A proposition on the Texas Republican primary ballot deals with Sharia Law.
Early voting in the state of Texas primary is underway ahead of next week’s March 3 Election Day. Texas Scorecard reports that there are 10 propositions on the Republican ballot.
Many topics are covered in the propositions, including property tax, public school teachings, and illegal immigration among others. Proposition 10 says that the state should prohibit Sharia Law.
The purpose of the ballot propositions is to measure voter support to guide the party’s legislative interests in 2027, which will be voted on in June 2026. The listed propositions were approved last September by the State Republican Executive Committee in a 59-3 vote.
Tony Perkins, program host of Washington Watch, said that, unlike Judaism and Christianity, Islam is a political and legal system all rolled into one and that Sharia Law is part of it.
Frank Gaffney, president for Institute for the American Future, says there’s no misunderstanding the intent of those who practice Islam.
“Islamists — some call them, I think of them as Sharia supremacists — are very clear about this. They say that Islam is not a religion — that it is instead a complete way of life and, I believe, a political ideology at best and at worst a diabolical death cult,” says Gaffney.
Gaffney, Frank (Ctr for Security Policy) Gaffney
He said that Sharia Law is about power, and he talked about the goal of the proposition in Texas.
“The practical effect of this Proposition 10 is arguably the most important single measure being voted on in the course of this primary — that’s for sure — and maybe across the country because it offers the people an opportunity to say, ‘I don’t want to go that way. I do not want our country, our country’s various states, to submit to Sharia’,” states Gaffney. “And they shouldn’t either.”
The “Save Texas, Save America Campaign” has formed in response to inform people about Sharia Law and Proposition 10. Their goal is to gather support for banning Sharia in the country starting in Texas.
48 mosques have open in TX in the last 2 yrs (’23-’25). Across TX, there are 224 mosques in Dallas-Fort Worth and 109 in Houston.
Written by Robert Thorton for American Family News ~ February 26, 2026
~ Comment ~
Subdivisions in Plano, North Dallas, and Irving are openly marketed as muslim, Muslims living in these areas say it themselves, proudly showcasing Islamic-only parks.
“These aren’t ordinary subdivisions — they are purpose-built Islamic colonies: Mosques built directly into the neighborhood plans; Quran memorization schools that reject Western curricula; businesses that reflect Islamic values — halal-only offerings, Islamic signage, and Sharia-style behavioral expectations; streets named after Islamic figures: Ali Akbar Court, Amal Saleh Drive, Salma Jameel Court, Hafeela Drive, Zulaya Drive, Shemsa Way, homes with Quranic phrases, and mosques already embedded in the heart of their residential communities. This isn’t assimilation. It’s replication.
And it follows a well-known Islamic doctrine: Hijrah — migration for the advancement of Islam, not integration into host cultures. So TX, you have a problem, and it needs to be fixed ASAP. ~ Sally Coder
