

From cutting social services to changing election rules.

By Robert Downen
Democracy Reporter
The Texas Tribune

By Jeremy Schwartz
Reporter
ProPublica
Introduction
Over the past two decades, Tim OโHare methodically amassed power in North Texas as he pushed incendiary policies such as banning undocumented immigrants from renting homes and vilifying school curriculum that encouraged students to embrace diversity.
He rode a wave of conservative resentment, leaping from City Council member of Farmers Branch, a suburb north of Dallas, in 2005 to its mayor to the leader of the Tarrant County Republican Party.
Three years ago, OโHare sought his highest political office yet, running for the top elected position in the nationโs 15th-largest county, which is home to Fort Worth. Backed by influentialย evangelical churchesย and money from powerfulย oil industry billionaires, OโHare promised voters he would weed out โdiversity inclusion nonsenseโ and accused some Democrats of hating America. His win in November 2022 gave the GOPโs far right new sway over the Tarrant County Commissioners Court, turning a government that once prided itself on bipartisanship into a new front of theย culture war.
โI was not looking to do this at all, but they came after our police,โ he said inย his victory speechย on election night. โThey came after our schools. They came after our country. They came after our churches.โ
In Texas and across the country, far-right candidates have won control of school boards, swiftly banning books, halting diversity efforts and altering curricula that do not align with their beliefs. OโHareโs election in Tarrant County, however, takes the battle from the schoolhouse to county government, offering a rare look at what happens when hard-liners win the majority and exert their influence over municipal affairs in a closely divided county.
Since he was elected county judge โ a position similar to that of mayor in a city โ OโHare has pushed his agenda with an uncompromising approach. He has led efforts to cut funding to nonprofits that work with at-risk children, citing their views on racial inequality and LGBTQ+ rights. And he has pushed election law changes that local Republican leaders said would favor them.
OโHareโs rise in Tarrant County has come as he and his allies continue to align withย once-fringe figuresย while targeting private citizens with whom they disagree politically. In July, OโHare had a local pastor removed from a public meeting for speaking eight seconds over his allotted time. Days later, OโHare appearedย onstageย at a conference that urged attendees to resist a Democratic campaign to โrid the earthย of the white raceโ and embraceย Christian nationalism. The agenda prompted some right-wing Republicans toย condemn or pull outย of the event.
โWeโre seeing a shift of what conservatism looks like, and at the lower levels, theyโre testing how extreme it can get,โ said Robert Futrell, a sociologist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas who studies political extremism. โThe goal is to capture local Republican Party infrastructure and positions and own the party, turning it to more extremist goals.โ
Frequently, those aims include pushing back against broaderย LGBTQ+ acceptance, downplaying the nationโs history of racism and the lingering disparities caused by it, stemming immigration, andย falsely claimingย that America was founded as aย Christian nationย and that its laws and institutions should thus reflectย conservative evangelical beliefs.
OโHare declined multiple interview requests and did not answer detailed lists of questions emailed to him. His spokesperson instead touted aย list of eight accomplishments, including cutting county spending and lowering local property tax rates.
With 2.2 million people, Tarrant County is Texasโ most significant remaining battleground for Democrats and Republicans. When the county voted for Beto OโRourke for U.S. Senate in 2018 and Joe Biden for president in 2020, many political observers suspected the end was nigh for the era of Republican dominance in the purple county.
Two years later, voters elected the most hard-line Tarrant County leader in decades. After two years under OโHareโs leadership, voters in November will decide two races between Republican allies of OโHare and their Democratic opponents. The election of both Democrats would put OโHare into the minority.
The changes in county leadership have been dramatic, said OโHareโs Republican predecessor, Glen Whitley, who served as Tarrant County judge from 2007 until retiring in 2022. Whitley said OโHare has implanted an โus vs. themโ ideology that has increasingly been mainstreamed on the right.
