Limiting government power to those items enumerated in the United States and Texas

Constitutions” (Record Vote 3489); and

Representative Orr voted in favor of HB 366, a bill banning Al-generated political memes, in

violation of RPT Principle 1 “…we support the strict adherence to the original language and

intent of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitutions of the United States and of

Texas,” RPT Principle 3 “Preserving individual, Texan, and American sovereignty and

freedom,” and RPT Principle 4 “Limiting government power to those items enumerated in the

United States and Texas Constitutions” by inhibiting free speech, protected by the First

Amendment of the United States Constitution (Record Vote 982); and

Representative Orr voted in favor of SB 1, a bill that expanded state spending by over 40%, in

violation of RPT Principle 4 “Limiting government power to those items enumerated in the

United States and Texas Constitutions,” RPT Principle 5 “Personal Accountability and

Responsibility,” and RPT Principle 9 “A free enterprise society unencumbered by government

interference or subsidies,” by supporting bloated government growth and disregarding

conservative stewardship of taxpayer funds (Record Vote 174); and

WHEREAS, the Leon County Republican Party provided notice to Representative Angelia Orr’s office

and an opportunity to speak prior to the vote taking place; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 13 of the Leon County Republican Party

Executive Committee passed a resolution of censure of Representative Angelia Orr by both a two-

2thirds (2/3) majority of those present and voting and a 50% majority of all constituent Precinct Chairs,

even those not in attendance; and

WHEREAS, the term of office for Representative Angelia Orr expires after the 2026 Primary and

General Elections, and she would be eligible to run for reelection to her House seat in the 2026

election and also eligible to run for any other partisan office in the 2026 election; and

WHEREAS, in discussing resolutions of censure passed by a County Executive Committee, Rule No.

44 of the Republican Party of Texas states in part that “such a resolution may include a request to

impose the penalties below to the SREC. The SREC must confirm or deny penalties prior to early

voting of the Republican Primary Election in which the Officeholder is seeking election.

Penalties:

If such a request is included, after not less than fourteen (14) days’ notice and opportunity to

the Officeholder to appear and be provided time to speak before the SREC in response to the

request. The SREC, by a three-fifths (3/5) vote of the full membership, may vote to concur with

the resolution of censure and impose one or more of the following penalties:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any

level that demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with

respect to the named Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided

to the Officeholder’s campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the

Officeholder files an application to run for any public office in the Republican Party

Primary Election following the censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be

authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%) of the Party’s general fund on voter

education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the original censure resolution

verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage.

Penalty 3: Authorize and direct the State Chairman or any County Chairman to refuse

to accept any application for a place on the ballot of a Republican Primary Election for

a period of twenty-four (24) months following adoption of the censure and imposition of

said remedy”; and

WHEREAS, in its resolution of censure, the Leon County Republican Party requested that the SREC

concur with the resolution of censure and that the SREC “impose all applicable penalties set forth in

RPT Rule No. 44”; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee concurs with the

violations of Republican Party of Texas Principles and Legislative Priorities stated in the resolution of

censure passed by the constituent Precinct Chairs of Texas House District 13 of the Leon County

Republican Party and identified in this resolution; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas imposes Penalty 1 and Penalty 2

identified in Rule No. 44 on Representative Angelia Orr as follows:

3Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any level that

demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with respect to the named

Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided to the Officeholder’s

campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the Officeholder files an

application to run for any public office in the Republican Party Primary Election following the

censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%)

of the Party’s general fund on voter education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the

original censure resolution verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that nothing in this Resolution shall be construed to prohibit the use of

Party resources to encourage voting for Republican Party nominees or officeholders collectively, so

long as Representative Angelia Orr is not identified by name.

Passed by the State Republican Executive Committee, October 11, 2025

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Dade Phelan

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Dade Phelan

WHEREAS, Rule No. 44 of the Republican Party of Texas states that “a County or District Executive

Committee may, after no less than seven (7) days’ notice and invitation to the Officeholder to appear

and be provided time to speak before a County or District Executive Committee, by a two-thirds (2/3)

vote of those constituent Executive Committee Precinct Chairs present and voting, but in no case by

less than a majority of constituent Precinct Chairs of the County Executive Committee (CEC) in full,

adopt a resolution censuring a Republican public Officeholder representing all or a portion of that

County or District for three (3) or more actions taken during the Officeholder’s current term in

opposition to the core principles of the Republican Party of Texas defined in the Preamble of the Party

Platform as described in Rule No. 43A or to the Legislative Priorities adopted at the most recent State

Convention as described in Rule No. 34(c)”; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 21 of the Orange County Republican

Party, at the meeting of the Orange County Republican Party Executive Committee meeting on August

22, 2025, passed a “Resolution to Censure Texas House District 21 Representative Dade Phelan,”

which identified, among other grievances, the following nine actions taken during the Officeholder’s

current term (which began on January 14, 2025) in violation of the Principles or Legislative Priorities

of the Republican Party of Texas:

1. Representative Phelan opposed core RPT Principle 5 “Personal accountability and

responsibility,” by not voting for the Republican Caucus Nominee for Speaker of the House,

and instead voted for Representative Dustin Burrows (Record Vote 2); and

2. Representative Phelan violated RPT Principle 5 by seconding and voting for the “Previous

Question” motion on HR 4, the 2025 House Rules, thereby shutting down all debate and

eliminating any possibility of amending HR 4 to remove the provision that allowed the minority

party to chair standing subcommittees. These actions are a clear violation of RPT Legislative

Priority # 4 – “No Democrat Chairs,” which specifies not to appoint any Democrat Committee

Chairs (Record Vote 9); and

3. Representative Phelan voted in favor of HB 2442, which would loosen mail-in voting

restrictions in violation of Legislative Priority #2 – “Secure Texas Elections” (Record Vote

2615); and

4. Representative Phelan voted for HB 34, allowing state investments in foreign entities, including

adversaries, in violation of Legislative Priority #7 – “Texas is Not for Sale” (Record Vote

3432); and

15. Representative Phelan voted for HB 805, a bill opening the door to policy creep that could

threaten Texas energy sovereignty and grid independence in violation of Legislative Priority

#6 – “Secure the Electric Grid” (Record Vote 392); and

6. Representative Phelan authored and voted in favor of HB 366, a vague and overly broad bill

that would regulate certain types political content, chilling free speech in violation of RPT

Principle 1 “…we support the strict adherence to the original language and intent of the

Declaration of Independence and the Constitutions of the United States and of Texas,” RPT

Principle 3 “Preserving individual, Texan, and American sovereignty and freedom,” and RPT

Principle 4 “Limiting government power to those items enumerated in the United States and

Texas Constitutions” (Record Vote 982); and

7. Representative Phelan co-authored and voted for HB 1738, a bill that would decriminalize

same-sex sodomy in violation of RPT Principle 6 “…traditional marriage between a natural

man and a natural woman” (Record Vote 2714); and

8. Representative Phelan violated Legislative Priority #2 – “Secure Texas Elections” by voting in

committee to oppose SB 2743, an act which would have authorized the Attorney General to

ensure election crimes in Texas do not go unprosecuted (State Affairs Committee; May 23,

2025, 11 a.m. formal meeting); and

9. Representative Phelan voted for SB 22, which allocates up to $2.5 billion to Texas film and

television production incentives, violating RPT Principle 5 “Personal Accountability and

Responsibility” by supporting a massive subsidy funded by taxpayers rather than opposing

government overreach in economic affairs and RPT Principle 9 “A free enterprise society

unencumbered by government interference or subsidies” by supporting substantial state

spending on special-interest programs rather than prioritizing conservative stewardship of

public finances (Record Vote 3541); and

WHEREAS, the Orange County Republican Party provided notice to Representative Dade Phelan’s

office and an opportunity to speak prior to the vote taking place; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 21 of the Orange County Republican

Party Executive Committee passed the resolution of censure of Representative Dade Phelan by both a

two-thirds (2/3) majority of those present and voting and a 50% majority of all constituent Precinct

Chairs, even those not in attendance; and

WHEREAS, the term of office for Representative Dade Phelan expires after the 2026 Primary and

General Elections, and he would be eligible to run for reelection to his House seat in the 2026 election

and also eligible to run for any other partisan office in the 2026 election; and

WHEREAS, in discussing resolutions of censure passed by a County Executive Committee, Rule No.

44 of the Republican Party of Texas states in part that “such a resolution may include a request to

impose the penalties below to the SREC. The SREC must confirm or deny penalties prior to early

voting of the Republican Primary Election in which the Officeholder is seeking election.

2Penalties:

If such a request is included, after not less than fourteen (14) days’ notice and opportunity to

the Officeholder to appear and be provided time to speak before the SREC in response to the

request. The SREC, by a three-fifths (3/5) vote of the full membership, may vote to concur with

the resolution of censure and impose one or more of the following penalties:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any

level that demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with

respect to the named Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided

to the Officeholder’s campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the

Officeholder files an application to run for any public office in the Republican Party

Primary Election following the censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be

authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%) of the Party’s general fund on voter

education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the original censure resolution

verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage.

Penalty 3: Authorize and direct the State Chairman or any County Chairman to refuse

to accept any application for a place on the ballot of a Republican Primary Election for

a period of twenty-four (24) months following adoption of the censure and imposition of

said remedy”; and

WHEREAS, in its resolution of censure, the Orange County Republican Party requested that the SREC

concur with the resolution of censure and that the SREC impose “all applicable penalties outlined in

Rule No. 44 of the RPT Rules”; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee concurs with the

violations of Republican Party of Texas Principles and Legislative Priorities stated in the resolution of

censure passed by the constituent Precinct Chairs of Texas House District 21 of the Orange County

Republican Party and identified in this resolution; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas imposes Penalty 1 and Penalty 2

identified in Rule No. 44 on Representative Dade Phelan as follows:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any level that

demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with respect to the named

Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided to the Officeholder’s

campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the Officeholder files an

application to run for any public office in the Republican Party Primary Election following the

censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%)

of the Party’s general fund on voter education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the

original censure resolution verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

3Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that nothing in this Resolution shall be construed to prohibit the use of

Party resources to encourage voting for Republican Party nominees or officeholders collectively, so

long as Representative Dade Phelan is not identified by name.

