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Texas secession movements

Texas secession movements, also known as the Texas independence movement or Texit,[1][2] refers to both the secession of Texas during the American Civil War as well as activities of modern organizations supporting such efforts to secede from the United States and become an independent sovereign state.

Flag of Texas

The U.S. Constitution does not specifically address the secession of states, and the issue was a topic of debate after the American Revolutionary War until the Civil War, when the Supreme Court ruled in Texas v. White that states strictly cannot unilaterally secede except through revolution or the expressed consent of the other states.[3]

Texas was formerly called the Republic of Texas, a sovereign state for nine years prior to the Texas annexation with the United States. Accordingly, its sovereignty was not recognized by Mexico although Texas defeated the Mexican forces in the Texas Revolution, and authorities in Texas did not actually control all of its claimed territory.

Modern secession efforts have existed in the state at least since the 1990s and focused first on the Republic of Texas organization as well as the Texas Nationalist Movement.[4] Recent discussions between Texas Republican Party representatives renewed talks of secession after the decision of the Supreme Court in Texas v. Pennsylvania, which declined to hear the case regarding attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election due to lack of standing.[5]

Secession in the United States edit

Discussion about the right of U.S. states to secede from the union began shortly after the American Revolutionary War. The United States Constitution does not address secession. Each of the colonies originated by separate grants from the British Crown and had evolved relatively distinct political and cultural institutions prior to national independence. Craig S. Lerner has written that the Constitution's Supremacy Clause weighs against a right of secession, but that the Republican Guarantee Clause can be interpreted to indicate that the federal government has no right to keep a state from leaving as long as it maintains a republican form of government.[6]

The question remained open in the decades before the Civil War. In 1825, Alexis de Tocqueville observed, "If today one of these same states wanted to withdraw its name from the contract, it would be quite difficult to prove that it could not do so. To combat it, the federal government would have no evident support in either force or right." However, Joseph Story wrote in 1830 in Commentaries on the Constitution that the document foreclosed the right of secession.[6] On the eve of the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln argued that states were not sovereign before the Constitution but instead they were created by it.[6]

Current Supreme Court precedent, in Texas v. White, holds that the states cannot secede from the union by an act of the state.[7] More recently, in 2006, Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia stated, "If there was any constitutional issue resolved by the Civil War, it is that there is no right to secede."[8]

Republic of Texas (19th century) edit

Texas seceded from Mexico in 1836, spurred on primarily by American settlers in the former Mexican territory against the government of Santa Anna.[9]

After the final engagement at San Jacinto in 1836, there were two different visions of the future of Texas: one as a state of the United States and the other as an independent republic.[10] Sam Houston promoted the first, as he felt that the newly independent country, lacking hard currency and still facing threats from Mexico, could not survive on its own.[9][11] The other was promoted by second Texas president Mirabeau B. Lamar, who felt that it was Texas's destiny to be a nation that extended from the Louisiana border to the Pacific Ocean. For this reason, Lamar is considered the father of Texas nationalism.[11]

The Republic under Lamar incurred large-scale debt, and suffered from a poor economy and inadequate defenses, which led to the annexation of Texas into the United States in 1845.[9][12] Since then, the state's time as an independent nation has been the basis of a lasting sense of national identity.[11][12][13]

Secession from the U.S., 1861 edit

The history of Texas in the Civil War has distinctions from the rest of the South, in part because of its history of being independent previously. Much of Texas's dissatisfaction was not only tied to opposition to Lincoln and his view of states' rights (which they also viewed as a transgression of the annexation agreement), but also because they did not feel that Washington had lived up to promises of inclusion into the country as part of annexation.[12][13] In 1861, Sam Houston still strongly supported remaining in the United States primarily for economic and military reasons.[11] However, those promoting secession used not only elements from U.S. history such as the American Revolution and the Constitution, but also the Texas Revolution and elements from the history of the Republic of Texas.[12]

On February 1, 1861, delegates to a special convention to consider secession voted 166 to 8 to adopt an ordinance of secession which cited the institution of slavery as the primary cause of secession.[14] The ordinance was ratified by a popular referendum on February 23, making Texas the seventh and last state of the Lower South to do so.[11][13][15]

 
1861 Texas Secession Referendum Map by county, teal is For and orange is Against[16]

Some wanted to restore the Republic of Texas, but an identity with the Confederacy was embraced. This led to the replacement of Texas themes for the most part with those of the Confederacy, including religious justification given in sermons, often demanded by petitioners.[12] The transference to the Stars and Bars was in the hope of achieving the inclusion perceived by some to be denied by Washington.[13] However, that shift was never complete. Clayton E. Jewett wrote in Texas in the Confederacy: An Experiment in Nation Building that its identity remained somewhat separate from the rest of the Confederacy. James Marten wrote in Texas Divided: Loyalty and Dissent in the Lone Star State, 1856–1874 that it battled between loyalty to the Confederacy and dissent and its ambivalence may have been enough to assure Southern defeat.[13]

During the war, Texas was spared most of the actual fighting, with only Galveston seeing any military engagement with Union forces. However, the war did take a serious toll in the way of chronic shortages, absence of men at home to run the economy, military setbacks and fear of invasion.[13] Although Lincoln recognized Texas's history as an independent nation, his definition of the Union meant that Texas forever ceded this to be subject to the Constitution.[6]

From the Civil War to the 1990s edit

After the end of the Civil War, Texans maintained a "rebel" or Confederate identity instead of a completely Texan one as a way of still defying the United States.[12] After the Civil War, it provided a haven for others in the Confederacy leaving claimed devastation.[17] From that time to the present, a "Lost Cause" mythology has continued in Texas and other areas of the South.[18] However, for the most part, overt discussion of the right of states to secede ended, replaced by another mythology based on the indivisibility of the territory.[6] This did not end Texas's identity as at least somewhat different from the rest of the United States. Unlike southern states, Texas began emphasizing its cowboy heritage and connection with the U.S. Southwest, even influencing the rest of the U.S. identity in the 20th century.[19] For many Texans, the history of the Republic of Texas is considered a time of independence and self-determination often in contrast to interference by the federal government in Washington. Texas requires a course in the state's history in the seventh grade where these ideas can also be found.[20]