โThey no longer feel like they have to compromise,โ said Whitley, whoย recently endorsedย Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris for president and U.S. Rep. Colin Allred of Texas in the U.S. Senate race. โYou either vote with these people 100% of the time, or youโre their enemy.โ
Political Rise
In 2005, when OโHare initially ran unopposed for a seat on the City Council in Farmers Branch, a small town just outside of Tarrant County, his platform included plans to revitalize the public library and bring in new restaurants. In 2006, however, OโHare began taking positions that were outside of the Republican mainstream at the time. He pushed for the diversifying town to declare English its official language, ban landlords from renting to residents without proof of citizenship, and stop publishing public materials in Spanish.
โThe reason I got on the City Council was because I saw our property values declining or increasing at a level that was below the rate of inflation,โ OโHareย said at the time. โWhen that happens, people move out of our neighborhoods, and what I would call less desirable people move into the neighborhoods, people who donโt value education, people who donโt value taking care of their properties.โ
Hispanic residents mobilized and sued to block the rental banโs implementation. OโHare doubled down: He pushed for Farmers Branch police to partner with immigration enforcement authorities to detain and deport people in the country illegally, and urged residents to oppose a grocerโs plan to open a store that catered to Hispanics, arguing it was โreasonableโ to prefer โa grocery store that appeals to higher-end consumers.โ
OโHare was elected as mayor in 2008. Foreshadowing moves heโd make as Tarrant County judge, heย abruptly ended a public meetingย after cutting off and removing one resident who criticized him. He led opposition to the local high schoolโs Gay-Straight Alliance and fought against a mentorship program for at-risk high school students that included volunteers from a Hispanic group that opposed his immigration resolution.
Meanwhile, the city continued to defend the immigration ordinance after it was repeatedly struck down by federal judges. As costs for the seven-year legal battle ballooned, Farmers Branch dipped into its reserves, cut nearly two dozen city employees andย outsourced servicesย at the library that OโHare had campaigned on improving during his City Council run. โAt the end of the day, this will be money well spent, and it will be a good investment in our communityโs future,โ OโHare said after the town laid off staff in 2008.
OโHare stepped down as mayor in 2011. Three years later, after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear the cityโs appeal, Farmers Branch stopped defending the ordinance. It was never enforced, but the related lawsuits cost the town $6.6 million,ย city officials saidย in 2016.
After leaving office, OโHare moved his family a few miles away to Tarrant County, where demographic changes have dropped the share of white residents from 62% of the countyโs population in 2000 to 43% in 2020.
Home to some of the nationโs most influential evangelical churches and four of former President Donald Trumpโs spiritual advisers, the county is an epicenter for ultraconservative movements in Texas, including those that call for Christians toย exert dominanceย over all aspects of society. In 2016, OโHare was elected chair of the Tarrant County GOP. Under him, the party distributed mailers that listed the primary voting records for local candidates โ breaking with the longstanding nonpartisan tradition of county elections.
In 2020, following a series ofย racist incidentsย at the mostly white Carroll High School in Southlake โ including one viral clip in which white students chanted the N-word โ OโHare co-founded a political action committee that raised hundreds of thousands of dollars to oust school board members who supported the Carroll Independent School Districtโs plans for diversity and inclusion programming.ย The disputeย helped catapult the small Tarrant County suburb into the national spotlight amid Republican panic over critical race theory and โgender ideology,โ and created aย blueprint for right-wing organizingย that wasย copied in suburbsย across America.
In 2021, OโHare launched his campaign for Tarrant County judge, squaring off in the GOP primary against the more moderate five-term mayor of Fort Worth, whom he painted as a RINO, or โRepublican in name only.โ OโHare rode a wave fueled by backlash to COVID-19 mandates, baseless election fraud conspiracy theories and opposition to what he called โdiversity inclusion nonsense,โย according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. OโHareโs campaign was condemned by moderate Republicans, including Whitley, the outgoing judge, who accused him of trying to โdivide and pit one group against another.โ OโHare won the primary by 23 percentage points.
Whitley and other longtime Republican leaders declined to endorse OโHare in the 2022 general election. It didnโt matter; by then, he was backed by a coalition of far-right megadonors, pastors and churches. His top campaign donors included a PAC funded byย Tim Dunnย andย Farris Wilks. The two west Texasย oil billionairesย have givenย tens of millionsย of dollars to candidates and groups that oppose LGBTQ+ rights, support programs that wouldย use public dollarsย to pay for private schools, and have led efforts toย push moderatesย out of the Texas GOP.