Passed by the State Republican Executive Committee, October 11, 2025

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Gary VanDeaver

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Gary VanDeaver

WHEREAS, Rule No. 44 of the Republican Party of Texas states that “a County or District Executive

Committee may, after no less than seven (7) days’ notice and invitation to the Officeholder to appear

and be provided time to speak before a County or District Executive Committee, by a two-thirds (2/3)

vote of those constituent Executive Committee Precinct Chairs present and voting, but in no case by

less than a majority of constituent Precinct Chairs of the County Executive Committee (CEC) in full,

adopt a resolution censuring a Republican public Officeholder representing all or a portion of that

County or District for three (3) or more actions taken during the Officeholder’s current term in

opposition to the core principles of the Republican Party of Texas defined in the Preamble of the Party

Platform as described in Rule No. 43A or to the Legislative Priorities adopted at the most recent State

Convention as described in Rule No. 34(c)”; and

WHEREAS, within Texas House District 1, both the Red River County and Morris County Republican

Parties passed resolutions to censure State Representative Gary VanDeaver under the provisions of

Rule No. 44 and requested the concurrence of the SREC; and

WHEREAS, The constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 1 of the Lamar County Republican

Party, at the meeting of the Lamar County Republican Party Executive Committee on September 6,

2025, Executive Committee meeting, passed a “Resolution to Censure State Representative House

District 1 – Gary VanDeaver,” which identified, among other grievances, the following six actions

taken during the Officeholder’s current term (which began on January 14, 2025) in violation of the

Principles or Legislative Priorities of the Republican Party of Texas:

1. On January 14, 2025, Representative VanDeaver did not vote for the elected Republican Caucus

nominee David Cook for Speaker of the Texas House, but instead voted for Representative

Dustin Burrows, who was not the Republican Caucus nominee for House Speaker, a disregard

for RPT Principle 5 “Personal accountability and responsibility” and a violation of 2024 RPT

Platform Plank 213 which calls for Republican House Members to vote as a “unified body” for

the Caucus selected Speaker; and

2. On January 23, 2025, Representative VanDeaver voted in favor of the Previous Question

motion, enabling the so-called “nuclear option,” wherein debate was cut off to exclude

Republican perfecting amendments to the Rules of the 89th House Legislative Session, and

approving Democrat only Committee vice chairs, in opposition to RPT Legislative Priority #4

“No Democrat Chairs,” adopted at the 2024 Republican Party of Texas State Convention

(Record Vote 9); on January 23, 2025, Representative VanDeaver also voted in favor of HR 4,

Rules that required compulsory appointment of solely minority party Committee vice chairs

13. 4. 5. 6. awarding them sweeping new powers and authority (per HR 4, Rule 4, Sec 4A), a disregard for

the intent of RPT Legislative Priority #4 “No Democrat Chairs” and Platform Plank 213(b);

and

On March 10, 2025, the last action on HB 1304 was a referral to the House Public Health

Committee, through which Committee Chairman VanDeaver ended the bill’s progress; his

inaction on HB 1304 in the Committee was in opposition to RPT Legislative Priority #8 “End

Federal Overreach” regarding medical freedom; the bill would have required labeling of certain

products containing or derived from aborted human fetal tissue; and

On April 23, 2025, Representative VanDeaver voted in favor of HB 805 (relating to a study by

the Public Utility Commission of Texas on the interconnection of electric transmission service

facilities with the United Mexican States); the Democrat-sponsored bill was unanimously

opposed by the SREC Legislative Priorities Committee and therefore, his vote in favor was an

action in opposition to the RPT Legislative Priority to “Secure the Electric Grid” (Record Vote

392); and

On April 30, 2025, Representative VanDeaver voted in favor of HB 366, a bill that “creates a

criminal offense on certain political advertising that contains altered media”; a vote for this bill

violates RPT Principle 1 “…strict adherence to the original language and intent of the

Declaration of Independence and the Constitutions of the United States and of Texas,” which

declare that no law should be enacted to restrict the freedom of speech; the bill stands in

opposition to 2024 RPT Platform Planks 1, 11, and 181, which further assert our First

Amendment rights including free speech; HB 366 represents encroachment upon the free

speech rights of Texas citizens (Record Vote 982); and

On May 1, 2025, Representative VanDeaver voted in favor of HB 1359 (relating to the creation

of a program to provide income-based assistance for certain retail electric customers); the

Democrat-sponsored bill was unanimously opposed by the SREC Legislative Priorities

Committee and therefore, his vote in favor was in opposition to the RPT Legislative Priority to

“Secure the Electric Grid”; additionally, the House Research Organization Bill Analysis states

that the bill would have a negative impact of $8.5 million to general revenue related funds

through the biennium (Record Vote 1149); and

WHEREAS, the Lamar County Republican Party provided notice to Representative Gary VanDeaver’s

office and an opportunity to speak prior to the vote taking place; and

WHEREAS, the constituent Precinct Chairs of House District 1 of the Lamar County Republican Party

Executive Committee passed the resolution of censure of Representative Gary VanDeaver by both a

two-thirds (2/3) majority of those present and voting and a 50% majority of all constituent Precinct

Chairs, even those not in attendance; and

WHEREAS, the term of office for Representative Gary VanDeaver expires after the 2026 Primary and

General Elections, and he would be eligible to run for reelection to his House seat in the 2026 election

and also eligible to run for any other partisan office in the 2026 election; and

2WHEREAS, in discussing resolutions of censure passed by a County Executive Committee, Rule No.

44 of the Republican Party of Texas states in part that “such a resolution may include a request to

impose the penalties below to the SREC. The SREC must confirm or deny penalties prior to early

voting of the Republican Primary Election in which the Officeholder is seeking election.

Penalties:

If such a request is included, after not less than fourteen (14) days’ notice and opportunity to

the Officeholder to appear and be provided time to speak before the SREC in response to the

request. The SREC, by a three-fifths (3/5) vote of the full membership, may vote to concur with

the resolution of censure and impose one or more of the following penalties:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any

level that demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with

respect to the named Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided

to the Officeholder’s campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the

Officeholder files an application to run for any public office in the Republican Party

Primary Election following the censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be

authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%) of the Party’s general fund on voter

education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the original censure resolution

verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage.

Penalty 3: Authorize and direct the State Chairman or any County Chairman to refuse

to accept any application for a place on the ballot of a Republican Primary Election for

a period of twenty-four (24) months following adoption of the censure and imposition of

said remedy”; and

WHEREAS, in its resolution of censure, the Lamar County Republican Party requested that the SREC

concur with the resolution of censure and that the SREC impose “all applicable penalties set forth in

Rule No. 44 of the Republican Party of Texas, including but not limited to, refusing to accept any

application from him for a place on the ballot of the Republican Primary Election for the period of

twenty-four (24) months following adoption of the censure”; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee concurs with the

violations of Republican Party of Texas Principles and Legislative Priorities stated in the resolution of

censure passed by the constituent Precinct Chairs of Texas House District 1 of the Lamar County

Republican Party and identified in this resolution; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas imposes Penalty 1 and Penalty 2

identified in Rule No. 44 on Representative Gary VanDeaver as follows:

Penalty 1: Declare that no Rule or Bylaw enacted by any division of the Party at any level that

demands the Party be neutral in intraparty contests shall be observed with respect to the named

Officeholder, and no financial or other support shall be provided to the Officeholder’s

3campaign by the Party except that which is required by law. If the Officeholder files an

application to run for any public office in the Republican Party Primary Election following the

censure resolution’s passage, the SREC shall be authorized to spend up to twelve percent (12%)

of the Party’s general fund on voter education in the Officeholder’s district, by republishing the

original censure resolution verbatim, using a media format determined by the SREC.

Penalty 2: Declare that the named Officeholder is discouraged from participating in the

Republican Party Primary Election following the censure passage; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that nothing in this Resolution shall be construed to prohibit the use of

Party resources to encourage voting for Republican Party nominees or officeholders collectively, so

long as Representative Gary VanDeaver is not identified by name.

Passed by the State Republican Executive Committee, October 11, 2025

Resolution on Parental Rights and Substance Abuse Treatment for Minors

WHEREAS, drug overdose deaths in Texas rose from 1,988 in 2012 to 4,721 in 2022, reflecting a devastating public health crisis driven largely by fentanyl and other illicit substances; and

WHEREAS, Section 32.003(a)(5) of the Texas Family Code currently allows a minor to consent to medical, dental, psychological, and surgical treatment – including examination and treatment for drug addiction, dependency, or related conditions – without parental knowledge or consent; and

WHEREAS, on August 21, 2022, 15-year-old Hays High School student Noah Rodriguez tragically died of an accidental fentanyl overdose; and

WHEREAS, Noah’s mother, Janel Rodriguez, had previously sought to admit her son into a substance abuse treatment program but was denied due to the minor-consent provision in Section 32.003(a)(5); and

WHEREAS, Plank 17 of the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform declares: “Parental Rights: The rights of parents are foundational to Western society and shall be respected, affirmed, and protected by the Texas Constitution and Texas Law…We call upon the Legislature to properly recognize and affirm the fundamental right of parents to make all decisions regarding the upbringing and control of their children in all aspects…Any failure to recognize, protect, or honor these fundamental rights shall be actionable”; and

WHEREAS, allowing minors to refuse life-saving substance abuse treatment against their parents’ judgment undermines the God-given authority of parents and endangers vulnerable children, and has harmed Texas children during this historic overdose epidemic; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas urges the Texas Legislature to amend Section 32.003 of the Texas Family Code to remove the minor’s independent consent authority for substance abuse treatment and to explicitly affirm the right of parents or legal guardians to compel their minor child into a licensed substance abuse treatment program when, in the parents’ judgment, such intervention is necessary to protect the child’s health and life.

