Betrayal often wears the mask of cooperation. Dustin Burrows, the new speaker of the Texas House, has donned that mask with a plan that promises Republican control while surreptitiously gifting legislative dominance to the Democrats. His proposal—to maintain GOP-chaired committees while granting Democrats control of key subcommittees and vice chair positions—is nothing short of a political Trojan horse. On its face, it appears to preserve Republican leadership; in reality, it undermines the conservative agenda by ceding control over the legislative bottlenecks where policy lives or dies.

This isn’t just a mistake; it’s a five-alarm fire for Republicans who believe they have the mandate to govern. If enacted, this plan would ensure that nothing Democrats oppose reaches the House floor. And yet, many in the GOP seem willing to believe the illusion of power that Burrows is peddling. The question is not merely why Burrows has adopted such a strategy but why so many Republicans appear ready to go along with it.
The last session of the Texas House was a cautionary tale for Republicans. Dade Phelan was elected speaker by exchanging key committee chairs to Democrats in return for their votes, a move that left conservatives disillusioned and sparked a GOP rebellion. This session, we are witnessing a repeat performance, but in a more pernicious form under Dustin Burrows, a Phelan ally. While Democrats won’t serve as committee chairs, they will occupy vice chair roles with expanded power and dominate subcommittee chairs, where legislation can be killed or bottled up. These subcommittees, often overlooked by the public, are where the real work of legislation is done—and where bills can quietly be buried before they ever reach a vote.
Burrows was elected speaker with the help of Democrats, a fact that should set off alarm bells for anyone who values conservative governance. His plan, far from being a compromise, ensures that Democrats retain de facto control while Republicans are left to playact as the ruling party. It is as if Burrows learned all the wrong lessons from history, doubling down on a failed strategy under the guise of bipartisanship.
To understand the full implications of Burrows’ proposal, one must grasp the mechanics of legislative power. Committees may set the agenda, but subcommittees are the gatekeepers. By placing Democrats in charge of these crucial bodies, Burrows is effectively giving them veto power over any conservative legislation. This arrangement allows Democrats to quietly stifle bills without the fanfare of a public vote, shielding their actions from scrutiny while frustrating the Republican base.
Imagine a bill that seeks to curtail DEI mandates or defend election integrity. Under Burrows’ plan, such legislation could be buried in a subcommittee controlled by Democrats, ensuring it never sees the light of day. Republicans may retain nominal control of the House, but that control becomes meaningless when the legislative pipeline is clogged with Democratic roadblocks.
Burrows’ plan hinges on the illusion of Republican control. GOP lawmakers will hold the chair positions, providing them with the optics of leadership. Yet, as Mark Twain once said, “There are lies, damned lies, and statistics.” The statistics Burrows is banking on are those of perception: Republican chairs will create the appearance of governance, while Democrats quietly wield the true power behind the scenes.
This illusion is not merely cynical; it is dangerous. By pacifying the Republican caucus with symbolic roles, Burrows is lulling the party into a false sense of security. The consequences will become apparent only when it is too late to reverse course, as conservative bills die in committee and the GOP base grows increasingly disillusioned.
The inclusion of Democrat vice chairs adds insult to injury. Vice chairs play a critical role in shaping committee agendas and steering discussions. With Democrats occupying these roles, even GOP-chaired committees will find themselves constrained. The vice chairs will have the ability to influence key decisions calling for impact studies and other delay tactics, ensuring that conservative priorities are diluted or derailed entirely.
This strategy is akin to inviting the fox into the henhouse and then marveling at the disappearance of eggs. Republicans who support Burrows’ plan are complicit in their own disempowerment, trading meaningful authority for empty titles and the illusion of bipartisanship.
The stakes could not be higher. Texas Republicans campaigned on a platform of conservative principles: defending election integrity, pushing back against federal overreach and resisting the creeping influence of woke ideology. Burrows’ plan jeopardizes all of this by giving Democrats effective control over the legislative process. It ensures that no bill Democrats oppose will ever reach the floor for a vote, rendering the GOP’s majority meaningless.
This betrayal is not just a tactical error; it is a fundamental abdication of responsibility. Republican voters entrusted their elected officials with the mandate to govern according to conservative principles. Burrows’ plan squanders that trust, replacing it with a sham arrangement that empowers the very forces conservatives sought to defeat.
Dustin Burrows’ plan is a political sleight of hand that threatens to unravel the conservative agenda in Texas. By granting Democrats control over subcommittees and vice chair positions, he is not forging bipartisanship but enabling sabotage. Republicans who support this strategy are deluding themselves into believing they hold power, when in reality they are handing the keys to the House to Democrats.
This is a moment of reckoning for the GOP. The lessons of the last session are clear: power, once ceded, is rarely regained without a fight. Republicans must reject Burrows’ plan and demand a leadership strategy that reflects their mandate to govern. Anything less is not compromise; it is capitulation. The Republican base will not be fooled by the illusion of control, nor should they be. The time to act is now, before the conservative agenda is buried in the graveyard of subcommittees.
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Why are Republican’s so weak?. They act as if were not in charge at all. The democrats are not in power anymore and we should push them off as much as possible. Many Republicans are to liberal for us to be of any consequence for this term. We must change the tide of things and overtake the opposition with ALL WE HAVE or we will not accomplish very much and that is unacceptable! Either were all in to WIN IT and make changes that can not be compromised today and into the future. America has been going in the wrong direction with concerns about sex and pronouns and how many genders do they think we have. GOD made Man and Woman no in-betweens our focus must be for the improvements to military and protecting the United States from countries that want to harm US AND TAKE US OVER. Make upgrades on the cost of housing so many more can enjoy home ownership. GOD PLEASED HELP US if it’s in Your will as government has tried to PUSHED YOU out of our lives.
Demorats are always inventing ways to cheat to control. I WOULD NEVER TRUST anything they say or do.
Burrows and other traitors to their party, need to be recalled/fired for not representing the desires of those that elected them! They work for the people, time they learn that the people do not work for them!