In the 1990s, Texas began to use the slogan "Texas. It's Like a Whole Other Country" especially in domestic ads for tourism, and still can be seen today.[20] However, public imagination remains split on the visions of Texas as state and nation that Houston and Lamar had in the 19th century. The two can appear as a conflict between rural and urban Texans but the Lamar vision can be found in the cities as well.[11] Texas did not join in festivities for the 150th anniversary of the Civil War as it was thought that the commemoration would have reopened old unhealed wounds.[17]

1990s to present edit

Republic of Texas organization edit

There have been efforts to promote Texas secession in the state at least since the 1990s.[21] At this time, Richard Lance McLaren founded the Republic of Texas organization based on his property within the Davis Mountains Resort in Jeff Davis County, becoming the most active and influential secession group at the time. Essentially the organization claimed that the United States annexed Texas illegally and considered it to be held captive. The organization held itself out as an alternative government, based on the principle of very limited powers.[9]

McLaren had both supporters and enemies. His supporters generally believed that globalization was a threat to constitutional rights and against Christian principles.[22] Tactics of the group included filing liens against properties, disavowing state and federal authorities, and opening an "embassy". McLaren's legal filings were so numerous that the county clerk gave them a separate cabinet.[22] Members of the Republic of Texas group listed grievances with the U.S. government, such as accusing the government of a corrupt judicial system, paganism, and of creating illegal treaties and illegitimate agencies. Members of the group also stated that the U.S. government had set itself above the people and had exercised its global influences unlawfully against the Constitution. The Republic of Texas members placed emphasis on the Branch Davidian incident near Waco as an example of all that was wrong with the U.S. government.[9]

In the summer of 1996, injunctions and other court proceedings against McLaren were well underway. In July of that year, McLaren held a press conference a block away from the state courthouse in Austin stating that he refused to appear because he did not recognize the legitimacy of the court.[9] McLaren was jailed for a month by a federal judge for failing to show in court. After his release, McLaren's rhetoric grew stronger.[22][23][24]

Davis Mountains standoff edit

In March 1997, McLaren wrote to the federal government to claim 93 trillion dollars in reparations to Texas for the Civil War.[22] By this time, the Republic of Texas organization had fractured into three factions. When two of McLaren's groups were arrested, McLaren took two hostages and holed up with armed supporters on his property, leading to a standoff with Texas Department of Public Safety.[9][22] The siege ended on May 4, 1997, with McLaren and four others giving up without violence,[22] while two others from the group, Mike Matson and Richard Keyes, fled the hideout armed with handguns and deer hunting rifles. The following day, the fugitives, with the troopers in hot pursuit, fired at a Black Hawk helicopter and searching dogs[25][26] in the Davis Mountains;[27] Matson was killed by return fire,[28][29] while Keyes managed to slip away. He was eventually caught in September at New Waverly, north of Houston.[30] In November of that year, McLaren was convicted of kidnapping and was sentenced to 99 years in prison.[9] McLaren was also convicted of federal mail fraud and bank fraud in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas in Dallas.[31] He is imprisoned at the William P. Clements Unit of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, near Amarillo, Texas, and is scheduled for release on June 15, 2041.[32]

As of 2003, there were three groups that claimed to be the Republic of Texas with different web sites, but without McLaren named as a leader.[9]

Texas Nationalist Movement edit

The Texas Nationalist Movement (TNM), headed by Daniel Miller, evolved from one of the factions of the old Republic of Texas in 2005.[33][34][35] However, the organization has disassociated itself from the Republic of Texas and the tactics of McLaren, instead opting for more political rather than confrontational or violent solution.[34] The group has county-level groups in most parts of the state.[36]

According to its website, the objective of the Texas Nationalist Movement is "the complete, total and unencumbered political, cultural and economic independence of Texas".[37] Unlike its predecessor, TNM claims to work peaceably[38] with the current political system, and to reject use of force to achieve its goals.[35][38] TNM is an unincorporated association under the laws of the State of Texas.[35] The organization focuses on political support and advocacy, and education surrounding the issue of secession.[35] It seeks to have the Texas Legislature call for a state-wide referendum on the issue, similar to the Scottish Independence vote of 2014.

In January 2013, members of the TNM rallied at the state capital in Austin to promote the resolution, resulting in one mention of secession by one lawmaker on the opening day of the legislative session.[21] In May 2016, the Texas GOP narrowly rejected bringing a resolution for secession to a floor vote at the 2016 Texas Republican Convention.[39] However, in 2020, the Republican Party of Texas included a plank in its party platform (with 93% approval) stating that the federal government has impaired Texas' right to self-government, that any legislation infringing upon the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution "should be ignored, opposed, refused, and nullified", and that Texas retains the right to secede if any future Congress or President change the current political system from a constitutional republic to something else.[40] In June 2022, it voted to include a further secessionist plank in its party platform, calling for the Texas Legislature to approve a referendum on whether Texas should secede from the Union on the 2023 statewide ballot.[41]

In 2015, a representative from the Texas Nationalist Movement attended a separatist conference in Russia. Despite claims that the conference is funded by the Kremlin, public record show that the conference was almost entirely paid for by a charitable fund.[42][43] During Russia's 2016 interference operations in the U.S., a fake Russian Facebook page, dubbed "Heart of Texas," claimed it was passing information about supporters along to the Texas Nationalist Movement.[44]

Other discussions of secession starting in 2012 edit

The rise of membership in the Texas Nationalist Movement coincided with other secession-related news events not part of that organization. Governor Rick Perry, at a political rally in 2009, addressed the possibility of secession. During the rally, many in the crowd began to chant "secede, secede", to which Perry remarked, "If Washington continues to thumb their nose at the American people, you know, who knows what might come out of that?"[34][45] Perry subsequently clarified that the comment was tongue in cheek and that he does not support secession.[39] His remarks sparked controversy[45] and harsh criticism from government officials and pundits, such as Jeff Macke and Joe Weisental.[46]

After Perry's comments received news coverage, Rasmussen Reports found that about 1 in 3 of those it polled believed that Texas has the right to secede from the United States, although only 18% would support secession and 75% would oppose secession.[47] In another poll, 60% of Texans surveyed opposed becoming an independent nation. However, 48% of Texas Republicans surveyed supported it.[48][49] The reaction from outside the state was also strongly split, including those who wanted to get rid of Texas.[45]

