With nationwide redistricting taking maintain on the county stage in Fort Bend, many residents are refusing to take the assaults on their political voices mendacity down.
Actually, at a latest Neighborhood Dialogue 2025, a breakfast with county stakeholders, elected officers and candidates, attendees promised to interact within the battle of their lives.
Days earlier than the Neighborhood Dialogue, Rep. Suleman Lalani urged Fort Bend County residents to submit public feedback, contact lawmakers and mobilize shortly in response to state GOP members’ makes an attempt to redraw U.S. Congressional districts.
“Gov. Abbott is busy giving Texas on a silver platter to President Trump,” stated Lalani. “We didn’t have some other choice however to disclaim quorum. Breaking quorum will not be working away from the obligations… it is among the instruments put in Texas laws by our forefathers. We’re accused of working away, strolling out. You realize what? We aren’t strolling out. We’re standing up.”
Defining the challenges
That very same stage of righteous indignation and battle was on show in the course of the more moderen Neighborhood Dialogue, which featured Fort Bend County commissioners Grady Prestage (Precinct 2) and Dexter McCoy (Precinct 4), judges Monica Rawlins, Roderick Garner, Tyra McCullum and Surendran Patel, and judicial candidate Brendetta Scott.
To set the tone of the proceedings, Reynolds supplied a historical past lesson, mentioning “Bloody Sunday” and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, linking the sacrifices of Civil Rights Motion individuals to a modern-day name to motion.
“Right here we’re in 2025, and they’re actually making an attempt to show again the clock. I hope you notice that this isn’t like a hyperbolic assertion,” stated Reynolds. “Actually, as I discuss to you right this moment, there are forces of evil that need to flip again the clock. They’re not proud of this new usher of management. They need us on the menu, however they don’t need us on the desk.
Talking on the newly drawn U.S. Congressional maps for Texas as ordered by President Donald Trump and delivered by Texas Governor Greg Abbott, Reynolds didn’t mince phrases.
“We now have extra African Individuals in Texas than in some other state. Did y’all hear that? But, we solely have 4 African American seats in Texas,” stated Reynolds.
“That is our Selma. That is our civil rights second proper right here.”
State Rep. Ron Reynolds
He cited the truth that, although Texas had 4 “African American” seats, and will have extra resulting from inhabitants numbers, the Abbott/Trump map leaves the state with simply two.
“We should always have like eight. It ought to be a 50% enhance primarily based on the numbers, however we had a 50% lower. That’s 50-freaking-percent, and I’m nonetheless pissed off about it,” shouted Reynolds. “That is our Selma. That is our civil rights second proper right here.”
Requires unity
Native activist and training advocate Regina Gardner was crystal clear on what she hoped to see transpire throughout and after the Neighborhood Dialogue to ensure that residents to fulfill the second and efficiently push again in opposition to the undermining of their political voices.
“We now have some divisions in our group that we actually must fill in these gaps as a result of this group is confronted with some very difficult occasions, together with an assault on voting rights and redistricting,” stated Gardner. “We’re in a really difficult time, and what I’m hoping to realize is just a few group unity.”
Garner acknowledged the divisions Gardner alluded to, however targeted on the assaults Reynolds alluded to that demanded unity among the many Democratic-leaning attendees.

“There’s been an assault on our democracy. There’s been an assault on our courts, on our judges, and it’s unwarranted,” stated Garner. “However however, we’re going to maintain pushing ahead and we’re going to guarantee that they perceive. We now have some fractions from of us who don’t at all times get alongside, however they’re coming collectively.”
Working collectively as a political technique was the theme of the day.
“One factor I’m hoping to realize from that’s that we unite. That’s the one method we’re going to get additional,” stated longtime voting advocate Mary Kelly. “Unite first. No matter the place we come from, who we’re, we’re all one individuals, and we should get again collectively. Then we are able to conquer our oppressors and be rightfully fitted the place we must be.”
Training on the road
By the use of a extra particular resolution, longtime Fort Bend educator Audrey Williams advocated for altering the election day for FBISD college board elections.
“The voting information for a few years in Fort Bend County are extraordinarily dismal, and including it to a November election day, when voters have numerous points to think about, will surely interact extra voters,” stated Williams, a member of the Willowridge Excessive Faculty Wall of Honor.

Williams made a direct tie between voting rights and academic challenges that have to be met with options, significantly at Willowridge, the varsity the place she taught for many years earlier than retiring.
“By the early Eighties, Willowridge had amassed a state soccer championship and its college students had obtained the biggest variety of athletic and educational scholarships within the district. The three excessive faculties in Fort Bend (Willowridge, Dulles and Clements) had been all thriving,” stated Williams.
She famous that as Fort Bend County started to develop farther west, with every new college constructed, college students and FBISD consideration had been pulled from Willowridge.
Williams believes combating for voting energy in Fort Bend goes deeper than philosophical causes, however impacts the present and future academic realities of space youth.


