Resolution to Require Artificial Intelligence Data Centers to Adhere to Oil and Gas Industry Water Protocols and Use Recycled Water

WHEREAS, each artificial Intelligence (AI) data center is projected to require up to five million gallons of water per day for cooling and operational needs; and

WHEREAS, new cooling technologies now enable water to be recycled, thereby reducing demand for fresh water and minimizing stress on Texas aquifers; and

WHEREAS, the oil and gas industry in Texas has established proven water management protocols, including the use of interconnected reserve pits designed for recycling and heat management; and

WHEREAS, a system of three interconnected reserve pits, each holding approximately 100,000 gallons, would provide adequate capacity for each Al data center while reducing freshwater withdrawals; and

WHEREAS, prioritizing the use of recycled water from oil and gas operations would prevent unnecessary depletion of natural aquifers and conserve resources for Texas communities, agriculture, and future growth; and

WHEREAS, the process of using recycled water to pull heat from computer chips can reduce overall demand on the Texas electric grid; and

WHEREAS, establishing uniform standards for AI data centers would ensure fairness, protect Texas natural resources, and encourage responsible technological innovation; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls upon the Texas Legislature to require AI data centers operating in Texas to:

1. Follow the same water management and recycling protocols currently required of the oil and gas industry;

2. Use interconnected reserve pits of sufficient size to allow full water recycling and storage;

3. Prioritize the use of recycled water from oil and gas operations to protect Texas aquifers; and

4. Implement technologies that convert heat into power to reduce strain on the Texas electric grid.

Resolution Urging the Reform of Eminent Domain Law in Texas

WHEREAS, the right to private property is a foundational principle of Liberty and a core component of the American and Texan way of life – a right guaranteed by both the United States and Texas Constitutions; and

WHEREAS, under the Fifth Amendment, the Constitution of the United States guarantees that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation; and

WHEREAS, eminent domain – the power of the government or delegated private entities to seize private property for essential public infrastructure such as roads, schools, and utilities, with compensation – should be strictly limited and exercised only under conditions of clear, immediate, and compelling public necessity; and

WHEREAS, the definition of “public use” has been judicially and legislatively expanded to include projects justified by speculative future economic development, tax revenue increases, or private partnerships; and

WHEREAS, the current eminent domain laws in Texas have allowed for the taking of private property for purposes that have disproportionately benefitted private interests, under the pretense of public use or economic development; and

WHEREAS, many rural landowners, ranchers, family farms, multi-generational family properties, and small communities have been disproportionately harmed by eminent domain projects, threats and takings with inadequate transparency, insufficient compensation, and limited legal recourse; and

WHEREAS, recent projects, including proposed reservoirs and infrastructure developments, have raised serious concerns about the misuse of eminent domain to displace communities and transfer land to private or quasi-governmental entities without clear, immediate, direct public necessity; and

WHEREAS, many such projects have boosted urban growth and private developers at the direct expense of rural communities, natural ecosystems, and agricultural lands; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas urges the Texas Legislature to uphold the original standard for eminent domain in which true public necessity must first be demonstrated through transparent, accountable planning processes with ample opportunity for local input, environmental review, and economic justification when all other resources have been exhausted; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls upon the Texas Legislature and all relevant state agencies to implement the following measures:

1. Eminent Domain Reform

The Texas Legislature should introduce legislation to:

  • Replace all references to “public use” within the Texas Constitution and relevant statutes with “public necessity”;
  • Reform eminent domain statutes to strengthen protections for property owners by clearly defining “public necessity” to exclude private development and speculative projects;
  • Prohibit the use of eminent domain for any project primarily driven by economic development purposes, speculative population or tax growth, real estate or commercial development, and public-private partnerships that provide private economic return;
  • Prohibit the delegation of eminent domain authority to private companies, unelected boards, or entities that stand to profit from the land acquisition;
  • Require rigorous public necessity findings before any eminent domain power is exercised within the given location or any downstream and surrounding areas, including economic, environmental, and community impact assessments;
  • Require any entity exercising eminent domain to prove immediate public necessity through a third-party, independent review board, demonstrate that no less intrusive options exist, and show that the project benefits the local population where the taking occurs;
  • Mandate transparent, participatory planning processes for all proposed projects involving eminent domain, including public hearings and meaningful local stakeholder engagement;
  • Mandate a public referendum for any eminent domain project exceeding 100 acres or affecting more than ten property owners;
  • Ensure fair, timely, and full compensation of no less than 200% of fair market value to property owners, thereby accounting for long-term land value, relocation costs, damages, and emotional and cultural loss of agricultural, residential, and environmentally sensitive land;
  • Create legal safeguards and independent oversight mechanisms to review eminent domain cases and provide property owners with accessible avenues for appeal and redress;
  • Establish a right of reversion whereby if land acquired through eminent domain is not used for its original stated purpose within ten years, it must be offered to the previous owner at the original compensation rate plus inflation;

2. Protection of Agricultural and Natural Lands

The Texas Legislature should create special protections:

  • For prime farmland, timberland, watersheds, bottomland hardwood forests, and multi-generational ranches and homesteads;
  • To ensure that the affected lands may only be condemned by eminent domain upon an absolute showing of unavoidable, immediate public necessity and only with a two-thirds affirmative vote of the local electorate.

 

Footnote:

“Public necessity” means a project that is essential to address an immediate and critical need for public infrastructure or services that directly benefit the general population and cannot reasonably be provided through any alternative means.

Resolution Recognizing Erin Anderson for Her Courageous Journalism and Contributions to Protecting Texas Students

WHEREAS, the Republican Party of Texas proudly recognizes exceptional Texans whose courage, integrity, and dedication to truth advance accountability, transparency, and the protection of Texas families; and

WHEREAS, Erin Anderson, an investigative journalist with Texas Scorecard, has demonstrated an extraordinary commitment to exposing sexual-abuse-related educator misconduct and uncovering systemic failures that have placed Texas students at grave risk and violated public trust; and

WHEREAS, Ms. Anderson’s reporting has revealed not only general misconduct, but also an alarming and persistent pattern of sexual abuse, sexual grooming, and failures by school districts and administrators to properly address or report suspected abuse, despite clear and mandatory obligations under state law; and

WHEREAS, her work has amplified the voices of victims and exposed how repeated failures at the district level have allowed predators to remain in classrooms, move between districts, and continue harming children; and

WHEREAS, despite Texas law making it a state jail felony for administrators to ignore or mishandle suspected abuse, Ms. Anderson uncovered widespread and repeated lapses in enforcement and oversight by the Texas Education Agency – failures that have allowed sexual misconduct cases to persist unchecked and without consequence; and

WHEREAS, through her in-depth investigations of “bad apples” within the education system, Ms. Anderson has revealed that sexual misconduct by educators is far more pervasive than publicly acknowledged, and that existing safeguards – including the “Don’t Pass the Trash” law and the state’s “Do Not Hire” registry – have too often been minimized, ignored, or undermined through noncompliance; and

WHEREAS, Ms. Anderson’s courageous journalism played a critical role in the passage of House Bill 4623 during the 89th Legislature, a landmark law that removes sovereign immunity from civil liability for public school entities that are negligent in hiring, employing, or reporting educator sexual misconduct – thereby empowering victims and families to seek justice when schools violate their duty to protect children; and

WHEREAS, Erin Anderson exemplifies the highest ideals of responsible journalism: fearlessly holding powerful officials accountable, defending vulnerable students, and serving the public good with unwavering courage and integrity; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas hereby commends Erin Anderson for her outstanding investigative reporting, her steadfast advocacy for victims of sexual abuse, and her vital role in exposing the failures of districts to eradicate sexual misconduct in Texas schools.

Resolution Condemning the Use of Push Polling in Republican Primary Elections

WHEREAS, the Republican Party of Texas is steadfastly committed to elections that are fair, honest, and transparent, enabling voters to make informed decisions; and

WHEREAS, “push polling” is a deceptive and unethical practice in which voters are contacted under the guise of an objective survey while being fed false, misleading, or defamatory information about a candidate, and it serves to distort and bias public perception rather than gather real data; and

WHEREAS, this practice is so widely discredited that the American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR), the American Association of Political Consultants, the Council for Marketing and Opinion Research, and the National Council on Public Polls have all publicly denounced push polling as unethical and damaging to the integrity of elections; and

WHEREAS, such practices erode trust in the electoral process, unscrupulously damage candidates’ reputations through false innuendo or misleading claims, and undermine the integrity of our Republican primaries; and

WHEREAS, Republican voters deserve accurate and truthful information about primary candidates, and every candidate, consultant, and organization affiliated with the Republican Party bears a responsibility to campaign with respect for the electorate and adherence to ethical practices; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas condemns the use of push polling, recognizing it as a deceptive and disreputable tactic intended to mislead voters and dishonorably malign fellow Republican candidates; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls upon all Republican candidates, campaigns, consultants, and allied organizations to categorically reject and refrain from any use of push polling.

Resolution in Support of Governor Abbott’s Designation of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) as Foreign Terrorists Organizations and Transnational Criminal Organizations

WHEREAS, on November 18, 2025, Texas Governor Greg Abbott designated the Muslim Brotherhood and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) as foreign terrorist organizations and transnational criminal organizations; and

WHEREAS, Governor Abbott’s designation proclamation included that the founder of the Muslim Brotherhood stated that “Jihad is an obligation…on every Muslim and cannot be ignored nor evaded” and that Jihad means “the fighting of the unbelievers, and involves all possible efforts that are necessary to dismantle the power of the enemies of Islam including beating them, plundering their wealth, destroying their places of worship, and smashing their idols”; and

WHEREAS, Governor Abbott’s proclamation explains that the Muslim Brotherhood continues to this day to pursue the organization’s primary goal: to resurrect an Islamic state – a caliphate – empowered to forcibly impose Sharia Law worldwide, as stated by Mohammed Badie, the Eighth Supreme Guide of the Muslim Brotherhood; and

WHEREAS, the Muslim Brotherhood operates and provides support for a multitude of branches around the world which engage in murderous terrorist acts, and branches have been declared terrorist organizations even in some Muslim-majority countries; and

WHEREAS, Hamas, a branch of the Muslim Brotherhood formed in 1987, kidnapped and murdered American citizens in the October 7, 2023, attack on Israel; and

WHEREAS, the FBI identifies CAIR as an Islamist organization that was founded as a front group for Hamas; and

WHEREAS, CAIR was named in the Holy Land Foundation prosecution as an unindicted co-conspirator in the largest successful prosecution of terrorism financing; and

WHEREAS, multiple CAIR members have been successfully prosecuted and convicted for financing terrorism and conspiring to aid Islamic terrorist groups; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Texas State Republican Executive Committee applauds Governor Abbott for his proclamation designating the Muslim Brotherhood and CAIR as foreign terrorist organizations and transnational criminal organizations, and we encourage him to vigorously pursue the investigation and prosecution of these organizations and any others that provide support, aid, or assistance to the Muslim Brotherhood and CAIR.

