A shocking revelation has emerged about Texas Republican Attorney General candidate Mayes Middleton that has conservatives across the Lone Star State asking serious questions about his true allegiances. The state senator quietly authored a bill in January 2025 that would have stripped local governments of their constitutional right to block religious housing developments – including the creation of Islamic cities operating under Sharia law.
Senate Bill 854, filed by Middleton and disguised as a solution to Texas' housing shortage, represents exactly the kind of globalist overreach that Texas voters thought they were done with. The legislation would have essentially forced small Texas towns to greenlight developments that could fundamentally transform their communities – whether residents wanted it or not.
Conservative activist Luigi Mucci sounded the alarm on social media, warning fellow Texans: "MY TEXAS FRIENDS KNOW THIS NAME.. STATE SEN. MAYES MIDDLETON! AUTHORED A BILL THAT WOULD STRIP LOCAL GOVERNMENTS OF THEIR ABILITY TO BLOCK RELIGIOUS HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS, INCLUDING THE CREATION OF ISLAMIC CITIES."
The bill represents a direct assault on local sovereignty and the rights of Texas communities to determine their own destiny.
This isn't just about housing policy – it's about preserving American values and constitutional governance. Local control has always been a cornerstone of conservative principles, allowing communities to make decisions that reflect their values and protect their way of life. Middleton's bill would have handed that power over to unelected bureaucrats and special interest groups.
The timing couldn't be worse for Middleton's AG ambitions. As President Trump works to secure America's borders and protect our constitutional republic, Texas voters are discovering that one of their supposed conservative champions was quietly working to undermine local sovereignty.
Patriots across Texas deserve to know: Is this the kind of "Republican" leadership they want enforcing the law in the nation's second-largest state? The answer should be crystal clear.