After US president Barack Obama won the 2012 US presidential election, bumper stickers and signs saying "secede" started to appear in Texas.[50] The election also triggered a wave of petitions on the White House "We the People" website. While the Texas petition was not first to appear, it overtook those of the other states with over 125,000 signatures, well above the 25,000 required to trigger a response.[21][46] The petition stated that secession would "protect the original ideas and beliefs of our founding fathers which are no longer being reflected by the federal government" and defend Texans from "blatant abuses to their rights"[51] The Texas secession petition was followed by one allowing Austin to secede from Texas and stay part of the union.[51] The White House issued a 476-word response rejecting the idea.[21]

In June 2016, when a 52–48 majority in the U.K. voted to leave the European Union (EU) using the hashtag #Brexit on social media, there was renewed interest that Texas formalize efforts to secede from the U.S., using the hashtag #Texit.[52]

Texas Republican Party platform and 2020s referendum proposals edit

In December 2020, when the Supreme Court refused to hear Texas's lawsuit in Texas v. Pennsylvania, the chair of the Texas GOP, Allen West, suggested that Texas and other like-minded states could leave the Union.[53][54][55] On January 26, 2021, the Texas Independence Referendum Act (HB 1359), a bill to provide for a nonbinding statewide referendum on secession, was filed by Texas House member Kyle Biedermann.[56] The bill was referred to the State Affairs committee but it was never given a hearing or voted on by the committee before the end of the session.[57]

In June 2022, the Republican Party of Texas released their Report of the Permanent 2022 Platform & Resolutions Committee which urges the legislature to introduce a referendum in 2023 to secede from the United States.[58] In March 2023, state representative Bryan Slaton introduced a bill that would add a referendum on independence to the 2024 US election ballot.[59] In December 2023, the Texas Nationalist Movement claimed that it collected enough signatures under the petition to include a question on secession on the ballot in 2024. It was clarified that even if the proposition passes, it is going to be non-binding.[60] Similar secession movements in other states, particularly the states of the Southern United States, are commonly associated with their support of former US president Donald Trump for the 2022 US elections.[61]

Opinion polling edit

Date(s)
conducted
Polling organization/client Sample size Support secession Oppose secession Undecided Net support
August 2009 Rasmussen Reports[62][63] -- 18% 75% 7% −57%
September 2–6, 2010 Public Policy Polling[64] 538 15% 72% 13% −57%
August 12–14, 2016 Public Policy Polling[65] 944 26% 59% 15% −33%

Alternative question wording edit

Along with other conservative states edit

Date(s)
conducted
Polling organization/client Sample size Support secession Oppose secession Undecided Net support
June 6–26, 2022 SurveyUSA[66] 625 60% 40% - +20%

If Hillary Clinton had won the 2016 election edit

Date(s)
conducted
Polling organization/client Sample size Support secession Oppose secession Undecided Net support
August 12–14, 2016 Public Policy Polling[65] 944 40% 48% 12% −8%

In fiction edit

The secession of Texas from the United States or the continued existence of the Republic of Texas has featured in some works of fiction, often set during a Second American Revolution or a Second American Civil War and, occasionally, in tandem with American Civil War alternate histories:

  • The second edition of The People's Almanac posits the question of what would have happened had the Confederacy won the Civil War. The Almanac uses the assumptions of author MacKinlay Kantor from his book If the South Had Won the Civil War. According to Kantor, Texas would initially remain with the Confederacy but would have significant economic ties with the Union due to its export of cattle. It would therefore declare its independence in 1878 (annexing Indian Territory—now Oklahoma—in the process); both the Union and the Confederacy "were more relieved than upset" at the move. Texas would abolish slavery in 1885 (the same year as the Confederacy). Movements in the Confederacy toward "Consolidation"—reunion of the three countries—would result in their combined entry into both World Wars I and II, and ultimately at the reunion on December 20, 1960, exactly 100 years after South Carolina originally seceded from the Union in response to a Soviet nuclear threat from Alaska.[67]
  • In the Settling Accounts tetralogy of Harry Turtledove's Southern Victory Series, set in an alternate reality where the Confederacy won the 'War of Secession' (1861–1862). Texas secedes from the Confederacy in 1944 during the Second Great War when it was clear that the CSA under Freedom Party rule and the presidency of Jake Featherston would ultimately lose. Under the presidency of former Freedom Party governor Wright Patman, the Republic of Texas signs an armistice and collaborates with the United States, arresting and trying Confederate concentration camp guards for crimes against humanity and allowing the U.S. state of Houston to be recreated. It is unclear if Texan independence continues beyond 1944.
  • The Crosstime Traffic novel The Disunited States of America is largely set in an alternate reality where the ratification of the Articles of Confederation resulted in the dissolution of the United States in the 1800s and a frequent series of minor wars between the smaller successor states. Texas is mentioned as a prominent oil-producing republic.
  • In The Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling, Charles Babbage successfully develops an analytical engine in 1824, resulting in the early arrival of the Information Age and the ascendency of the British Empire as a world power. Due to British interference in North American affairs chiefly to prevent the rise of the United States as a world power, the Republic of Texas remains an independent state by 1855, with Sam Houston appearing as the president-in-exile, having fled the country following a coup and the establishment of a military junta.
  • In The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood, the Republic of Texas is mentioned as being a successor state to the theonomic Republic of Gilead at a history symposium in Nunavut in 2195. In the sequel The Testaments, it was revealed that Texas declared independence shortly after the establishment of Gilead. A stalemated secessionist war cements Texan independence but enforces Texan neutrality in Gileadian affairs. In Season 4 of The Handmaid's Tale television series, the Republic of Texas is mentioned as a potential refuge for a group of escaped Handmaids.
  • In Russian Amerika by Stony Compton, the Republic of Texas is mentioned as being one of many rump states that comprised the former United States and Canada in an alternate reality where a Civil War which broke out in the 1850s resulted in a Confederate victory.
  • In the Sliders episode "The Good, the Bad and the Wealthy", Texas had declared independence during the American Civil War, enveloping the former US state of California. In 1996, George H. W. Bush served as Texian President and gunfighting was legal.
  • In the 2006 television series Jericho—created by Stephen Chbosky, Josh Schaer, and Jonathan E. Steinberg—the Independent Republic of Texas is mentioned and credited with saving the United States after a series of nuclear attacks.
  • In Underground Airlines by Ben H. Winters, the assassination of President-elect Abraham Lincoln in 1861 resulted in the adoption of a modified version of the Crittenden Compromise and the continued practice of slavery into the twenty-first century in the so-called 'Hard Four' States (Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana). The state's growing abolitionist Black and Hispanic populations led Texas to declare independence from the United States during the presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson, starting a fifteen-year-long 'Texas War' ending in stalemate. The status of Texas as either a US state or an independent republic remained ambiguous thereafter.