Resolution Honoring the Life and Service of Former State Representative Jodie Laubenberg

WHEREAS, Jodie Anne Barta was born on April 20, 1957, in Dallas, Texas; and

WHEREAS, she earned a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Texas in Austin and, while she was a student, served as an officer in the University of Texas Young Republicans; and

WHEREAS, she was a leader in Youth for Reagan in 1976, and already as a young adult deservedly earned a reputation for volunteering countless hours for conservative causes and candidates; and

WHEREAS, she married Bob Laubenberg in 1994, and they raised two children, David and Liz; and

WHEREAS, Jodie Laubenberg was passionate about promoting conservative values in government, was a respected grassroots conservative, and a consistent presence at Republican conventions for many years; and

WHEREAS, she served on the Texas State Republican Executive Committee from 1994 to 1997; and

WHEREAS, she served on Parker City Council from 1999 to 2003; and

WHEREAS, Jodie Laubenberg honorably served the people of Texas House District 89 from 2003 to 2019, distinguishing herself through principled leadership and unwavering commitment to the values of the Republican Party; and

WHEREAS, during her eight terms in the Texas House of Representatives, Laubenberg was a strong and effective voice for the pro-life movement, sponsoring landmark legislation, including House Bill 2 in 2013, which reaffirmed Texas’ commitment to protecting preborn life and ensuring women’s health and safety; and

WHEREAS, Representative Laubenberg also championed tort reform, responsible budget management, private property rights, election security, and Texans’ right to bear arms; and

WHEREAS, she served with distinction as Chair of the House Committee on Elections and the Committee on Public Health; and

WHEREAS, her legacy is one of courage, conviction, and faithful service to the people of Texas, leaving an indelible mark on our state and Party through her dedication to Republican values; and

WHEREAS, Jodie Laubenberg was a vivacious and dynamic powerhouse who truly loved Jesus, her family, and Texas; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas mourns the passing of former State Representative Jodie Anne Laubenberg, a faithful conservative leader, public servant, and tireless advocate for the principles of limited government, individual liberty, and the sanctity of life; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that we, the State Republican Executive Committee, honor our departed colleague and friend Jodie, who in her LIFE fervently promoted LIFE, and whose legacy therefore will continue to give countless Texas children a future; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas extends our deepest condolences to Jodie’s husband Bob, to their son David and his wife Jessica, to their daughter Liz and her husband Tyler, to their grandchildren Madeline, Declan, Emma, and Ava, to their extended family, and to Jodie’s many friends around Texas.

Resolution Honoring Edee LeAnn Sinclair

WHEREAS, Edee LeAnn Sinclair was born on July 9, 1965, in Phillipsburg, Kansas; and

WHEREAS, Edee was the devoted wife of Rick Sinclair, and they made their home in Needville, Fort Bend County, Texas; and

WHEREAS, Edee and Rick were loving parents to their daughter Abby, of blessed memory, and their sons Richie and Andrew, as well as devoted grandparents; and

WHEREAS, Edee was a faithful servant of Jesus Christ, and her life reflected Galatians 5:22-23 as she radiantly displayed “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control”; and

WHEREAS, Edee was known for her abiding happiness and her kind and nurturing spirit, which touched countless lives as she embodied the love of Christ in all she did; and

WHEREAS, music was a cherished avenue for Edee to glorify God and bless others, and she shared her musical talent by teaching hundreds of children to play the ukulele, sparking in them a love for music and nurturing their creativity; and

WHEREAS, Edee loved the United States and Texas deeply, giving generously of her time, talents, and energy to preserve the values and freedoms she held dear; and

WHEREAS, Edee was an ardent pro-life advocate and a pillar in Texas Republican politics, and her wisdom and mentorship shaped the careers of many state and federal politicians and rightfully earned Edee widespread respect as a trusted advisor and influential leader in the Republican Party; and

WHEREAS, Edee was a resolute conservative voice, a true patriot, and a tireless advocate for liberty, limited government, and the Constitution of the United States, and her leadership and passion for public service inspired those around her and strengthened the Republican Party; and

WHEREAS, Edee served as an election judge for over 30 years and as the Vice Chair of the Fort Bend County Republican Party; and

WHEREAS, Edee LeAnn Sinclair was honored by the Fort Bend County Republican Party in 2021 with a Lifetime Achievement Award for Volunteerism and Defending Conservative Values, and this honor was recognized in House Resolution 1415 by the Texas House of Representatives during the 87th Legislature; and

WHEREAS, Edee LeAnn Sinclair represented Senatorial District 18 with honor, dedication, and an unwavering commitment to conservative principles for three terms from 2016-2022 on the Texas State Republican Executive Committee (SREC); and

WHEREAS, the Republican Party of Texas lost our dear friend Edee LeAnn Sinclair on August 9, 2025; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas honors and remembers Edee LeAnn Sinclair for her faithful service to Fort Bend County, to Senatorial District 18, to Texas, and to the United States of America and for her steadfast patriotism and lifelong dedication to the Republican Party; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas expresses our deepest condolences to Edee’s husband Rick Sinclair, to their sons Richie and Andrew, to their entire family, and to all of Edee’s beloved friends.

“You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.”

Psalm 16:11

Resolution Calling for Immediate Corrective Action by the Texas Education Agency

WHEREAS, the Republican Party of Texas affirms that education is a God-given right and parental responsibility, and that every Texas child deserves a safe, high-quality, and legally compliant education; and

WHEREAS, the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform, adopted by grassroots delegates with overwhelming support, unequivocally prioritizes parents as the primary educators and disciplinarians of their children (Plank 85), urges the Legislature to create an independent Office of Inspector General of Education to investigate waste, fraud, and abuse – particularly sexual abuse of students, violations of parental rights, and violations of student due process rights in school settings (Plank 86) – and calls for compelling superintendents to report sex crimes within schools to outside law enforcement while removing civil liability immunity for schools and employees in such cases (2024 Legislative Priority on Stop Sexualizing Texas Kids); and

WHEREAS, these Platform planks highlight the urgent need for robust enforcement mechanisms to safeguard children, hold educators accountable, and ensure transparency – principles imperiled by systemic failures in Texas public education; and

WHEREAS, Texas has failed to achieve measurable academic gains commensurate with record funding increases, with the 2024 Nation’s Report Card (NAEP) results showing that Texas ranked 37th in 4th-grade reading, 44th in 8th-grade reading, and 34th in 8th-grade math – lagging far behind Republican-led states such as Florida, Tennessee, and Mississippi, where targeted reforms have driven significant post-pandemic recovery; and

WHEREAS, the Texas Education Commission has presided over systemic failures to protect children from physical and sexual abuse in both traditional public schools and charter schools, exemplified by:

· The Celina ISD scandal, in which coach Caleb Elliott has been indicted on eight federal counts of sexual exploitation of children involving at least 39 minor victims, with four civil lawsuits filed on behalf of 34 families, alleging the district covered up misconduct despite complaints, violated mandatory reporting laws, and failed to intervene decisively, while the Texas Education Agency (TEA) has launched only a belated investigation without imposing immediate corrective actions;

· Over 6,888 reported incidents of educator sexual and violent misconduct against students from 2022–2025, with approximately 6,654 remaining unresolved per TEA data, a quantity which signifies a gross dereliction in enforcing the Do Not Hire Registry;

· Continued issuance of expansion waivers to charter networks with documented histories of abuse and financial misconduct, as the TEA has granted at least 17 such waivers to underperforming charters since 2016, enabling growth despite failing campuses and non-compliance; and

WHEREAS, persistent violations of federal special-education law have caused irreparable harm to Texas children with disabilities, exposed the state to ongoing federal oversight, and jeopardized hundreds of millions of dollars in Individual with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) funding, now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas formally and unequivocally condemns the conduct, policies, and leadership failures of the Texas Education Agency:

1. Sustained failure to raise academic standards and student outcomes to competitive levels, as evidenced by Texas’ low NAEP rankings despite surging per-pupil spending;

2. Gross dereliction of their duty to protect children from physical and sexual abuse in Texas schools, including inadequate responses to scandals as in Celina ISD;

3. Repeated and ongoing violations of federal and state special-education law that have systematically denied thousands of vulnerable Texas children the services they are legally entitled to receive; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls for immediate corrective action by the Texas Education Agency and directs that it be placed under heightened oversight by the Governor and State Board of Education to ensure:

· Restoration of Texas as a national leader in academic achievement through rigorous, locally controlled standards free from federal overreach;

· Enforcement of zero-tolerance policies and swift action against child abuse in any taxpayer- funded school, including mandatory reporting to law enforcement and full implementation of the Do Not Hire Registry;

· Texas is brought into full and immediate compliance with all special-education laws by prioritizing Free Appropriate Public Education (FAPE), accelerating evaluations and services, and imposing conservatorship or penalties on non-compliant districts;

· Prompt establishment of an independent Office of Inspector General of Education, as urged by the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform, to investigate fraud, waste, abuse, and violations of parental rights, with full authority to refer matters for criminal and civil enforcement.

