Texas Legislative Scorecards: See Where These Candidates Stand

We asked candidates running for State Representative in House Districts 115, 113, 104, and 47 about their positions on 13 key pieces of legislation affecting civil rights and civil liberties in our state. We then studied the results to determine which candidates were supportive of ACLU of Texas priorities. The scores below reflect how current state lawmakers voted during the 2017 legislative session. For challengers, the scores indicate how they would have voted, as indicated in their responses to our candidate questionnaire. Here are the bills we analyzed in each section. Click the header to find out more about each category:

By Brad Pritchett

Find out how these candidates voted on these priority issues.

Supporting Our Constitution, Today and Always

On this date -- some 231 years ago in Philadelphia -- 39 delegates from the fledgling nation known as the United States of America came together to sign the final iteration of its Constitution.

By Selene Escalera

Constitution Day

Trump’s Border Wall Obsession Is a Threat to the Southwest Border Region

Given all the false rhetoric and rage that drive President Trump’s fixation on building his border wall, it’s critically important to step back from that noise and think about people and places that would be jeopardized if his wall obsession continues to be funded by Congress.

By Astrid Dominguez, Chris Rickerd, ACLU National Political Advocacy Department

CBP Officers at the border

‘My Son is Traumatized’: One Separated Family’s Reunion

Inside a Texas detention center, 3-year-old Sammy* was asleep next to his father, Ever Reyes-Mejia, on the ground with a tin foil emergency blanket when an Immigration and Customs Enforcement official told Ever that he needed to go see an immigration judge and fill out some paperwork. Ever asked whether he should leave his son asleep and was told that he would return shortly and there was no need to wake him.

By Imelda Mejia, Abril Valdes

Reyes-Mejia mother and son

Jeff Sessions’ Illegal Attacks on Asylum Seekers

Grace,* an indigenous woman from a small village in Guatemala, came to the United States seeking protection from beatings, sexual assault, and death threats. Grace made the long and treacherous journey from Central America, arriving at the border in June. She was deeply traumatized, having been raped, beaten, and threatened with death for more than two decades at the hands of her abusive partner, a non-indigenous man, who frequently disparaged and mocked her for being indigenous and unable to read and write.

By Cody Wofsy, Staff Attorney, ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project, Katrina Eiland, Staff Attorney, ACLU Immigrants’ Rights Project

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions

At U.S. Ports of Entry, the Government Is Denying Asylum to Those Seeking Refuge

Good things don’t always come to those who wait. 

By Astrid Dominguez

minor at border bridge

‘Back Up, Motherfuckers,’ A Cop Yells at Kids With His Gun Drawn

Over the past week, a Facebook video went viral, showing an El Paso police officer drawing his gun on a group of Latino kids outside a community center and handcuffing the person taking the video. The video has drawn outrage — and rightly so — as an illustration of the urgent need for robust police policies and training emphasizing de-escalation and how to interact with youth.

By Kali Cohn

Officer leaning against car

Inside Trump’s Migrant Terror Machine

On Tuesday, in response to the ACLU’s lawsuit challenging family separation, a federal court ordered the reunification of thousands of families torn apart by the Trump administration. The decision was a rare victory for civil rights, immigrants’ rights, and common human decency in the age of Trump.

By Edgar Saldivar, Thomas Buser-Clancy

blog cover

Chaos and Cruelty for Immigrants Held in Brownsville, Texas

In the federal courthouse in Brownsville, in the space of 75 minutes, 63 people were read their charges, asked to plead guilty or not guilty, and sentenced. Handcuffed and chained at the waist, they had to stoop to raise their right hands.

By Terri Burke

detainee