See also edit

References edit

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  60. ^ Stanton, Andrew (December 1, 2023). "Texas Gets One Step Closer to Leaving US". Newsweek. Retrieved December 19, 2023.
  61. ^ DeChalus, Camila. "Texas secession? Civil war? Threats of violence — or worse — loom over the 2022 midterm elections". Business Insider.
  62. ^ Reports, Rasmussen. "In Texas, 31% Say State Has Right to Secede From U.S., But 75% Opt To Stay - Rasmussen Reports™". from the original on March 11, 2017. Retrieved April 18, 2017.
  63. ^ Weiner, Rachel (May 18, 2009). "Texas Secession Poll: 75% Of Texans Say No". from the original on March 20, 2017. Retrieved April 18, 2017 – via Huff Post.
  64. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on May 7, 2016. Retrieved August 23, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  65. ^ a b "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on August 16, 2016. Retrieved August 17, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  66. ^ "SurveyUSA News Poll #26381". www.surveyusa.com. Retrieved January 17, 2023.
  67. ^ The People's Almanac #2, David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace, pp. 393-395.

External links edit

  • Seceder.com: Texas secession's viability
  • Slate: The Republic of Texas Article published in 1997.
  • Still true today: 'The Republic of Texas is no more' - an article by Ralph H. Brock published in the Houston Chronicle in 1997 that debunks Republic of Texas claims
  • Texas Nationalist Movement website, not affiliated with Republic of Texas organization

Terrorism Knowledge Base profile of Republic of Texas edit

  • (archived from the original on 2007-09-30)

Texas Convention Pro-Continuation of 1861 edit

  • RoT statement to U.S. District Court in Austin
  • RoT declaration filed with the Swiss Federal Council
  • RoT cease fire against the state government

