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Will Texas GOP continue its descent without Matt Rinaldi as chair?

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Will Texas GOP continue its descent without Matt Rinaldi as chair?


When we read the news that Republican Party of Texas Chair Matt Rinaldi would step down, we were hit with a little spark of hope. This is, after all, one of the men who presided over the transformation of the state GOP from a normal, if deeply conservative, political party into a conspiracy-embracing, corruption-supporting mess that has mutated the meaning of conservatism in Texas.

Our hope lasted about a millisecond when we remembered that this is the Republican Party of Texas. Whenever we think it can’t get worse, it usually does.

Look at the track record. Rinaldi, a flamethrower in the Texas House who lost his Dallas County seat in 2019, succeeded former Florida Congressman Allen West as state GOP chair. Once a tea party agitator, West regularly made headlines for incendiary comments that flirted with the far-right QAnon cult and the Texas secessionist movement.

(By the way, if you’re a Dallas County Republican who didn’t vote in the primary, we regret to inform you that West is your new county party chair.)

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While West tried to use the state GOP to vault himself to the governor’s mansion, Rinaldi has brandished the party as a weapon on behalf of the billionaires bankrolling the far-right movement in Texas. Instead of buoying its members, the party apparatus attacks conservative lawmakers who ran afoul of Attorney General Ken Paxton or otherwise failed to fall in lockstep with every hard-line position of West Texas oilmen Tim Dunn and Farris Wilks.

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Rinaldi should go down in infamy for his ties to Texas GOP activists who met with Nazi sympathizer Nick Fuentes in the fall. The Texas Tribune observed Rinaldi leaving the building where the meeting took place. Rinaldi denied participating in that meeting and condemned Fuentes, but we can’t take him seriously when he dismissed as unnecessary an attempt by his party to pass a ban on associating with antisemites. The ban eventually passed in spite of Rinaldi.

Running to replace him is former Collin County GOP party chair Abraham George, a Paxton defender. The Texas Tribune reported Monday that police responded to his home last year based on a call that an armed George was going to confront a man he thought was having an affair with his wife. Also running is state GOP Vice Chair Dana Myers, who voted in favor of the ban on associating with known neo-Nazis. She’s got at least that going for her, though the party has set the bar so low you have to dig to find it.

As Paxton hints that he may take on U.S. Sen. John Cornyn in 2026, we can’t reconcile how it is that we’re talking about the same party. How can a Texas GOP that gave us a principled and competent leader like Cornyn elevate an unscrupulous and inept attorney general like Paxton to be its standard bearer?

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We think this helps explain why Republican turnout in the Texas primary was only 12.6%, as our colleague Gromer Jeffers Jr. reported. Traditional conservatives in Texas are losing heart. The party that once courted them and lifted them up has kicked them out of the house.

We welcome your thoughts in a letter to the editor. See the guidelines and submit your letter here. If you have problems with the form, you can submit via email at letters@dallasnews.com



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North Texas grandmother proud grandsons help U.S. hockey win gold

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North Texas grandmother proud grandsons help U.S. hockey win gold


When Jack Hughes scored the winning goal in overtime to help the U.S. Men’s Hockey Team win gold for the first time since the ‘Miracle on Ice’ in 1980, his grandmother in North Dallas beamed with pride.

“It’s amazing! Just amazing,” Penny Weinberg said. “And that Jack got it with his teeth knocked out! Um, hopefully he’ll get ’em fixed!

Hughes lost a front tooth, but gained an Olympic gold medal, along with his brother Quinn, on Sunday when the U.S. beat Canada 2-1 in overtime.

Weinberg knows something about the perils of hockey. One of the bedrooms in her North Dallas home has hockey trophies on the shelves that belong to her daughter, Ellen Weinberg-Hughes.

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“She wanted to play, and she did,” Weinberg said. “So the rest is history!”

A young Ellen Weinberg was the subject of an NBC 5/KXAS report decades ago when she was the only girl on an all-boys peewee hockey team. At the time, the young hockey player said she wanted to be a professional hockey player one day.

“Cute,” Weinberg said, laughing as she watched the archive news report about her daughter.

Ellen Weinberg-Hughes went on to help the U.S. National Women’s Hockey Team win Silver at the 1992 Women’s World Championships. She also served as a consultant for this year’s gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic Women’s Hockey Team.

Three of her sons play in the NHL, and now two of them, Quinn and Jack, are Olympic gold medalists. Weinberg-Hughes’ joy over the Olympic win was palpable as she and her husband jumped and hugged in the stands.

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“I couldn’t be more proud of them as hockey players,” Weinberg said of her grandsons. “But I’m just as proud of them being people.”



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Republican candidates for Texas Attorney General discuss how they would target fraud

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Republican candidates for Texas Attorney General discuss how they would target fraud


During a debate, the candidates were asked about a wide range of issues, including how they would combat fraud similar to the large‑scale scheme recently uncovered in Minnesota. Each contender used the topic to argue they would bring a stronger, more aggressive, or more principled brand of enforcement to the attorney general’s office.



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NWS hosts SKYWARN training as spring storm season nears

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NWS hosts SKYWARN training as spring storm season nears


With spring storm season approaching, the National Weather Service is holding free SKYWARN storm spotter training sessions across North Texas. At a class in Garland this morning, residents learned how storms form, how to prepare for severe weather, and what warning signs to watch for. Meteorologists say spotters play a critical role by reporting real‑time conditions that radar can’t detect, helping forecasters make faster and more accurate warning decisions.



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