Texas Truth:

89th Legislative Session Recap

Health + Food Justice

A Culture of Care

Every Texan envisions a state where a culture of care drives positive health outcomes for all.

In the 89th Legislative Session, we welcomed new Health and Food Justice (HFJ) team members who laid the groundwork for and placed the Every Texan stamp on a new era in health and food policy work at the Capitol. With years of experience in the ecosystem, our analysts utilized earned trust and cultivated new relationships to stand apart as powerfully equipped advocates at the Capitol. Their work acknowledged the lived experience of those seeking access to healthcare and nutritious food, and the complex landscape of policy that determines whether or not Texans can build healthy futures.

Health + Food Justice

Every Texan, our partners, and lawmakers overcame harmful healthcare policy proposals over the 140-day session.

With threats to federal health coverage looming, Every Texan’s work to stabilize healthcare financing, improve delivery systems, and increase coverage and utilization rates across the state is more important than ever.

We also worked to remove barriers to food access for children, college students, people with diet-related diseases, and people living in food deserts. SNAP and other food assistance programs that are supported by that funding face a similar threat from the federal government. Texas leaders warned of increased challenges ahead when the governor vetoed funding for Summer EBT following the 89th Legislative Session, citing federal uncertainty for the program’s funding as his reasoning.

The greater the threat, the greater our grit. Every Texan’s commitment to health and food justice is unwavering and we look forward to continuing our work in both regular and special sessions to come. coverage and utilization rates across the state is more important than ever.

Every Texan

Priorities

Health + Food Justice

Restore Funding, Support Local Enrollment Assistance, and Protect Patient Data

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Health + Food Justice

Remove Harmful Barriers to Food Assistance

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Education

For All Texans

Education

Texas kids and the public schools they attend are worth more than a down payment.

For years, Every Texan has delivered reliable, data-driven recommendations for public education policy. Our advocacy in the 89th Legislative Session faced insurmountable political pressure, though our sound policy was driven by the knowledge that every kid in Texas can receive a free, quality education where they live and play if investments are made that center our public school system.

For years, Every Texan has delivered reliable, data-driven recommendations for public education policy.

Our advocacy in the 89th Legislative Session faced insurmountable political pressure, though our sound policy was driven by the knowledge that every kid in Texas can receive a free, quality education where they live and play if investments are made that center our public school system.

This session, the fight to prevent public school dollars from funding private schools was lost when the Legislature approved the creation of an arbitrary, unaccountable third system of education: the private school voucher program. Policy experts, advocates, and families across Texas relied on our data in that fight. We disseminated impact numbers, district by district, for rural and urban school districts alike. Our work against vouchers forged new coalition opportunities with rural, conservative Texans who find common cause in our defense of public education. Increasingly, conservative and rural voucher opponents see Every Texan as a trusted and sound voice in defense of public education.

As we look forward to ongoing analysis of the impact of vouchers on Texas communities, we welcome the $8 billion investment the Legislature made in public schools—a down payment on the future of public education in the state of Texas. Notably, our years-long effort to shift school funding to depend on enrollment rather than attendance was successful with HB2 and because of the crucial support it received from both sides of the aisle. While enrollment based funding will not be implemented across the board, HB2 created initial building blocks for the broad implementation of enrollment based funding in future sessions.

The $8 billion investment provided by HB2 will reshape public school funding for years to come, and Every Texan encourages Texas policymakers to recommit to policy choices based on uncompromised, sound research and data. To properly invest in our state’s future, policy makers must first understand the true cost of providing each child in Texas with a free, quality education. In a state that proudly claims abundance, it’s time to provide more than a down payment on the futures of our 5.5 million children. We envision a future where our policy makers rely on data to fully fund our public education system, ensuring that neighborhood schools can be an entry point to bright futures for every child.

Every Texan

Priorities

Education

School Finance

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Education

Vouchers

Fair Taxes

Invest in Texas

Fair Taxation

Targeting tax exemptions to help those who need it most is not only good sense, but the right thing to do.

Tax cuts remained a dominant narrative this session. Every Texan’s work on the state budget and for fair taxes is distinct. We persevere in our analysis and perspective, pushing back against the pro-tax-cut environment that favors wealthy homeowners and businesses. We continue to push the conversation toward other targeted relief options like renters' rebates, circuit breakers, or increased homestead exemptions.

Every Texan examined, reported on, and expressed opposition to the state’s ongoing fiscal commitment to big, misdirected tax cuts for the wealthy and their long-term budgetary impacts.

With many big cuts passing again in the 89th Session, Every Texan could be found in each House Ways and Means Committee hearing, reminding policy makers that across-the-board property tax cuts disproportionately benefit wealthy property owners and harm the state's ability to fund essential public services.

As leaders in budget and tax analysis, a key goal of our tax work in the 89th Session was to equip coalitions with valuable analysis and policy language. By supporting smaller-scale tax law changes to benefit low-income Texans, as well as other budget matters impacting tax incentives, housing, and sustainability, we forged strong relationships that will shift the tax discussion for years to come. We laid the groundwork for continued research and conversations with members and the media.

