Aaron Reitz: A Legal Warrior for Texas

Trump, Reitz, Paxton

Our local state congressional representative is Chip Roy in nearby Kerrville. But we are not voting for him to be Texas’s next Attorney General.

“Chip Roy was the first elected official in America to call for (Ken) Paxton to be removed from office. Immediately after that, Mayes Middleton started unloading vast sums of money, bankrolling everyone that wanted to take him out,” Aaron Reitz, candidate for Attorney General recalled. “I was loyal in that moment.”

We desperately want RINO Senator John Cornyn out of office. He did not support President Donald Trump during the January 6, 2021 infamous fiasco at the U.S. Capitol. Paxton will work well with Trump and Senator Ted Cruz.

Reason #1

Reitz will vigorously topple the “Islamification” of Texas. He surpasses the rhetoric of his GOP opponents. He will actually aggressively sue Muslim-affiliated nonprofits, schools, and developments in the Lone Star State.

Reitz vows to create a legal environment that is “so inhospitable that they’ll self-deport or go to jail.”

He stated this because he believes that “Jesus Christ — and none other — reigns over this land,” as he said in a post.

“I imagine being even more aggressive and energetic than Paxton,” he stated. “Paxton has been tremendous. I think he’s 10 out of 10, but to use the old Spinal Tap reference, we’re going to turn it up to 11.”

Reason #2

In 2023, Reitz left his “dream job” as Paxton’s chief prosecutor to become chief of staff for Sen. Ted Cruz.

After Trump won reelection in 2024, Cruz nominated Reitz to run the Office of Legal Policy at the Justice Department, calling him “a true MAGA attorney” and “a warrior for our Constitution.”

Reason#3

On Biden’s inauguration day, Reitz and crew were busy. They were filing the first of over 100 lawsuits. The Texas Attorney General’s Office would bring these lawsuits against the new administration.

Reitz likened his position was “offensive coordinator,” with Paxton as head coach.

“My job was to identify targets to go after,” he explained. “Entities, whether governmental in nature, federal, state or local, or private actors who, in the attorney general’s and my judgment, were conducting themselves in ways that were unconstitutional or illegal or thwarting law and order or justice.”

He perfected a “plug and play” model for suing the Biden administration, especially over immigration, which he explained at a Heritage Foundation event in October 2021.

“‘It’s a disaster’ — that’s your opening paragraph in every lawsuit, ‘it’s a disaster,’” Reitz encouraged other state attorneys general to bring their cases to Texas, where “we have nothing but good courts,” he said.

The Texas attorney general’s office was at war with “the forces that want to destroy the American order, root and branch,” he revealed. “If you don’t believe that we’re at war, then I think, you know, you need to wake up to that reality. Here at the Texas Attorney General’s Office … our soldiers are lawyers, and our weapons are lawsuits, and our tactic is lawfare. This is the project that we’re engaged in.”

Reason#4

Reitz was a freshman at Ronald Reagan High School in San Antonio when the planes flew into the Twin Towers on 9/11. This event inspired him to join the Marines.

After graduating from Texas A&M, he deployed to Afghanistan where he “stared into the abyss of anti-civilizational Islamist rot.” 

He enrolled in law school at the University of Texas after serving. There, he led the UT chapter of the Federalist Society. He was editor-in-chief of the Texas Review of Law & Politics law journal. There, he worked with future legal luminaries like now-U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk and Texas Supreme Court Chief Justice Jimmy Blacklock.

“I knew exactly why I was going to law school,” Reitz says. “To fulfill the spirit of the oath that I had sworn when I was a Marine to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies foreign and domestic.”

He went into private practice after graduation and later Gov. Greg Abbott appointed Blacklock to the Texas Supreme Court in January 2018, Reitz became his inaugural clerk.

He soon found himself in the Oval Office. He was talking with President Trump about overturning the 2020 election. They discussed blocking four states from casting their electoral votes for Joe Biden.

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5 comments

  1. Thank you! This is helpful. I was going to vote for Mayes, but now I’m not sure! Praying to do God’s will. I was definitely not voting for Chip.

    Liked by 1 person

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