Resolution Condemning the Texas Association of School Boards (TASB) and the Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA)

WHEREAS, the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform, adopted by grassroots delegates with overwhelming support, explicitly directs local independent school districts to “sever all ties with taxpayer-funded lobby groups, including the Texas Association of School Boards (TASB) and the Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA)” and to prohibit the use of taxpayer dollars for their dues or fees (Plank 101), affirming the duty of elected school boards to maintain purview over policy, curriculum, and budget in alignment with traditional Texas values; and

WHEREAS, Plank 101 builds upon the Platform’s broader commitments to parental rights (Plank 85), enforcement against violations of those rights, including waste and abuse (Plank 86), transparency under the Texas Open Meetings Act (Plank 102), and opposition to external standards that undermine local control (Plank 94), all of which are imperiled by TASB and TASA’s monopolistic and coercive practices; and

WHEREAS, conservative school board members, elected by the people of Texas, have been subjected to systematic intimidation, coercion, and attempts to force their recusal from legitimate governance and oversight duties by administrators and attorneys funded through the TASB Legal Assistance Fund and related programs; and

WHEREAS, such coercive tactics have been employed against trustees who, in faithful discharge of their statutory duties under Texas Education Code Sections 11.1511 and 11.1515, have reported compliance deficiencies to the Texas Education Agency or have exercised proper oversight of district operations; and

WHEREAS, TASB-retained attorneys and risk-management consultants have routinely withheld critical information from duly elected trustees unless those trustees first agree to recuse themselves, thereby interfering with trustees’ statutory and constitutional duties and risking violation of the Texas Open Meetings Act (Chapter 551, Texas Government Code); and

WHEREAS, TASB and TASA exploit the average citizen-trustee’s limited familiarity with legal procedure by wielding threats of personal liability, selective disclosure of information, and aggressive litigation tactics, to bully and silence locally elected officials; and

WHEREAS, neither TASB nor TASA possesses any lawful authority to restrict the participation rights of duly elected school board members, and such conduct constitutes an egregious abuse of power and a direct assault on local control; and

WHEREAS, TASB and TASA have repeatedly used taxpayer-funded dues and risk-management assessments to advance ideological agendas, protect administrative overreach, suppress conservative voices, and undermine transparency and accountability – actions irreconcilable with Republican principles of limited government, fiscal responsibility, and grassroots governance; and

WHEREAS, through its Risk Management Fund and related programs, TASB has secured a virtual monopoly controlling a majority of the property, casualty, liability, workers’ compensation, and cyber insurance market for Texas public school districts, leaving most districts with no viable alternative; and

WHEREAS, TASB reinforces this monopoly by bundling insurance with mandatory policy, legal, and training services that frequently require adoption of leftist model policies on gender identity, equity, diversity, and inclusion; and

WHEREAS, districts seeking to exit TASB’s risk pools routinely face punitive tail coverage assessments, non-cancelable multi-year commitments, and threats of being unable to secure replacement coverage – practices designed to trap districts in the TASB system against the will of locally elected boards; and

WHEREAS, this monopolistic structure enables TASB to extract ever-higher payments from Texas property taxpayers while providing coverage that is frequently more costly and less responsive than competitive private-sector alternatives would be; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas declares that no elected school board member should ever be intimidated, excluded, or denied information by unelected associations sustained with compulsory public-school funds; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas:

1. Strongly condemns the pattern of interference, intimidation, and monopolistic practices perpetrated by the Texas Association of School Boards (TASB) and the Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA) against conservative school board members and Texas taxpayers;

2. Encourages the Republican Caucus of the 90th Texas Legislature to prioritize consideration of legislation that would:

a. Prohibit the expenditure of any public funds for membership dues, fees, or payments of any kind to TASB or TASA;

b. Authorize school districts to terminate existing contracts with TASB and TASA without penalty or punitive tail coverage charges;

c. Break the TASB monopoly by deregulating the public-school insurance and risk- management marketplace, eliminating artificial barriers to entry, and encouraging competitive private carriers and new ideologically neutral cooperative pools;

d. Direct the Texas Department of Insurance to establish a streamlined approval process for new market entrants and risk pools that respect local control;

e. Provide transitional state support and regulatory relief to ensure districts leaving TASB can secure comparable or superior coverage at lower cost; and

3. Encourages local school boards to review existing relationships with TASB and TASA for consistency with principles of fiscal responsibility, transparency, and local control.

Resolution Condemning the Obstruction of the Ban on Taxpayer-Funded Lobbying and Calling for a Third Special Session

WHEREAS, the Republican Party of Texas (RPT) adopted as one of its Legislative Priorities for the 89th Legislature a demand to ban the use of taxpayer dollars by political subdivisions to fund lobbying, a practice that diverts public money away from essential services and toward influencing government against the will of taxpayers; and

WHEREAS, Governor Greg Abbott included the Ban on Taxpayer-Funded Lobbying in the official call for both special sessions of the 89th Legislature, reflecting its importance to the people of Texas and his executive agenda; and

WHEREAS, only the Governor may call a special session and set the agenda, and legislators may only act on issues designated by the Governor during a special session; and

WHEREAS, SB 13, filed and passed by the Texas Senate during the second special session, was engrossed without harmful amendments and represented a clean and complete version of the proposed lobbying ban; and

WHEREAS, the lobbying ban followed the “Resolution Condemning the Senate Amendment to SB 19 That Gutted the Ban on Taxpayer-Funded Lobbying and Commending the Senators Who Defended GOP Priorities” passed on March 22, 2025, which condemned the Texas Senate for gutting similar legislation during the Regular Session – a failure they have now corrected by honoring the Legislative Priority in full; and

WHEREAS, HB 186, from the second special session, an identical companion bill filed by Representative Mike Olcott, was co-sponsored by over 70 Republican members of the Texas House, demonstrating that the bill would have passed had it reached the floor; and

WHEREAS, despite this broad support and engrossment in the Senate, SB 13 was referred on August 20, 2025, to the Texas House State Affairs Committee, chaired by Representative Ken King, the bill was never given a hearing or vote in the House, resulting in its silent death before the Session’s conclusion; and

WHEREAS, only two Republican members of the State Affairs Committee – Representatives John McQueeney and Will Metcalf – demonstrated alignment with the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform and the Governor’s agenda by co-sponsoring HB 186; and

WHEREAS, the most recent obstruction marks the third consecutive failure to pass this RPT Legislative Priority – following identical stall tactics in the Regular and first special sessions – and represents a pattern of deliberate suppression of Republican grassroots priorities by Republican leadership; and

WHEREAS, Rule No. 44 of the RPT Rules allows for the censure of Republican elected officials who, on three or more demonstrable occasions in the current term, act in opposition to Republican Principles or Legislative Priorities; and

WHEREAS, Representative Ken King, as Chair of the State Affairs Committee, is personally responsible for this obstruction, and any Republican members of the Committee who failed to oppose or enabled this inaction share culpability; and

WHEREAS, taxpayer-funded lobbying organizations such as the Texas Association of School Boards (TASB) and the Texas Municipal League (TML) have repeatedly worked to oppose multiple Republican Party of Texas Legislative Priorities, including property tax reform, election integrity, and parental rights in education; and

WHEREAS, the influence of taxpayer-funded lobbying organizations continues to drive up government spending and resist property tax reform, making the link between lobbying reform and property tax reduction both direct and urgent; and

WHEREAS, Speaker of the Texas House Dustin Burrows previously communicated his support for passing a bill to ban taxpayer-funded lobbying, and none of the bills that were filed in the most recent special sessions advanced through the House; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee condemns the actions of Representative Ken King, Chair of the Texas House State Affairs Committee, for his procedural obstruction of SB 13 during the second special session of the 89th Texas Legislature; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee urges Republican legislators to request a third special session to correct this failure; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee affirms that the inaction by Representative Ken King and any Republican collaborators constitutes a violation under RPT Rule No. 44 and qualifies as one of the three demonstrable offenses necessary for censure consideration; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee calls upon Governor Greg Abbott to immediately convene a third special session of the 89th Legislature and to include in the agenda:

  • Banning taxpayer-funded lobbying
  • Reducing or eliminating property taxes; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee contends that taxpayer-funded lobbying organizations (such as TASB and TML) advocate spending policies that drive property taxes higher and also affirms that ending taxpayer-funded lobbying is essential to achieving meaningful property tax relief in Texas; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the State Republican Executive Committee calls upon Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows to honor his commitment and to work with Governor Abbott to ensure the quick passage of a meaningful ban on taxpayer-funded lobbying in a third special session without any gutting amendments.

Resolution Supporting Designating The Muslim Brotherhood a Foreign Terrorist Organization

WHEREAS, United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated in an August 12, 2025, interview that America is in the process of preparing to designate the Muslim Brotherhood, its various branches, and CAIR as terror organizations; and

WHEREAS, the State Republican Executive Committee adopted the “Resolution Denouncing the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)” on June 14, 2025; and

WHEREAS, on July 15, 2025, Senator Ted Cruz introduced the Muslim Brotherhood Terrorist Designation Act of 2025, S. 2293, joined by Republican Senators Tom Cotton (AR), John Boozman (AR), Rick Scott (FL), Ashley Moody (FL), and Dave McCormick (PA) in urging President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio to use their statutory authority to sanction the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization; and

WHEREAS, on July 26, 2025, U.S. Representatives Mario Díaz-Balart (R-FL) and Jared Moskowitz (D-FL), reintroduced the companion Muslim Brotherhood Terrorist Designation Act of 2025, H.R. 4397, a bipartisan bill that seeks to designate the global Muslim Brotherhood (MB) as a terrorist group; and

WHEREAS, on June 10, 2025, U.S. Representative Nancy Mace (R-SC) introduced the Muslim Brotherhood Is a Terrorist Organization Act, H.R. 3883, directing the Secretary of State to formally designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) under Section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act; and

WHEREAS, Muslim-majority countries, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Jordan, and Bahrain, have already designated the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization; and

WHEREAS, the Muslim Brotherhood provides support to its branches that are terrorist organizations, including Hamas; and

WHEREAS, on October 7, 2023, Hamas committed the largest single-day massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, and their attack included the murder and kidnapping of at least 53 Americans; and

WHEREAS, the U.S. Department of State officially designated Hamas as a FTO on October 8, 1997; and

WHEREAS, the legal and practical impact of designating the Muslim Brotherhood and its affiliated organizations as FTOs is that persons in the United States or subject to the jurisdiction of the United States are prohibited from knowingly providing “material support or resources” to a designated FTO; and

WHEREAS, because the FTO designation makes it criminal to support the FTO, the designation gives law enforcement the capacity to prosecute those who aid that FTO, thus expanding prosecutorial options for law enforcement and depriving the FTO of resources; and

WHEREAS, the Muslim Brotherhood has previously admitted openly its intention to eliminate and destroy Western Civilization, including America, as stated in writing by Mohammed Akram, senior leader of the Muslim Brotherhood in North America, who in 1991 wrote the “Explanatory Memorandum,” laying out the Muslim Brotherhood’s plan to destroy America from within; and

WHEREAS, that Memorandum, which was introduced into evidence in the U.S. government’s successful prosecution of the Holy Land Foundation – the largest terrorism-financing trial in the nation’s history – states in part:

“The process of settlement is a ‘Civilization-Jihadist Process’ with all the word means. The Ikhwan [Muslim Brotherhood] must understand that their work in America is a kind of grand jihad in eliminating and destroying the Western civilization from within and ‘sabotaging’ its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the believers so that it is eliminated and Allah’s religion is made victorious over all other religions”; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas urges:

  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio to designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a Foreign Terror Organization under Section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)
  • President Trump to consider issuing an Executive Order designating the Muslim Brotherhood as Specially Designated Global Terrorists (SDGTs)
  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio to designate the Muslim Brotherhood and its known leaders to the Terrorism Exclusion List (TEL) in accordance with the Immigration and Nationality Act, deeming members and representatives of groups on the TEL inadmissible to the United States.