Despite our failure to move bills that would have helped first-time homebuyers, incentivized grocery stores in food deserts, and instituted a flat-dollar local option homestead exemption, our commitment to that targeted work remained unwavering. In a tax-regressive state sitting on a wealth of resources, we are here to champion fiscal fairness so that every Texan sees investments in their communities and future.

Every Texan

Priorities

Fair Taxation

Make the Property Tax System More Fair

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Fair Taxation

Tracking the State Purse for Efficiency and Effectiveness

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Worker Power

and Strong Families

Texas workers should share in the prosperity they create.

In the 89th Session, Every Texan worked in coalition with the state’s labor movement to ensure that the “Texas Miracle” is a possibility for all of us, not just the wealthy few. We attended every Appropriations and Senate Finance Committee hearing to advocate on behalf of working Texans. Over the course of the 140-day session, our team ultimately led the creation of a labor caucus to defend the state workforce at the Capitol.

Worker Power

Every Texan’s labor policy work operates across the political spectrum, calling conservative legislators into important conversations and building effective partnerships with them.

Our position in the workforce space focused on the mitigation of severe harm to hardworking Texas families. Even when bills stalled, we worked to ensure that state employees and the Texans who rely on them remained at the center of policy discussions. We fought alongside workers for policies that raise wages and address the increasing cost of living so that Texans can take care of themselves and their families.

As we build trust and strong foundational partnerships with labor unions in Texas, we recognize that unions play a vital role in balancing the economy. Income inequality is higher in areas with fewer unionized workers, and for too long, Texas has prioritized transferring worker wealth to corporations. To support our partners at the Texas State Employees Union (TSEU), Every Texan utilized the results of our state employee satisfaction survey to bring the voice of all state employees into the Capitol. TSEU was able to organize and build their membership, catapulting Every Texan’s assertion that listening to state employees is a key component to building effective policy.

We recognize our research must expose how the Legislature’s divestment in the state workforce undermines Texans’ and businesses’ ability to prosper. We are committed to truth-telling and building worker power so that every family can reach their full potential.

Every Texan

Priorities

Worker Power

Economic Security, Wages, Safety on the Job:

Voting Rights

and Preemption

Voting Rights

Policymakers must defend and fortify democracy to ensure every Texan’s voice is heard.

Texas has a long history of voter suppression and discrimination. Our state continues to struggle with voter turnout and consistently ranks in the bottom 10 for voter turnout across the nation. Every Texan joined the statewide movement for voting rights in 2021 and remained a committed advocate throughout the 89th Legislative Session.

Drawing from our research, legislative experience, trusted relationships, and past advocacy, Every Texan was prepared for a particularly hostile attack on voting rights this session.

The sheer volume of voting and preemption legislation in Texas is designed to overwhelm policy experts and stifle public engagement. Every Texan’s leadership helped focus opposition to policies that aim to suppress voting in historically disenfranchised communities and undermine local democracy through abusive preemption policy.

While co-leading the Texas Election Reform Coalition (TERC), Every Texan helped defeat close to all of the significantly detrimental proposals aimed at disenfranchising voters. These included efforts to require documentary proof of citizenship, restrict local voter registration initiatives, limit school district transportation to the polls, expand third-party voter challenges, and wrongfully remove eligible voters based on address mismatches or infrequent voting.

Voter registration and the eligibility of existing voters came under attack in the 89th Session, and we provided legislators with the clear policy analysis and evidence they needed to push back and draw a firm line in defense of democracy. For the first time in 10 years, Every Texan secured a committee hearing on online voter registration—a long-standing priority of the organization. While change is relentlessly incremental in Texas, we stand firm with Texans and remain rooted in our defense of the fundamental building blocks of our democracy.

Every Texan

Priorities

Voting Rights

Implement Online Voter Registration

After a decade of strategic work at the Capitol, HB 311 (Bucy) was given a courtesy hearing in the House Elections Committee. Though the bill did not advance, witnesses were able to testify in favor of it and, with the only opposition focusing on concerns of an electronic signature, the hearing is real progress for Texas’ voter registration systems. Every Texan will continue our work through the biennium to address those concerns. Considering all possibilities, Every Texan provided support and language for an amendment to include online voter registration in SB 16 in case it progressed to the floor.

Voting Rights

Fortify Democracy

The 89th Session brought a wave of more than 13 proposals designed to attack voting rights and undermine democracy, but we were ready. Drawing on deep legislative experience and knowledge, we were well-positioned to intervene, build pressure, and measure responses to act decisively. SB 16 (Hughes) proposed long-lasting harm for voter registration. The bill would allow the state to force existing voters to prove their citizenship, threatening the voting rights of elderly, rural, and marginalized Texans. In working to amend and mitigate the bill’s harm, Every Texan demonstrated just how irreparable the policy was, and ultimately helped prevent it from becoming law.