• What Happened: The Texas House has passed seven Muslim-themed resolutions in 2025 alone, including recognizing Ramadan, Eid al-Fitr, and commending an organization with ties to CAIR and the Muslim Brotherhood.
  • Why It Matters: Six more Muslim-themed bills are currently pending, including one to designate May as Muslim Heritage Month, one to grant Imams legal authority to perform marriages, and one to establish a decade-long Combat Islamophobia Day.
  • Bottom Line: Conservative voices are now calling on Texans to look up who voted for these bills and pay close attention to who is running for the State House in upcoming elections.

While Texas conservatives have been fighting the border crisis, combating child trafficking, and pushing back against the radical left, something else has been quietly happening inside the Texas House. Republican lawmakers have been passing bill after bill after bill catering to Muslim interests, and most Texans have no idea.

Seven Muslim-themed resolutions passed in 2025 alone. H.R. 34 recognized the holy month of Ramadan. H.R. 36 recognized Eid al-Fitr. H.R. 32 recognized Pakistani Day at the Texas Capitol. H.R. 408 honored Bangladeshi Day. H.R. 1802 honored and memorialized an Islamic figure. And H.R. 37 commended the Emgage Texas Emerging Leaders Program, an organization with documented ties to CAIR and the Muslim Brotherhood.

That last one should stop every conservative Texan cold. Governor Greg Abbott designated both CAIR and the Muslim Brotherhood as terrorist organizations in November 2025. And yet Republican state lawmakers voted to commend an organization connected to both of them.

It does not stop there. Six more Muslim-themed bills are currently pending. H.C.R. 18 wants to designate May as Muslim Heritage Month. H.B. 1044 wants to grant Imams legal authority to perform marriages in Texas. H.C.R. 85 wants to designate March 15 as Combat Islamophobia Day for ten consecutive years through 2035. H.R. 45 wants to recognize April 29 as Texas Muslim Capitol Day. H.B. 667 wants to expand halal food options. And H.R. 641 wants to establish Ismaili Day.

Conservative commentator Kaylee Campbell put it plainly. "I think it's fair to say that we have a slight issue going on in the Texas House with all of these things being passed that have nothing to do with Texas," she said. "Not only do I urge you to look up these bills, try to see who voted for them and make sure you're paying attention to who's running for the State House in these upcoming elections."

Texas is supposed to be the last line of defense for American values and constitutional governance. The voters who sent these representatives to Austin deserve to know exactly what they have been doing while nobody was watching.

Look up the votes. Know the names. Remember them in November.