OโHare received another $203,000 from the We Can Keep It PAC. The PACโs treasurer is an elder at Mercy Culture Church in Fort Worth, whose leadersย have endorsedย multiple GOP candidates, including OโHare. The churchโsย pastor has claimedย Democrats canโt be Christian and dared critics to complain to the IRS that the church wasย flouting federal prohibitionsย on political activity by nonprofits.
Transforming Elections

OโHare took office in early 2023, as Republicans continued to question President Joe Bidenโsย razor-thin win in Tarrant Countyย two years earlier.ย A 2022 auditย by Texasโ Republican secretary of state found no evidence of widespread fraud and that Tarrant County held โa quality, transparent election.โ
Despite that โ and whileย saying he had no proof of malfeasanceย โ OโHare immediately set out to prevent cheating he claimed was responsible for Democratsโ steady rise in the long-purpling county. Soon after taking office, he helpedย launch an โelection integrity unitโย that heโd lead with the county sheriff who had spoken at a โStop the Stealโ rally in the days after the 2020 presidential election.
No Democrats were initially on the unit. Nor was the countyโs elections administrator, Heider Garcia, who by then had facedย three years of harassment, death threats andย accusations of being a secret agentย for Venezuelaโs socialist government by election fraud conspiracy theorists. Garcia opted forย radical transparencyย โ making himself accessible to answer questions about the election process and earning praise from across the political aisle for his patient public service.
But Garcia lasted only a few months under OโHare: In April 2023, he resigned his position, citing his relationship with OโHare in hisย resignation letter. โJudge OโHare, my formula to โadminister a quality transparent electionโ stands on respect and zero politics; compromising on these values is not an option for me,โ Garcia wrote. โYou made it clear in our last meeting that your formula is different, thus, my decision is to leave.โ
Garcia, now the Dallas County elections administrator, did not respond to an interview request.
One day after Garcia resigned, OโHareย told membersย of True Texas Project โ a group whose leadersย have sympathizedย with aย white nationalistย mass shooter andย endorsed Christian nationalismย โ that he was encouraged by the potential for low turnout in that yearโs upcoming elections, which he said would help Republicans win more local seats. (OโHare previously served on True Texas Projectโs advisory team, according to aย 2021 social media postย by the groupโs CEO, Julie McCarty).
In June 2024, the election integrity unit reported that, over the previous 15 months, it received 82 complaints of voter fraud โ or about 0.009% ofย all votes castย in the 2020 presidential election in Tarrant County โ and that none had resulted in criminal charges. Meanwhile, OโHare has proposed a number of changes to the election system that Tarrant County GOP leaders have said were intended toย help Republicansย or hurt Democrats.
In February, OโHare and fellow Republicans cut $10,000 in county funding to provide free bus rides to low-income residents, a program thatย Tarrant GOP leaders decriedย as a scheme to โbus Democrats to the polls.โ
O’Hare said he opposed the funding on fiscal grounds. โI donโt believe itโs the county governmentโs responsibility to try to get more people out to the polls,โ he said before the vote.
A few months later, commissioners prohibited outside organizations from registering voters inside county buildings after Tarrant County GOP leaders raised concerns about left-leaning organizations holding registration drives. Democrats and voting rights groups assailed the moves as attempts to lower voter turnout.
In September, OโHare proposed eliminating voting locations on some college campuses that he called a โwaste of money and manpower.โ But this time, his Republican allies on the Commissioners Court said they couldย not go alongย with the vote and joined Democrats to defeat the measure. Tarrant County Republican leaders condemned the recalcitrant commissioners in a public resolution that made it clear they saw the effort to close polls on college campuses as a move thatย would help them in November.ย The GOP commissioners, the resolution claimed, โvoted with Democrats on a key election vote that undermines the ability of Republicans to win the general election in Tarrant County.โ
Manny Ramirez, one of those Republican commissioners, said in an interview he thinks the GOP should try to win college students with their conservative ideas rather than limit on-campus voting.