texas, secession, movements, texit, redirects, here, proposed, legislation, texas, independence, referendum, also, known, texas, independence, movement, texit, refers, both, secession, texas, during, american, civil, well, activities, modern, organizations, su. Texit redirects here For the proposed legislation see Texas Independence Referendum Act Texas secession movements also known as the Texas independence movement or Texit 1 2 refers to both the secession of Texas during the American Civil War as well as activities of modern organizations supporting such efforts to secede from the United States and become an independent sovereign state Flag of TexasThe U S Constitution does not specifically address the secession of states and the issue was a topic of debate after the American Revolutionary War until the Civil War when the Supreme Court ruled in Texas v White that states strictly cannot unilaterally secede except through revolution or the expressed consent of the other states 3 Texas was formerly called the Republic of Texas a sovereign state for nine years prior to the Texas annexation with the United States Accordingly its sovereignty was not recognized by Mexico although Texas defeated the Mexican forces in the Texas Revolution and authorities in Texas did not actually control all of its claimed territory Modern secession efforts have existed in the state at least since the 1990s and focused first on the Republic of Texas organization as well as the Texas Nationalist Movement 4 Recent discussions between Texas Republican Party representatives renewed talks of secession after the decision of the Supreme Court in Texas v Pennsylvania which declined to hear the case regarding attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election due to lack of standing 5 Contents 1 Secession in the United States 2 Republic of Texas 19th century 3 Secession from the U S 1861 4 From the Civil War to the 1990s 5 1990s to present 5 1 Republic of Texas organization 5 1 1 Davis Mountains standoff 5 2 Texas Nationalist Movement 5 3 Other discussions of secession starting in 2012 5 4 Texas Republican Party platform and 2020s referendum proposals 6 Opinion polling 6 1 Alternative question wording 6 1 1 Along with other conservative states 6 1 2 If Hillary Clinton had won the 2016 election 7 In fiction 8 See also 9 References 10 External links 10 1 Terrorism Knowledge Base profile of Republic of Texas 10 2 Texas Convention Pro Continuation of 1861Secession in the United States editMain article Secession in the United States Discussion about the right of U S states to secede from the union began shortly after the American Revolutionary War The United States Constitution does not address secession Each of the colonies originated by separate grants from the British Crown and had evolved relatively distinct political and cultural institutions prior to national independence Craig S Lerner has written that the Constitution s Supremacy Clause weighs against a right of secession but that the Republican Guarantee Clause can be interpreted to indicate that the federal government has no right to keep a state from leaving as long as it maintains a republican form of government 6 The question remained open in the decades before the Civil War In 1825 Alexis de Tocqueville observed If today one of these same states wanted to withdraw its name from the contract it would be quite difficult to prove that it could not do so To combat it the federal government would have no evident support in either force or right However Joseph Story wrote in 1830 in Commentaries on the Constitution that the document foreclosed the right of secession 6 On the eve of the Civil War President Abraham Lincoln argued that states were not sovereign before the Constitution but instead they were created by it 6 Current Supreme Court precedent in Texas v White holds that the states cannot secede from the union by an act of the state 7 More recently in 2006 Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia stated If there was any constitutional issue resolved by the Civil War it is that there is no right to secede 8 Republic of Texas 19th century editMain articles Texas Revolution and Republic of Texas Texas seceded from Mexico in 1836 spurred on primarily by American settlers in the former Mexican territory against the government of Santa Anna 9 After the final engagement at San Jacinto in 1836 there were two different visions of the future of Texas one as a state of the United States and the other as an independent republic 10 Sam Houston promoted the first as he felt that the newly independent country lacking hard currency and still facing threats from Mexico could not survive on its own 9 11 The other was promoted by second Texas president Mirabeau B Lamar who felt that it was Texas s destiny to be a nation that extended from the Louisiana border to the Pacific Ocean For this reason Lamar is considered the father of Texas nationalism 11 The Republic under Lamar incurred large scale debt and suffered from a poor economy and inadequate defenses which led to the annexation of Texas into the United States in 1845 9 12 Since then the state s time as an independent nation has been the basis of a lasting sense of national identity 11 12 13 Secession from the U S 1861 editMain article Texas in the American Civil War The history of Texas in the Civil War has distinctions from the rest of the South in part because of its history of being independent previously Much of Texas s dissatisfaction was not only tied to opposition to Lincoln and his view of states rights which they also viewed as a transgression of the annexation agreement but also because they did not feel that Washington had lived up to promises of inclusion into the country as part of annexation 12 13 In 1861 Sam Houston still strongly supported remaining in the United States primarily for economic and military reasons 11 However those promoting secession used not only elements from U S history such as the American Revolution and the Constitution but also the Texas Revolution and elements from the history of the Republic of Texas 12 On February 1 1861 delegates to a special convention to consider secession voted 166 to 8 to adopt an ordinance of secession which cited the institution of slavery as the primary cause of secession 14 The ordinance was ratified by a popular referendum on February 23 making Texas the seventh and last state of the Lower South to do so 11 13 15 nbsp 1861 Texas Secession Referendum Map by county teal is For and orange is Against 16 Some wanted to restore the Republic of Texas but an identity with the Confederacy was embraced This led to the replacement of Texas themes for the most part with those of the Confederacy including religious justification given in sermons often demanded by petitioners 12 The transference to the Stars and Bars was in the hope of achieving the inclusion perceived by some to be denied by Washington 13 However that shift was never complete Clayton E Jewett wrote in Texas in the Confederacy An Experiment in Nation Building that its identity remained somewhat separate from the rest of the Confederacy James Marten wrote in Texas Divided Loyalty and Dissent in the Lone Star State 1856 1874 that it battled between loyalty to the Confederacy and dissent and its ambivalence may have been enough to assure Southern defeat 13 During the war Texas was spared most of the actual fighting with only Galveston seeing any military engagement with Union forces However the war did take a serious toll in the way of chronic shortages absence of men at home to run the economy military setbacks and fear of invasion 13 Although Lincoln recognized Texas s history as an independent nation his definition of the Union meant that Texas forever ceded this to be subject to the Constitution 6 From the Civil War to the 1990s editAfter the end of the Civil War Texans maintained a rebel or Confederate identity instead of a completely Texan one as a way of still defying the United States 12 After the Civil War it provided a haven for others in the Confederacy leaving claimed devastation 17 From that time to the present a Lost Cause mythology has continued in Texas and other areas of the South 18 However for the most part overt discussion of the right of states to secede ended replaced by another mythology based on the indivisibility of the territory 6 This did not end Texas s identity as at least somewhat different from the rest of the United States Unlike southern states Texas began emphasizing its cowboy heritage and connection with the U S Southwest even influencing the rest of the U S identity in the 20th century 19 For many Texans the history of the Republic of Texas is considered a time of independence and self determination often in contrast to interference by the federal government in Washington Texas requires a course in the state s history in the seventh grade where these ideas can also be found 20 In the 1990s Texas