Resolution to Eliminate Energy Subsidies and Require Uniform Grid Reliability Standards

WHEREAS, Texas’ electric grid is increasingly dependent on unreliable energy sources, with wind, solar, and batteries now comprising 50% of the installed capacity for ERCOT (Electric Reliability Council of Texas) [1]; and

WHEREAS, Texas residential electricity prices rose 33% from 2020 to 2024 [2], making our power more expensive than the prices in any of our neighboring states – states that do not rely heavily on wind and solar power; and

WHEREAS, by 2026, over half of Texas’ dispatchable power plants will be more than 30 years old [1], with no market incentives to build reliable replacements, in part due to market distortions caused by wind and solar subsidies; and

WHEREAS, in 2023 alone, Texas ratepayers were forced to absorb $2.3 billion in additional costs to stabilize the grid against the volatility of wind and solar power [3]; and

WHEREAS, subsidized intermittent generation displaces reliable generation, increasing the risk of blackouts while providing very little firm capacity in times of peak demand; and

WHEREAS, SB 3 (87th Regular Session) required the cost allocation of ancillary services, which ERCOT procures continuously to maintain grid stability, to power generators that cause the need for those services [4]; and

WHEREAS, the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUC) found that in 2023 the variability from wind and solar generators was responsible for 42% of ancillary services costs, accounting for $788 million of the $1.87 billion in total costs [3]; and

WHEREAS, Governor Greg Abbott issued a directive in July 2021 instructing the PUC to end market distortions by allocating reliability costs to renewable generators [5]; and

WHEREAS, the PUC has yet to implement these directives from SB 3 and Governor Abbott, and their failure to implement the directives has allowed corporate-driven virtue signaling to continue distorting the market at the expense of reliability and affordability; and

WHEREAS, HB 1500 (88th Regular Session) required power generators entering into service beginning in 2027 to meet a reliability standard and to pay penalties for failing to meet the standard, yet the legislation did not extend to any existing generators [6]; and

WHEREAS, SB 715 (89th Regular Session) by Senator Kevin Sparks, which failed to pass, would have corrected the imbalance in current law by requiring all power generators in ERCOT, both new and existing, to meet the same reliability standard [7]; and

WHEREAS, the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform calls for a free-market approach to energy that avoids government favoritism and supports a reliable, affordable electric grid; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas urges the Texas Legislature to eliminate and counterbalance all taxpayer-funded subsidies, rebates, and mandates for renewable energy sources and related infrastructure, including, but not limited to, wind, solar, electric vehicles, energy storage systems, and electric vehicle charging stations; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature should establish and enforce a technology-neutral reliability standard requiring all generators participating in ERCOT to meet uniform reliability performance expectations and to contribute equitably to grid stability; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas urges the PUC to immediately implement Governor Abbott’s 2021 directive to allocate reliability costs to the sources that cause them, thereby ending the cost-shifting burden on Texas families and businesses.

 

Footnotes:

[1] https://www.ercot.com/files/docs/2025/07/07/MORA_September2025.pdf

[2] https://www.eia.gov/electricity/data/browser/#/topic/7?agg=0,1&geo=vvvvvvvvvvvvo&linechart=ELEC.PRICE.TX-ALL.M~ELEC.PRICE.TX-RES.M~ELEC.PRICE.TX-COM.M~ELEC.PRICE.TX-IND.M&columnchart=ELEC.PRICE.TX-ALL.M~ELEC.PRICE.TX-RES.M~ELEC.PRICE.TX-COM.M~ELEC.PRICE.TX-IND.M&map=ELEC.PRICE.US-ALL.M&freq=M&start=200101&end=202507&ctype=linechart&ltype=pin&rtype=s&maptype=0&rse=0&pin=&endsec=vg

[3] https://lifepowered.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/2025-02-LP-Cost-of-Wind-and-Solar-ReedBennett.pdf

[4] https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=87R&Bill=SB3

[5] https://gov.texas.gov/uploads/files/press/SCAN_20210706130409.pdf

[6] https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=88R&Bill=HB1500

[7] https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=89R&Bill=SB715

Resolution on Uniform Submissions of County and Senatorial District Convention Reports

WHEREAS, since 2020, Republican Party of Texas Rule No. 32(a) has allowed the SREC to specify a standard format and method of submission for the Delegate and Alternate lists, resolutions, and other records; and

WHEREAS, accurately processing the large volume of data collected from all the Texas conventions – 2,090 resolutions were received, entered, processed, formatted, and sorted from County and Senatorial Conventions in 2024 – is a monumental task which must be completed by volunteers before State Convention Committees convene; and

WHEREAS, the entry of documents that are not entirely in digital format with selectable text is needlessly time-consuming for staff and volunteers, creates great potential for errors and omissions, and delays both convention planning and the work of the State Convention Committees; and

WHEREAS, implementing a uniform digital format would greatly facilitate and expedite the many days of work required of the limited number of qualified and willing volunteers of the Republican Party of Texas and the State Convention Committees; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that pursuant to RPT Rule No. 32(a), the SREC authorizes the SREC Special Committee on Convention Planning and RPT staff to specify a standard format and method of submission for all reports and exhibits originating from the 2026 County and Senatorial District conventions; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the SREC requests that RPT staff work with the County and Senatorial District Temporary and Permanent Convention Chairs to require them to submit their reports using the specified format within the required deadlines; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the SREC commits to work with RPT staff to help educate County and Senatorial District Convention Chairs about the specified formats, and to offer to assist the Convention Chairs with compliance, if necessary; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that documents explaining the resulting approved formats and methods be distributed to all Republican County Chairs and SREC members in Texas.

Resolution in Support of the American Action on Iran’s Nuclear Facilities

WHEREAS, the United States of America’s attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities was an overwhelming success and a breakthrough for a more peaceful Middle East; and

WHEREAS, the military operation was carried out with surprise, secrecy, and deception, without a single American casualty; and

WHEREAS, the brave and skilled B-2 pilots from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri flew a 36-hour round-trip mission and guided the 30,000 pound Massive Ordnance Penetrator bombs with pinpoint precision into the ventilation shafts of Iran’s Fordo nuclear facility; and

WHEREAS, the expert flights of the B-2s could not have been carried out successfully without the tanker pilots who refueled the B-2s on their mission, the fighter pilots who flew in protection of the B-2s, and all the support and ground crews; and

WHEREAS, our combined Air and Naval Forces took out two other Iranian nuclear sites, Natanz and Isfahan, with a combination of bombs and submarine-fired Tomahawk Missiles; and

WHEREAS, the strength of and respect for the United States military might has been renewed worldwide; and

WHEREAS, President Donald J. Trump has shown great leadership and resolve in protecting the United States and Israel from potential use of nuclear weapons by the Iranian regime and has shown courage in his bold action in giving the final order for the surgical military operation; and

WHEREAS, Secretary of Defense (now Secretary of War) Pete Hegseth deserves great credit, as the military carried out the operation flawlessly and maintained secrecy without leaks; and

WHEREAS, General Dan “Razin” Caine, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is to be commended for his brilliant battle plan, Operation Midnight Hammer, which will be remembered as one of the most successful military operations of all time; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas commends and congratulates Commander in Chief President Donald J. Trump, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan “Razin” Caine, the brave and skilled B-2 pilots from Whiteman Air Force Base, the naval submarine commanders and crews, and all the US forces who played any support role in the successful outcome of Operation Midnight Hammer for a historic military operation, which has made the world a safer place; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas send a copy of this resolution to President Donald J. Trump, to Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, and to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dan Caine.

Resolution in Support of Republican Party of Texas Volunteers

WHEREAS, thousands of Republican Party of Texas volunteers dedicate their time, talent, and treasure to volunteer as precinct chairs, county chairs, party officers, and members of the State Republican Executive Committee; and

WHEREAS, certain elected officials and their proxies have threatened Republican Party of Texas volunteers with litigation and criminal prosecution; and

WHEREAS, certain elected officials and their proxies have promoted gossip and slander of Republican Party of Texas volunteers; and

WHEREAS, the Republican Party of Texas promotes volunteerism and actionable commitment to the Republican Party of Texas’ Principles, Platform, and Legislative Priorities; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas expresses its deep gratitude for the unwavering dedication of its volunteers; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas strongly urges elected officials to treat and honor these grassroots conservative volunteers with the utmost respect and appreciation.