โWeโve been providing those same exact sites for nearly two decades,โ Ramirez said. His role as commissioner, he added, is to provide โequal access to all of our citizens.โ
Targeting Youth Programs
Less than a year into his term, OโHare began targeting long-established nonprofits whose websites and social media accounts contained language the county judge considered politically objectionable on issues of gender and race.
In October 2023, he moved to block a $115,000 state grant to Girls Inc. of Tarrant County, for its Girl Power program offering summer camps and mentoring to help participants focus on stress management, hygiene and self-esteem.
About 90% of the youth served by Girls Inc. of Tarrant County are people of color and come from families making less than $30,000 a year, according toย the organizationโs website.
Four months earlier, the national Girls Inc. group, which has chapters across the country, had tweeted out its support forย abortion rightsย andย LGBTQ+ pride, which conservative media and activists seized upon.
โGirls Inc. is an extremist political indoctrination machine advocating for divisive liberal politics,โ Leigh Wambsganss, the chief communications officer of Patriot Mobile, told commissioners. Patriot Mobile is a Christian nationalist cellphone company whose PAC has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in support ofย far-right candidatesย across Tarrant County, including OโHare.
Local leaders of Girls Inc., who did not respond to requests for comment, said at the time their chapter is independent of the national organization. They told commissioners they were reviewing their affiliation with the parent organization.
In denying the funds, OโHare told the Commissioners Court the government shouldnโt support โan organization that is so deeply ideological and encourages the children that they are teaching to go advocate for social change.โ
Commissioners killed the contract on a 3-2 party-line vote.
Six months later, OโHare raised questions about another local nonprofit, Big Thought. It provides youth in the Tarrant County juvenile detention system with summer and after-school programs aimed at helping them get their lives back on track through music, acting and performance arts. Big Thought has had a contract with the county for the past three years andย says on its websiteย that youth who go through its programs reoffend at a lower rate than those who donโt, potentially saving taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars in juvenile detention costs.
At an April meeting of the Tarrant County Juvenile Board, OโHare raised questions about the programโs advocacy for โracial equityโ after reading the organizationโs website,ย according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. (The boardโs meetings are not streamed or recorded).
Asked about OโHareโs concerns, a Big Thought spokesperson said in an email that the organization focuses on the realities facing at-risk youth in Tarrant County. โYoung people in our communities experience challenges like economic inequality, racism, and more, and it is our responsibility to provide a safe place to build the skills they need so they can thrive,โ said Evan Cleveland, Big Thoughtโs senior director of programs.
The countyโs juvenile probation director, Bennie Medlin, who has not responded to requests for comment, told board members the program had not had any โnegative resultsโ during the partnership, according to minutes of the meeting. Members of the board were not swayed and voted not to renew the program.
Three months later, at the juvenile boardโs July meeting, OโHare and a district judge proposed ending a contract with the Pennsylvania nonprofit Youth Advocate Programs after probing the nonprofit about the position it had taken in briefs to the Supreme Court, its opinion on school choice and police in schools, and whether โthey work to eliminate systemic racism,โ according to minutes of the meeting.
Board members voted to cut ties with the nonprofit, which had worked with the county for over three decades to provide mentoring, job training and substance abuse counseling as alternatives to detention.
Gary Ivory, the organizationโs president, said that a week after the July vote, he met with OโHare for about a half-hour in OโHareโs office. He said OโHare questioned him about his personal views on the LGBTQ+ community and โhot-button cultural war issues.” Also during that meeting, OโHare pulled up Youth Advocate Programsโ website, Ivory said, and asked him why the group takes funding from Everytown for Gun Safety, a nonprofit that advocates for gun control.
โThey are saying if anybody is too woke in Tarrant County, we are going to put them in the dustbin of history and they wonโt exist anymore,โ Ivory said.