began to use the slogan Texas It s Like a Whole Other Country especially in domestic ads for tourism and still can be seen today 20 However public imagination remains split on the visions of Texas as state and nation that Houston and Lamar had in the 19th century The two can appear as a conflict between rural and urban Texans but the Lamar vision can be found in the cities as well 11 Texas did not join in festivities for the 150th anniversary of the Civil War as it was thought that the commemoration would have reopened old unhealed wounds 17 1990s to present editRepublic of Texas organization edit There have been efforts to promote Texas secession in the state at least since the 1990s 21 At this time Richard Lance McLaren founded the Republic of Texas organization based on his property within the Davis Mountains Resort in Jeff Davis County becoming the most active and influential secession group at the time Essentially the organization claimed that the United States annexed Texas illegally and considered it to be held captive The organization held itself out as an alternative government based on the principle of very limited powers 9 McLaren had both supporters and enemies His supporters generally believed that globalization was a threat to constitutional rights and against Christian principles 22 Tactics of the group included filing liens against properties disavowing state and federal authorities and opening an embassy McLaren s legal filings were so numerous that the county clerk gave them a separate cabinet 22 Members of the Republic of Texas group listed grievances with the U S government such as accusing the government of a corrupt judicial system paganism and of creating illegal treaties and illegitimate agencies Members of the group also stated that the U S government had set itself above the people and had exercised its global influences unlawfully against the Constitution The Republic of Texas members placed emphasis on the Branch Davidian incident near Waco as an example of all that was wrong with the U S government 9 In the summer of 1996 injunctions and other court proceedings against McLaren were well underway In July of that year McLaren held a press conference a block away from the state courthouse in Austin stating that he refused to appear because he did not recognize the legitimacy of the court 9 McLaren was jailed for a month by a federal judge for failing to show in court After his release McLaren s rhetoric grew stronger 22 23 24 Davis Mountains standoff edit In March 1997 McLaren wrote to the federal government to claim 93 trillion dollars in reparations to Texas for the Civil War 22 By this time the Republic of Texas organization had fractured into three factions When two of McLaren s groups were arrested McLaren took two hostages and holed up with armed supporters on his property leading to a standoff with Texas Department of Public Safety 9 22 The siege ended on May 4 1997 with McLaren and four others giving up without violence 22 while two others from the group Mike Matson and Richard Keyes fled the hideout armed with handguns and deer hunting rifles The following day the fugitives with the troopers in hot pursuit fired at a Black Hawk helicopter and searching dogs 25 26 in the Davis Mountains 27 Matson was killed by return fire 28 29 while Keyes managed to slip away He was eventually caught in September at New Waverly north of Houston 30 In November of that year McLaren was convicted of kidnapping and was sentenced to 99 years in prison 9 McLaren was also convicted of federal mail fraud and bank fraud in the U S District Court for the Northern District of Texas in Dallas 31 He is imprisoned at the William P Clements Unit of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice near Amarillo Texas and is scheduled for release on June 15 2041 32 As of 2003 there were three groups that claimed to be the Republic of Texas with different web sites but without McLaren named as a leader 9 Texas Nationalist Movement edit The Texas Nationalist Movement TNM headed by Daniel Miller evolved from one of the factions of the old Republic of Texas in 2005 33 34 35 However the organization has disassociated itself from the Republic of Texas and the tactics of McLaren instead opting for more political rather than confrontational or violent solution 34 The group has county level groups in most parts of the state 36 According to its website the objective of the Texas Nationalist Movement is the complete total and unencumbered political cultural and economic independence of Texas 37 Unlike its predecessor TNM claims to work peaceably 38 with the current political system and to reject use of force to achieve its goals 35 38 TNM is an unincorporated association under the laws of the State of Texas 35 The organization focuses on political support and advocacy and education surrounding the issue of secession 35 It seeks to have the Texas Legislature call for a state wide referendum on the issue similar to the Scottish Independence vote of 2014 In January 2013 members of the TNM rallied at the state capital in Austin to promote the resolution resulting in one mention of secession by one lawmaker on the opening day of the legislative session 21 In May 2016 the Texas GOP narrowly rejected bringing a resolution for secession to a floor vote at the 2016 Texas Republican Convention 39 However in 2020 the Republican Party of Texas included a plank in its party platform with 93 approval stating that the federal government has impaired Texas right to self government that any legislation infringing upon the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution should be ignored opposed refused and nullified and that Texas retains the right to secede if any future Congress or President change the current political system from a constitutional republic to something else 40 In June 2022 it voted to include a further secessionist plank in its party platform calling for the Texas Legislature to approve a referendum on whether Texas should secede from the Union on the 2023 statewide ballot 41 In 2015 a representative from the Texas Nationalist Movement attended a separatist conference in Russia Despite claims that the conference is funded by the Kremlin public record show that the conference was almost entirely paid for by a charitable fund 42 43 During Russia s 2016 interference operations in the U S a fake Russian Facebook page dubbed Heart of Texas claimed it was passing information about supporters along to the Texas Nationalist Movement 44 Other discussions of secession starting in 2012 edit The rise of membership in the Texas Nationalist Movement coincided with other secession related news events not part of that organization Governor Rick Perry at a political rally in 2009 addressed the possibility of secession During the rally many in the crowd began to chant secede secede to which Perry remarked If Washington continues to thumb their nose at the American people you know who knows what might come out of that 34 45 Perry subsequently clarified that the comment was tongue in cheek and that he does not support secession 39 His remarks sparked controversy 45 and harsh criticism from government officials and pundits such as Jeff Macke and Joe Weisental 46 After Perry s comments received news coverage Rasmussen Reports found that about 1 in 3 of those it polled believed that Texas has the right to secede from the United States although only 18 would support secession and 75 would oppose secession 47 In another poll 60 of Texans surveyed opposed becoming an independent nation However 48 of Texas Republicans surveyed supported it 48 49 The reaction from outside the state was also strongly split including those who wanted to get rid of Texas 45 After US president Barack Obama won the 2012 US presidential election bumper stickers and signs saying secede started to appear in Texas 50 The election also triggered a wave of petitions on the White House We the People website While the Texas petition was not first to appear it overtook those of the other states with over 125 000 signatures well above the 25 000 required to trigger a response 21 46 The petition stated that secession would protect the original ideas and beliefs of our founding fathers which are no longer being reflected by the federal government and defend Texans from blatant abuses to their rights 51 The Texas secession petition was followed by one allowing Austin to secede from Texas and stay part of the union 51 The White House issued a 476 word response rejecting the idea 21 In June 2016 when a 52 48 majority in the U K voted to leave the European Union EU using the hashtag Brexit on social media there was renewed interest that Texas formalize efforts to secede from the U S using the hashtag Texit 52 Texas Republican Party platform and 2020s referendum proposals edit Further information Texas Independence Referendum Act In December 2020 when the Supreme Court refused to hear Texas s