Resolution Calling for a Special Session on Texas House Redistricting

WHEREAS, there are 62 Democrat members in the Texas House of Representatives, and more than 50 of them abandoned their constitutional duties by leaving the State of Texas in order to deny quorum, halting the work of the Texas Legislature; and

WHEREAS, the recent case of Petteway v. Galveston County has confirmed that the State of Texas is not required under federal law to maintain racially gerrymandered “coalition districts”; and

WHEREAS, a “coalition district” is a type of legislative or electoral district in the United States where two or more racial, ethnic, or language minority groups, when combined, form a majority of the voting age population; and

WHEREAS, there are currently 22 coalition districts in the Texas House that artificially empower Democrats and dilute the representation of Texas Republicans, in contradiction to the will of the majority of Texas voters; and

WHEREAS, the elimination of coalition districts and a lawful redrawing of the Texas House map would reflect the true conservative strength of Texas and give Republicans the ability to achieve a supermajority; and

WHEREAS, Texans expect their elected officials to fulfill their constitutional duties faithfully and to uphold the principles of fair and representative redistricting; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Texas State Republican Executive Committee urges Governor Greg Abbott to immediately call a Special Session of the Texas Legislature and to place on the call a redistricting of the Texas House of Representatives.

Resolution in Support of a Patriotic Framework for Texas Social Studies Education

WHEREAS, President Donald J. Trump, through an Executive Order reestablishing the 1776 Commission and directing preparation for America’s 250th Anniversary, has declared it the policy of the United States that schools provide patriotic education that instills admiration for our nation and rejects indoctrination in radical, anti-American ideologies; and

WHEREAS, the State Board of Education (SBOE) will meet September 8-12, 2025, to consider revisions to the framework for the K-8 Social Studies Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS); and

WHEREAS, the Social Studies framework determines how and when Texas students are taught about the history of Texas, the United States, and the world; and

WHEREAS, it is vital that Texas students learn history in a manner that strengthens civic understanding, honors our heritage, and builds pride in our nation and state; and

WHEREAS, the framework adopted by the SBOE will shape the worldview, values, and historical knowledge of future generations of Texans; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas affirms that the teaching of Texas and American history must emphasize the uniqueness of our founding principles, the blessings of liberty, and the greatness of America’s role in world history; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas urges the State Board of Education to adopt a Social Studies framework for the K-8 TEKS that prioritizes Texas and American history, emphasizes American exceptionalism, and instills patriotism in Texas students; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas supports a framework that teaches the story of Texas and America in a manner that highlights our nation’s unique contributions to freedom, prosperity, and human progress; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas opposes any framework that diminishes Texas or American history by diluting core content or replacing patriotic instruction with divisive or globalist perspectives; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls on the SBOE to reject frameworks that prioritize “world cultures” in place of world history or at the expense of Texas and American history, or one that minimizes the principles of faith, family, and freedom that form the foundation of our state and nation; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas urges the SBOE to use the White House Founders Museum as a resource for developing K-8 Social Studies TEKS and instructional materials and to align Texas’ Social Studies framework with the vision of President Donald J. Trump’s 1776 Commission and Task Force 250 so that Texas students are fully prepared to join the nation in celebrating America’s 250th Birthday – and every birthday thereafter – with knowledge, pride, and gratitude for the blessings of liberty.

Resolution Calling for Special Session to Address Key Republican Priorities

WHEREAS, the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform Plank 68 demands the abolition of the personal property tax; and

WHEREAS, the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform Plank 75 demands the Legislature to “Ax the Property Tax” for both businesses and individuals; and

WHEREAS, the 2024 Republican Party of Texas Platform Plank 76 states support for incremental steps toward the ultimate abolition of property tax; and

WHEREAS, the homestead exemption alone does not provide the largest property tax cut possible or lead Texas to a path toward the permanent elimination of property taxes; and

WHEREAS, compression leads to elimination of the school maintenance and operations (M&O) tax, which will give all private property owners the largest and most permanent tax cut possible; and

WHEREAS, “Ban Taxpayer-Funded Lobbying” is one of the eight Legislative Priorities chosen by delegates at the 2024 Republican Party of Texas State Convention; and

WHEREAS, multiple bills that did not adequately ban taxpayer-funded lobbying were filed during the 89th Regular Session of the Texas Legislature, and some bills were filed that would have enshrined the practice; and

WHEREAS, SJR 87 “Jocelyn’s Law” in the 89th Regular Session of the Texas Legislature did not receive the required two-thirds vote to send a State Constitutional Amendment to the voters to require judges to deny bail to individuals accused of violent felonies if those individuals had previously been convicted of felonies or were out on bail for similar offenses; and

WHEREAS, SJR 1 in the 89th Regular Session of the Texas Legislature did not receive the required two-thirds vote to send a State Constitutional Amendment to the voters to deny bail to illegal aliens accused of certain violent crimes; and

WHEREAS, President Donald J. Trump’s political team has met with the Texas Congressional delegation to discuss the possibility of redistricting the Texas Congressional map to support the Republican majority in Congress at the next midterm election; and

WHEREAS, an estimated 19,000 preborn children are currently killed in Texas every year via abortion pills delivered from out of state, and one in ten mothers who take these pills suffers severe medical complications within 45 days of taking these drugs; and

WHEREAS, the 89th Legislature did not adequately address the protection or privacy of girls and women in sex-separated spaces; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls for Governor Greg Abbott to immediately call a special session giving instruction to Texas legislators to pass meaningful legislation to eliminate property taxes; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas supports legislation that includes:

  • The vast majority of any surplus directed toward compression of rates to lead to eventual elimination of the M&O property tax
  • A further expanded homestead exemption
  • Replacing the appraisal system with a system that values property at the purchase price; appraisal caps for both residential and commercial property; and closing the loophole called the “Unused Increment Rate,” which allows taxing entities to bypass recently added limits to increases in property taxes (all as consistent with Plank 76); and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas strongly encourages the Texas Legislature and Governor Abbott to work together to pass legislation that will provide Texans with long-term property tax reform that will lead to the elimination of property taxes; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls for Governor Abbott to instruct Texas legislators to pass meaningful legislation to ban taxpayer-funded lobbying in the special session; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls for Governor Abbott to instruct Texas legislators to address critical public safety needs by passing bail reform in the special session; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls for Governor Abbott to instruct Texas legislators to bolster our Congressional majority and further enable President Trump to pass needed legislation by redrawing Texas Congressional districts in the special session; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls for Governor Abbott to instruct Texas legislators to further protect innocent preborn life by passing legislation to ban the abortion pill in Texas; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas calls for Governor Abbott to instruct Texas legislators to pass meaningful legislation to protect girls and women in restrooms, locker rooms, and other sex-separated spaces in the special session.

Resolution Denouncing the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

WHEREAS, the people of Texas, in steadfast commitment to the United States Constitution and the Texas Constitution, recognize the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) as an ideological threat due to its documented ties to terrorist organizations and activities that contravene constitutional values; and

WHEREAS, CAIR was named an unindicted co-conspirator in the United States v. Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development, the largest terrorism financing case in American history, due to its ties to Hamas – a designated Foreign Terrorist Organization responsible for the October 7, 2023, massacre of over 1,200 civilians in Israel, including Americans – and to the Muslim Brotherhood; and

WHEREAS, CAIR received funds from the Holy Land Foundation, which was classified as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist entity by the U.S. Treasury Department, prompting the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 2008 to sever all formal ties with CAIR; and

WHEREAS, Ghassan Elashi, a founding board member of CAIR-Texas, was convicted and sentenced to 65 years in federal prison for providing material support to Hamas, money laundering, and tax fraud, exemplifying the group’s long-standing alignment with anti-American terrorist interests; and

WHEREAS, since October 7, 2023, Hamas and its allies have launched more than 11,500 rockets into Israel with the stated goal of exterminating Israelis, Americans, Jews, and Christians, and establishing a global Islamic caliphate; and

WHEREAS, CAIR and its affiliates have repeatedly supported individuals convicted of terrorism-related offenses, including:

  • Abdurahman Alamoudi, who supported Hamas and Hezbollah at a CAIR rally and was later convicted as an Al-Qaeda financier
  • Randall Todd Royer, a former CAIR official sentenced to 20 years for aiding Al-Qaeda and the Taliban
  • Bassem Khafagi, CAIR’s former community affairs director, deported after pleading guilty to terrorism-related fraud
  • Rabih Haddad, a CAIR fundraiser tied to the Global Relief Foundation, which was shut down for funding Al-Qaeda
  • Muthanna al-Hanooti, a CAIR director convicted in 2011 for violating U.S. sanctions against Iraq
  • Sami Al-Arian, honored by CAIR despite his conviction for supporting Palestinian Islamic Jihad
  • Aafia Siddiqui, convicted of attempted murder of U.S. personnel and linked to a 2022 synagogue hostage situation and whose legal defense was endorsed by CAIR-Texas leaders; and

WHEREAS, the United Arab Emirates, a U.S. ally, designated CAIR as a terrorist organization in 2014; and

WHEREAS, CAIR leaders, including Maryland Executive Director Zainab Chaudry and National Executive Director Nihad Awad, have made inflammatory public statements, including comparing Israel to Nazi Germany and publicly celebrating the October 7th attacks on Israel; and

WHEREAS, CAIR-Texas has actively promoted Sharia-aligned policies in Texas public institutions, including:

  • Forcing Travis County Jail to alter mugshot procedures and clothing standards to comply with Islamic customs
  • Supporting HB 1044, which allows imams to perform marriages, including temporary and polygamous marriages incompatible with Texas law (89th Texas Legislature)
  • Endorsing HB 625 and HB 667, mandating halal meals in public schools, funded by the Islamic Society of North America – an unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation case (89th Texas Legislature)
  • Supporting HB 1883, which mandates accommodation for Islamic holidays on state exams (88th Texas Legislature)
  • Backing the April 5, 2025, Sugar Land Town Square Iftar – an event that enforced halal- only meals and broadcast the Islamic call to prayer (adhan) in a civic space – which was approved by the Sugar Land City Council, thereby advancing Islamic supremacy in violation of secular governance; and

WHEREAS, CAIR-Texas, under the leadership of Sameeha Rizvi, has actively worked to suppress constitutionally protected speech, including:

  • Orchestrating a campaign to cancel a peaceful protest by Christian women on April 29, 2025, at the Texas Capitol
  • Accusing lawmakers of “Islamophobia” for investigating alleged legal violations at the East Plano Islamic Center
  • Publishing a “Bullying Report” aimed at coercing public schools to label curriculum materials as “Islamophobic”
  • Supporting HCR 85, which mirrors Pakistan’s blasphemy laws by declaring March 15 (for a ten-year period) as the “Day to Combat Islamophobia,” effectively chilling criticism of Islamist ideology (89th Texas Legislature); and

WHEREAS, resolutions introduced during the 89th Legislature, such as HR 32 (“Pakistan Day”), HCR 18 (“Muslim Heritage Month”), and the legitimization of Harmony Public Schools – linked to the Turkish Gülen Movement, which has been accused of visa fraud and ideological indoctrination – further reveal an effort to advance Islamic nationalist and foreign-influenced ideologies within Texas; and

WHEREAS, the U.S. Constitution (Article IV, Section 4) guarantees each state a republican form of government and protection against domestic subversion, and the Texas Constitution requires elected officials to defend these principles against all threats, foreign and domestic; and

WHEREAS, any organization promoting foreign ideologies that threaten the U.S. Constitution, rule of law, and public safety must be actively opposed by those sworn to uphold the public trust; now

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the Republican Party of Texas calls upon all elected officials in Texas and throughout the United States – sworn to uphold the Texas and U.S. Constitutions – to:

  • Immediately suspend all contact and outreach activities with CAIR and its affiliates, including partnerships with schools, police departments, city councils, and government agencies
  • Publicly denounce CAIR’s anti-constitutional agenda, its documented terrorist affiliations, and its efforts to undermine American values, laws, and civic institutions
  • Take all appropriate legal and legislative actions to prevent CAIR’s ideological infiltration into Texas public life; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Republican Party of Texas will consider the failure by elected officials to oppose CAIR’s documented threat to constitutional governance to be a betrayal of their respective oaths of office and the public trust, and that we intend to hold those elected officials accountable for failing to protect the liberties, safety, and republican form of government guaranteed by the Constitutions of Texas and the United States.

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Stan Lambert

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Jared Patterson

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Angelia Orr

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Dade Phelan

Resolution of Concurrence with the Censure of State Representative Gary VanDeaver

Resolution on Parental Rights and Substance Abuse Treatment for Minors

Resolution to Require Artificial Intelligence Data Centers to Adhere to Oil and Gas Industry Water Protocols and Use Recycled Water

Resolution Urging the Reform of Eminent Domain Law in Texas

Resolution Recognizing Erin Anderson for Her Courageous Journalism and Contributions to Protecting Texas Students

Resolution Condemning the Use of Push Polling in Republican Primary Elections

Resolution in Support of Governor Abbott’s Designation of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) as Foreign Terrorists Organizations and Transnational Criminal Organizations

Resolution Honoring the Life and Service of Former State Representative Jodie Laubenberg

Resolution Honoring Edee LeAnn Sinclair

Resolution Calling for Immediate Corrective Action by the Texas Education Agency

Resolution Condemning the Texas Association of School Boards (TASB) and the Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA)

Resolution Condemning the Obstruction of the Ban on Taxpayer-Funded Lobbying and Calling for a Third Special Session

Resolution Supporting Designating The Muslim Brotherhood a Foreign Terrorist Organization

Resolution to Eliminate Energy Subsidies and Require Uniform Grid Reliability Standards

Resolution on Uniform Submissions of County and Senatorial District Convention Reports

Resolution in Support of the American Action on Iran’s Nuclear Facilities

Resolution in Support of Republican Party of Texas Volunteers

Resolution Calling for a Special Session on Texas House Redistricting

Resolution in Support of a Patriotic Framework for Texas Social Studies Education

Resolution Calling for Special Session to Address Key Republican Priorities

Resolution Denouncing the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

The Legislative Priorities for the 88th Session (2023-2024) of the Texas Legislature are:

Protect our Elections:

Restore felony penalties and enact civil penalties for Election Code violations, which shall be enforceable by any Texas jurisdiction, including the Texas Attorney General. Require citizenship verification of each voter. Restrict the distribution of mail-in ballots to only disabled, military, and citizens that are out of state. Reduce the time allowed for early voting, and eliminate the three-day gap between early voting and election day. Establish closed primaries in Texas. As technology evolves, we encourage the passage of legislation that ensures the security of our elections. Sub-Committee Chair Devvie Duke

Secure the Border and Protect Texans:

Texas shall immediately deny all taxpayer funded services and subsidies to illegal aliens. We call upon the Governor to assert his duty under Article 1, Section 10, Clause 3 of the US Constitution to declare an invasion on our Texas border and do everything in his power to protect Texans from this invasion. The legislature shall direct the Governor to enter into an Interstate Compact with one or more states for Border Security. Sub-Committee Chair Kelly Perry

Ban Gender Modification of Children:

Texas must ban chemical castration, puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, genital mutilation, bodily alteration surgery, psychological/social transitioning, and any other methods applied to or performed on children. Sub-Committee Chair Jill Glover

Stop Sexualizing Texas Kids:

Repeal Texas Penal Code “Obscenity Exemption” 43.24(c), which allows children access to harmful, explicit, or pornographic materials and 43.25(f)(2 3), which allows sexual performance by a child. In addition, prohibit teaching, exposure, and/or discussion of sexual matters (mechanics, feelings, orientation, or “gender identity” issues), and prohibit use or provision of related books and other materials using criminal, civil or other enforcement measures. Sub-Committee Chair Christin Bentley

Ban Democrat Chairs:

To ensure all legislative Republican priorities are given a fair opportunity to become law, the Republican-controlled Texas legislature shall adopt a rule that would end the practice of awarding committee chairmanships to Democrats. Sub-Committee Chair David Wylie

Abolish Abortion in Texas:

Abolish abortion by ensuring the right to life and equal protection of the laws to all preborn children from the moment of fertilization, including adopting effective tools to ensure the enforcement of our laws to protect life when district attorneys fail to do so. Sub-Committee Chair Jon Ker

Defend Our Gun Rights:

Protect our gun rights against threats, such as red flag laws, federal, state or other restrictions, by strengthening and preserving our inalienable rights under the second amendment to protect our life, liberty and property. The Texas Legislature should eliminate gun-free zones. Sub-Committee Chair Chris Byrd

Parental Rights and Educational Freedom:

Parents are the primary decision makers for their children in all matters. This authority shall be protected as an inalienable right. This shall include the choice of schooling where the money follows the child without strings attached, and enforcement and penalty mechanisms when parents’ rights are violated. The right to education shall be free from any social theories. Sub-Committee Chair Tisha Crowe

To repel invasion and deter illegal immigration:

  • Creating a Texas Department of Homeland Security to prevent illegal entry and trafficking, and to deport illegal aliens to Mexico or to their nations of origin.
  • Prohibiting, with mandatory fines and jail time, individuals, corporations, non-profits, governments, and social media entities from assisting or inciting illegal entry.
  • Requiring the use of E-Verify by all employers in Texas with significant penalties for business owners who violate this requirement.
  • Ending all subsidies and public services, including in-state college tuition and enrollment in public schools, for illegal aliens, except for emergency medical care.

Securing elections from each citizen’s registration to the final count of legal votes by:

  • Requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote.
  • Requiring the Counties and the Secretary of State to update the voter rolls at least quarterly.
  • Requiring a mandatory photo ID for every election, without exception.
  • Restricting mail-in ballots to disabled, military, and eligible citizens who are out of their county for the entire voting period.
  • Using only hand-marked, sequentially numbered paper ballots on anti-counterfeiting paper that are signed on the back by the election official at the voting location.
  • Standardizing in-person voting, with early voting limited to a period of no longer than nine (9) days, no gap before Election Day, and assigned-precinct voting locations only.
  • Counting ballots in precinct using a dumb-scanner method as soon as the ballot is returned by the voter and with publication of the results prior to submission to the County.
  • Closing party primaries for only registered Republicans.
  • Explicitly codifying the ability of the Attorney General to prosecute violations of the Election Code.
  • Removing existing Secretary of State waivers to comply with current Election Code.

Stopping the sexualization of minors, which leads to abuse, exploitation, and trafficking, by:

  • Prohibiting taxpayer funding to any entities that permit or promote sexually inappropriate content to minors and legislatively banning instruction on sexual orientation and gender ideology in schools and libraries.
  • Repealing affirmative defenses in Texas Penal Code (43.24, 43.25) and redefining “harmful materials” to remove loopholes provided by the modified Miller Test.
  • Establishing an independent Inspector General for Education to investigate fraud, waste, abuse, and criminal conduct within schools and refer findings to prosecutorial authorities.
  • Compelling superintendents to report sex crimes within schools to outside law enforcement and removing immunity from civil liability for schools and their employees.

The Republican-controlled Texas Legislature shall end the practice of awarding committee chairmanships to Democrats and require all committees to be majority Republican.

Prohibiting all forms of taxpayer-funded lobbying, including the use of tax dollars to hire lobbyists and payment of tax dollars to associations that lobby the Legislature.

Securing the integrity of Texas electricity production and delivery of abundant, reliable, and resilient energy, ensuring that the Texas grid can withstand any natural or manmade threat to include weather, cyber, physical, electromagnetic pulse (EMP) and geomagnetic disturbances (GMD).

Banning the sale of real property in Texas, and discontinuing taxpayer funding and incentives, to governments, entities, and proxies of China, Iran, North Korea, and Russia, and to individuals from these nations who are not legal permanent residents or citizens of the United States.

  • Resisting unconstitutional federal acts and mandates that restrict transportation, including mandatory kill switches in vehicles, road diets, and restrictions on the owner’s right to repair vehicles and equipment. Ensuring that Texans have medical freedom and can give or withhold consent for any vaccine or medical treatment without coercion, are not discriminated against based on vaccine status, and are not faced with any vaccine or medical mandate by public or private entities.

These priorities were chosen by delegates at the state convention, May 23-25, 2024 in San Antonio, Texas. Delegates were presented with a list of 15 topics selected by the Legislative Priorities Committee after a comprehensive review of resolutions passed at the precinct and senate district levels of the convention process. Delegates were allowed to vote on 8 topics, which became the official Legislative Priorities of the Republican Party of Texas.

Previous Legislative Priorities:

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