On Oct. 1, Tarrant County commissioners voted to sign a similar contract with another nonprofit. At the meeting, OโHare denied pushing to kill Youth Advocate Programsโ contract โbecause of a phrase on a website.โ Instead, he claimed Ivory told the juvenile board that 15% of the money Tarrant County gives the program goes to lobbyists and to โlaw firms to file amicus briefs against many of the things the people in that room that voted disagree with.โ
Ivory said that is incorrect. โI said generally 85 cents on a dollar stays in Tarrant County and 15 cents goes to overhead,โ he said. โAnd I made it clear that YAP doesnโt spend any of that 15 cents on the dollar for lobbying.โ
Phil Sawyer, a longtime juvenile probation officer in Tarrant County who retired two years ago, said the program was well respected within the department and helped give badly needed services that the department could not provide. โItโs a shocker,โ he said of the countyโs decision to cut ties with the group. โWithout them, it would just be insanity. There are things we can do as probation officers, but itโs not the same.โ
Stifling Dissent

In recent months, OโHare has taken aim at private citizens who disagree with him, ordering several political opponents removed from Commissioners Court meetings and calling for the firing of a local college professor.
As Ryon Priceโs allotted three minutes ofย public commentย during the July 2 Commissioners Court meeting expired, OโHare issued a sharp warning to the man, a local Baptist minister who was a frequent antagonist of OโHareโs at such meetings: โYour time is up.โ
Itโs not uncommon for residents to go over their allotted time during public comment sessions. But after Price continued criticizing conditions in the Tarrant County Jail for an extra eight seconds, OโHare ordered sheriffโs deputies to step in: โHeโs now held in contempt. Remove him.โ
As Price was escorted out of the meeting, someone in the audience booed. โWas that you?โ OโHare snapped. โWell, try me.โ
Price said that in the lobby, sheriffโs deputies handed him a trespassing warning that banned him from the premises. โI think itโs symbolic of a broader, more authoritarian shiftโ in Tarrant County government, Price said of his removal. โAnd I have to wonder if he really wants to govern this place, a place that splits red and blue evenly, or just please some higher-ups in his own party.โ
Price appealed his ban to the Tarrant County sheriffโs department and said the appeal was granted in August, allowing him to resume addressing the court during public comment sessions.
Minutes after Price was escorted from that July meeting, Lon Burnam, a Democrat who served nine terms in the Texas House, approached OโHare to confront him about his decision to cut off another commissioner who was requesting information about sheriff department policies. Burnam later received a trespass warning from sheriffโs deputies and said he is banned from public meetings until Jan. 1.
At their meeting two weeks later, commissioners amended public speaking rules as OโHare warned residents that โrefusal to abide by the Commissioners Courtโs order or my order as the presiding judge or continued disruption of the meeting may result in arrest and prosecution under the laws of the state of Texas.โ
OโHare said the changes were needed to ensure civility in the meeting room. โThis is not in any way shape or form attempting to stifle free speech,โ he saidย during the meeting.
Also in August, OโHare called for the firing of a Texas Christian University professor over social media posts from 2021 that called for police to be abolished. The professor, Alexandra Edwards, drew the ire of local right-wing activists after writing about them and the pro-Christian nationalism conference that OโHare attended in July. Not long after, a local right-wing website published an article about her โantifaโ views in which OโHare called her a โradicalโ and said Edwards should be fired.
โThe full force of the repression of the Tarrant County GOP and the various right-wing extremists kind of came down upon me,โ Edwards said in an interview, adding that she was inundated with threats and harassment.
Such crackdowns are a sign that the local GOP has been taken over by extremists, said Whitley, the countyโs Republican former judge.
โTheyโve gone so far to the right that most folks who used to be adamant Republicans are not so much anymore,โ he said, adding that some in the GOP are too afraid of retaliation by OโHare to speak out publicly.
OโHareโs term doesnโt end until 2027. But this yearโs elections will decide which party controls the powerful commissioners court and, in some ways, will be a referendum on the first two years of his tenure in county government.
Whitley said he hopes it will be a unifying moment for voters from across the political spectrum. โI want us to be Americans, to be Texans and to not just care about parties,โ he said. โI hope people will vote for the best person and not just vote for the party.โ
Originally published by ProPublica, 10.11.2024, under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States license.