lawsuit in Texas v Pennsylvania the chair of the Texas GOP Allen West suggested that Texas and other like minded states could leave the Union 53 54 55 On January 26 2021 the Texas Independence Referendum Act HB 1359 a bill to provide for a nonbinding statewide referendum on secession was filed by Texas House member Kyle Biedermann 56 The bill was referred to the State Affairs committee but it was never given a hearing or voted on by the committee before the end of the session 57 In June 2022 the Republican Party of Texas released their Report of the Permanent 2022 Platform amp Resolutions Committee which urges the legislature to introduce a referendum in 2023 to secede from the United States 58 In March 2023 state representative Bryan Slaton introduced a bill that would add a referendum on independence to the 2024 US election ballot 59 In December 2023 the Texas Nationalist Movement claimed that it collected enough signatures under the petition to include a question on secession on the ballot in 2024 It was clarified that even if the proposition passes it is going to be non binding 60 Similar secession movements in other states particularly the states of the Southern United States are commonly associated with their support of former US president Donald Trump for the 2022 US elections 61 Opinion polling editDate s conducted Polling organization client Sample size Support secession Oppose secession Undecided Net supportAugust 2009 Rasmussen Reports 62 63 18 75 7 57 September 2 6 2010 Public Policy Polling 64 538 15 72 13 57 August 12 14 2016 Public Policy Polling 65 944 26 59 15 33 Alternative question wording edit Along with other conservative states edit Date s conducted Polling organization client Sample size Support secession Oppose secession Undecided Net supportJune 6 26 2022 SurveyUSA 66 625 60 40 20 If Hillary Clinton had won the 2016 election edit Date s conducted Polling organization client Sample size Support secession Oppose secession Undecided Net supportAugust 12 14 2016 Public Policy Polling 65 944 40 48 12 8 In fiction editThe secession of Texas from the United States or the continued existence of the Republic of Texas has featured in some works of fiction often set during a Second American Revolution or a Second American Civil War and occasionally in tandem with American Civil War alternate histories The second edition of The People s Almanac posits the question of what would have happened had the Confederacy won the Civil War The Almanac uses the assumptions of author MacKinlay Kantor from his book If the South Had Won the Civil War According to Kantor Texas would initially remain with the Confederacy but would have significant economic ties with the Union due to its export of cattle It would therefore declare its independence in 1878 annexing Indian Territory now Oklahoma in the process both the Union and the Confederacy were more relieved than upset at the move Texas would abolish slavery in 1885 the same year as the Confederacy Movements in the Confederacy toward Consolidation reunion of the three countries would result in their combined entry into both World Wars I and II and ultimately at the reunion on December 20 1960 exactly 100 years after South Carolina originally seceded from the Union in response to a Soviet nuclear threat from Alaska 67 In the Settling Accounts tetralogy of Harry Turtledove s Southern Victory Series set in an alternate reality where the Confederacy won the War of Secession 1861 1862 Texas secedes from the Confederacy in 1944 during the Second Great War when it was clear that the CSA under Freedom Party rule and the presidency of Jake Featherston would ultimately lose Under the presidency of former Freedom Party governor Wright Patman the Republic of Texas signs an armistice and collaborates with the United States arresting and trying Confederate concentration camp guards for crimes against humanity and allowing the U S state of Houston to be recreated It is unclear if Texan independence continues beyond 1944 The Crosstime Traffic novel The Disunited States of America is largely set in an alternate reality where the ratification of the Articles of Confederation resulted in the dissolution of the United States in the 1800s and a frequent series of minor wars between the smaller successor states Texas is mentioned as a prominent oil producing republic In The Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling Charles Babbage successfully develops an analytical engine in 1824 resulting in the early arrival of the Information Age and the ascendency of the British Empire as a world power Due to British interference in North American affairs chiefly to prevent the rise of the United States as a world power the Republic of Texas remains an independent state by 1855 with Sam Houston appearing as the president in exile having fled the country following a coup and the establishment of a military junta In The Handmaid s Tale by Margaret Atwood the Republic of Texas is mentioned as being a successor state to the theonomic Republic of Gilead at a history symposium in Nunavut in 2195 In the sequel The Testaments it was revealed that Texas declared independence shortly after the establishment of Gilead A stalemated secessionist war cements Texan independence but enforces Texan neutrality in Gileadian affairs In Season 4 of The Handmaid s Tale television series the Republic of Texas is mentioned as a potential refuge for a group of escaped Handmaids In Russian Amerika by Stony Compton the Republic of Texas is mentioned as being one of many rump states that comprised the former United States and Canada in an alternate reality where a Civil War which broke out in the 1850s resulted in a Confederate victory In the Sliders episode The Good the Bad and the Wealthy Texas had declared independence during the American Civil War enveloping the former US state of California In 1996 George H W Bush served as Texian President and gunfighting was legal In the 2006 television series Jericho created by Stephen Chbosky Josh Schaer and Jonathan E Steinberg the Independent Republic of Texas is mentioned and credited with saving the United States after a series of nuclear attacks In Underground Airlines by Ben H Winters the assassination of President elect Abraham Lincoln in 1861 resulted in the adoption of a modified version of the Crittenden Compromise and the continued practice of slavery into the twenty first century in the so called Hard Four States Carolina Alabama Mississippi and Louisiana The state s growing abolitionist Black and Hispanic populations led Texas to declare independence from the United States during the presidency of Lyndon B Johnson starting a fifteen year long Texas War ending in stalemate The status of Texas as either a US state or an independent republic remained ambiguous thereafter See also edit nbsp Texas portalSecession in the United States Cascadia independence movement Hawaiian sovereignty movement Yes California independence movement Quebec sovereignty movementReferences edit McDaniel Kirk September 18 2021 Inside the movement for Texas independence www courthousenews com Courthouse News Service Archived from the original on June 21 2022 Retrieved January 24 2022 Wood Graeme November 6 2019 The Movement to Make Texas Its Own Country The Atlantic The Atlantic Archived from the original on December 16 2021 Retrieved January 24 2022 Ulysses S Grant on the Secession of Texas Archived from the original on January 6 2021 Retrieved February 7 2021 Perez Boquete Roi Bello Gabriel G December 19 2022 When nationalism beats populism The secessionist movement in Texas Nations and Nationalism 29 2 528 545 doi 10 1111 nana 12921 hdl 10347 30698 ISSN 1354 5078 S2CID 254968443 Axelrod Tal December 11 2020 Texas GOP chair floats secession for law abiding states after Supreme Court defeat The Hill Archived from the original on December 12 2020 Retrieved February 7 2021 a b c d e Lerner Craig S May 2004 Saving the Constitution Lincoln Secession and the Price of Union Michigan Law Review 102 6 1263 1294 doi 10 2307 4141945 JSTOR 4141945 Archived from the original on May 3 2020 Retrieved December 13 2019 TEXAS V WHITE September 19 2010 Archived from the original on March 21 2017 Retrieved April 18 2017 Letter dated October 31 2006 to Daniel Turkewitz http www newyorkpersonalinjuryattorneyblog com uploaded images Scalia Turkewitz Letter 763174 jpg Archived July 25 2014 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h i Shelly L Peffer 2008 Tenuous legitimacy The administrative state the antigovernment movement and the stability of the United States constitutional democracy PhD Cleveland State University Docket 3316905 https tea texas gov sites default files 1836 document telling the Texas story final pdf bare URL PDF a b c d e f Burka Paul June 2009 The Secret of My Secession Rick Perry is not the first Lone Star politician to embrace the myth of Texan autonomy Let s hope he s the last Texas Monthly Archived from the original on January 1 2017 Retrieved December 31 2016 a b c d e f Lang Andrew F June 2009 Upon the Altar of Our Country Confederate Identity Nationalism and Morale in Harrison County Texas 1860 1865 Civil War History 55 2 278 306 doi 10 1353 cwh 0 0060 S2CID 144887866 a b c d e f Lang Andrew F 2008 Victory is our only road to peace Texas wartime morale and Confederatenationalism 1860 1865 PhD University of North Texas Docket 1458660 Winkler Ernest William 1912 Journal of the Secession Convention of Texas 1861 Edited From the Original in the Department of State Austin Texas Texas State Library Archives Commission Martin Kelly When States Seceded During the American Civil War About Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved October 4 2014 Texas Secession Referendum Vote Archive Retrieved May 30 2023 a b Wheeler Linda Richardson Sarah June 2011 Texas Passes on Secession Anniversary Civil War Times 50 3 15 Roberts Timothy Mason May 2012 Secession as an International Phenomenon From America s Civil War to Contemporary Separatist Movements The Journal of Southern History 78 2 467 469 Seaton Melynda 2006 Texas cowboy as myth Visual representations from the late twentieth century PhD University of North Texas Docket 1437067 a b Sivek Susan Currie 2008 Constructing Texan identity at Texas Monthly magazine PhD The University of Texas at Austin Docket 3320365 a b c d Manny Fernandez January 15 2013 White House Rejects Petitions to Secede but Texans Fight On New York Times New York Archived from the original on January 19 2013 Retrieved January 22 2013 a b c d e f Patoski Joe Nick June 1997 Out there Texas Monthly Vol 25 no 6 pp 98 99 Archived from the original on January 1 2017 Retrieved December 31 2016 Loan Star loser Bankers News 5 4 February 25 1997 p S2 Solicita Texas atestiguar independencia Texas requests verification of independence Reforma in Spanish July 16 1996 p 16 Nieman Robert June 2007 Captain Barry Caver on the Republic of Texas Standoff PDF Texas Ranger Dispatch Archived PDF from the original on June 16 2020 Retrieved June 16 2020 CNN Texas separatist leader to surrender TV station reports Apr 30 1997 www cnn com Retrieved June 16 2020 Services Tribune News May 6 1997 SECESSIONIST SHOT TO DEATH AFTER FIRING AT TEXAS POLICE HELICOPTER chicagotribune com Archived from the original on June 18 2021 Retrieved May 22 2020 Man felt duped before dying in shootout Deseret News May 11 1997 Archived from the original on February 7 2021 Retrieved May 22 2020 Hewitt Christopher 2005 Political Violence and Terrorism in Modern America A Chronology Greenwood Publishing Group p 170 ISBN 978 0 313 33418 4 Archived from the original on February 7 2021 Retrieved November 7 2020 Republic of Texas fugitive arrested Tampa Bay Times Archived from the original on February 7 2021 Retrieved May 22 2020 See generally footnote 1 McLaren v United States Incorporated 2 F Supp 2d 48 D D C 1998 at 1 Archived October 19 2015 at the Wayback Machine Inmate record Richard Lance McLaren inmate 00802782 Tex Dep t of Criminal Justice at 2 Archived December 3 2013 at the Wayback Machine Inside the movement for Texas independence www courthousenews com Archived from the original on June 21 2022 Retrieved December 30 2021 a b c Nate Blakeslee September 1 2009 Revolutionary Kind Texas Monthly Archived from the original on October 11 2015 Retrieved January 22 2013 a b c d Questions About TNM Texas Nationalist Movement Archived from the original on February 16 2013 Retrieved January 20 2013 Texas Nationalist Movement to rally for independence on opening day of Legislature advertisement by Texas Nationalist Movement in Cypress Creek Mirror Houston January 7 2013 Archived from the original on January 12 2013 Retrieved January 22 2013 What we believe Texas Nationalist Movement Archived from the original on January 12 2013 Retrieved January 20 2013 a b Archived copy Archived from the original on May 18 2015 Retrieved May 7 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link A Guide to Effective Nonviolent Struggle a b Texas Republicans have opted not to secede from the United States after all The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 19 2016 Retrieved April 18 2017 Vindicated Texas GOP Passes TNM s Secession Plank with 93 Support October 15 2020 Archived from the original on November 5 2020 Retrieved November 5 2020 Chappell Bill June 20 2022 Texas GOP s new platform says Biden didn t really win It also calls for secession NPR Archived from the original on June 21 2022 Retrieved June 20 2022 Texas California Separatists Attend Kremlin Funded Conference ABCNews com National Charitable Foundation Competition nbfond ru Inside the Russian effort to fuel American secessionists February 26 2018 Archived from the original on December 22 2021 Retrieved December 22 2021 a b c Wayne Slater October 14 2009 Wayne Slater Texas Gov Rick Perry s secession talk triggered calls of good riddance McClatchy Tribune Business News a b EDITORIAL Civil War proved that secession isn t a practical option McClatchy Tribune Business News November 21 2012 In Texas 31 Say State Has Right to Secede From U S But 75 Opt To Stay Rasmussen Reports April 17 2009 Archived from the original on April 19 2009 Retrieved April 19 2009 Secession Divides Texas Republicans The Washington Post Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved May 25 2010 Daily Kos Research 2000 Texas Poll Daily Kos Archived from the original on April 26 2009 Retrieved November 16 2012 Texas Nationalist Movement Claims Membership Has Skyrocketed 400 Percent US News Washington December 4 2012 Archived from the original on January 31 2013 Retrieved January 22 2013 a b Chuck Lindell November 14 2012 Texas secession petition takes off McClatchy Tribune Business News Tagdef definition June 25 2016 Archived from the original on August 6 2016 Retrieved June 25 2016 Goldmacher Shane December 11 2020 Democrats and Even Some Republicans Cheer as Justices Spurn Trump The New York Times Archived from the original on December 12 2020 Retrieved December 11 2020 Merchant Omaan Durkin Richer Alanna Sherman Mark December 11 2020 Supreme Court rejects Republican attack on Biden victory The Associated Press Archived from the original on December 11 2020 Retrieved December 11 2020 Alexrod Tal December 11 2020 Texas GOP chair floats secession for law abiding states after Supreme Court defeat The Hill Archived from the original on December 12 2020 Retrieved December 11 2020 Herman Texas secession bill filed in House Austin American Statesman January 26 2021 Archived from the original on January 26 2021 Retrieved January 26 2021 87 R History for HB 1359 Texas Legislature Online Archived from the original on July 15 2021 Retrieved June 15 2021 Chappell Bill June 20 2022 Texas GOP s new platform says Biden didn t really win It also calls for secession NPR Archived from the original on June 21 2022 Retrieved June 21 2022 Ramirez Nikki McCann March 6 2023 Texas Republican Introduces Bill Calling for Vote on Secession Rolling Stone Retrieved March 7 2023 Stanton Andrew December 1 2023 Texas Gets One Step Closer to Leaving US Newsweek Retrieved December 19 2023 DeChalus Camila Texas secession Civil war Threats of violence or worse loom over the 2022 midterm elections Business Insider Reports Rasmussen In Texas 31 Say State Has Right to Secede From U S But 75 Opt To Stay Rasmussen Reports Archived from the original on March 11 2017 Retrieved April 18 2017 Weiner Rachel May 18 2009 Texas Secession Poll 75 Of Texans Say No Archived from the original on March 20 2017 Retrieved April 18 2017 via Huff Post Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on May 7 2016 Retrieved August 23 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on August 16 2016 Retrieved August 17 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link SurveyUSA News Poll 26381 www surveyusa com Retrieved January 17 2023 The People s Almanac 2 David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace pp 393 395 External links editDaughters of the Republic Library Seceder com Texas secession s viability Slate The Republic of Texas Article published in 1997 Still true today The Republic of Texas is no more an article by Ralph H Brock published in the Houston Chronicle in 1997 that debunks Republic of Texas claims Texas Nationalist Movement website not affiliated with Republic of Texas organizationTerrorism Knowledge Base profile of Republic of Texas edit Republic of Texas ROT archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Texas Convention Pro Continuation of 1861 edit RoT statement to U S District Court in Austin RoT declaration filed with the Swiss Federal Council RoT cease fire against the state government Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Texas secession movements amp oldid 1219341658 Texas Nationalist Movement, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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