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Republican incumbent faces challenger, Democrat uncontested for Texas House District 91

From left, Kyle Morris, Yisak Worku and David Lowe.
Courtesy | Kyle Morris, Yisak Worku; Maria Crane | Fort Worth Report/CatchLight Local/Report for America
From left, Kyle Morris, Yisak Worku and David Lowe.

Voters are deciding which candidates they want to see face off for Texas House District 91 in the November election.

In the March 3 primary, Republicans are choosing between one-term incumbent state Rep. and , a small-business owner and political newcomer, for their party鈥檚 nomination.

On the Democratic side, college student is running unopposed.

The district covers Haltom City, North Richland Hills, Richland Hills, Watauga and a small section of northeast Fort Worth.

In 2024, Lowe beat longtime incumbent Stephanie Klick, who due to her vote to impeach Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in 2023.

Here is an introduction to the candidates and their stances on the issues.

Incumbent Republican seeks a second term

Lowe is seeking a second, two-year term.

Lowe did not respond to the Report鈥檚 request for an interview for this story.

According to his , Lowe鈥檚 platform includes eliminating property taxes, securing the U.S.-Mexico border, ensuring election integrity, ending abortion, banning vaccine mandates, supporting Second Amendment rights and protecting children.

To eliminate property taxes, the state would use excess revenue to pay down property taxes, his website states. This would move the state to a voluntary taxing system.

鈥淵ou should never be forced to rent your property from the government,鈥 his website reads. 鈥淭he complete elimination of property taxes might sound like a far-fetched idea, but it鈥檚 a simple concept with many different, well-researched plans that have been proposed.鈥

Regarding Texas鈥 southern border with Mexico, Lowe鈥檚 website says 鈥渋t is up to the Texas Legislature to finally take charge鈥 after decades of federal failure. The website adds that undocumented immigrants must not be able 鈥渢o unfairly benefit from the resources鈥 paid for by Texas taxpayers, such as in-state university tuition rates and public education.

Lowe opposed red flag gun laws and sees them as 鈥渢he gateway to unconstitutional gun confiscation by the government,鈥 per his website. Such laws, also known as extreme risk protection orders, allow judges to rule in favor of seizing an individual鈥檚 guns when family members or police assert they are a risk to themselves or others.

The incumbent also believes sex offenders are released from prison too early, endangering communities, according to his website. He supports legislation to address this.

鈥淪pecifically, child molesters cannot be reformed. Therefore, any sexual contact with a minor should result in a lifelong sentence,鈥 his website reads.

From July 7 to Jan. 22, Lowe received $278,417 in contributions and spent $224,956. As of Jan. 22, he had $110,407 in cash on hand.

Motivated to protect families, Republican political newcomer seeks office

Morris, 45, is running for office for the first time.

His No. 1 campaign issue is the safety of children and families, he said.

In 2022, his then-15-year-old daughter was kidnapped and trafficked. She was missing for 10 days before she was found in Oklahoma.

He testified before a Texas Senate committee in 2023 in support of a bill that requires police to immediately investigate missing children cases and notify other nearby departments when a child is deemed to be at high risk for trafficking. The bill ultimately passed and went into effect Sept. 1, 2023.

His family鈥檚 experience and his firsthand look at how change is effected in Austin motivated him to run, he said.

He believes the penalty for sexual assault of a minor should be at least 25 years in prison, with the possibility for more time added based on the victim鈥檚 age and the severity of the crime.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going after a child, after a vulnerable part of our population, that鈥檚 someone who is going to continue preying on those people, on that population,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think they deserve a place out in society, I just don鈥檛. You鈥檙e taking advantage of children, and that鈥檚 just as low as it gets in my book.鈥

Morris wants to reduce property taxes and would like to eliminate them altogether. To accomplish the latter would take a collaborative effort at the state, local and county level, he said.

Regarding immigration, Morris said he believes President Donald Trump and Gov. Greg Abbott have done well in closing the border and wants to ensure it remains closed and secure.

鈥淲e are a nation of immigrants, we truly are, but there is a right way to do it and a wrong way to do it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 believe if you want to come here, if you want to immigrate to America, you have to go by our laws, and you have to follow our immigration policy.鈥

Morris believes his professional background would be an asset in the Texas House. He is the owner of the small business DeMars & Associates, a dispute resolution firm.

鈥淚 am not uncomfortable at all getting in the middle of a dispute,鈥 Morris said. 鈥淚鈥檓 a proponent that conflict doesn鈥檛 have to be bad. A lot of good can come from conflict.鈥

He strongly believes that elected officials represent all constituents, not just the ones who voted for them, something that would inform his approach to governance, he said.

From Sept. 5 to Jan. 22, Morris received $63,437 in contributions and spent $65,700. As of Jan. 22, he had $11,470 in cash on hand.

In Democratic primary, newcomer runs unopposed

Worku, a University of Texas at Dallas computer science student, is running unopposed in the Democratic Party primary.

His reasons for running trace back to his roots, he said. Worku is an Ethiopian immigrant from a working-class family and first-generation college student. Issues facing families like his 鈥 including rising costs of living and difficulty affording homes 鈥 as well as a desire to push back against Republican actions at the federal level led him to enter the race, he said.

Worku believes in raising taxes on corporations to fund cheaper energy and better transportation, he said.

鈥淲e tax them, we use that money to build the infrastructure that they benefit from, and then they can profit off that,鈥 he said.

Other issues central to the 23-year-old鈥檚 campaign are health care, education and immigration.

He believes the state should expand Medicaid. He also opposes private school vouchers.

鈥淚mprovements I would like to see for a public education system comes in the form of reduced class sizes and increased teacher counts, but that鈥檚 going to require more funding, more taxation. Increased teacher pay 鈥 more funding, more taxation,鈥 he said.

Regarding his approach to governance, Worku said he wants to say yes as much as he can because the government has operated too slowly to address problems.

鈥淚 want to be a catalyzer,鈥 Worku said. 鈥淚 want to encourage, I want to push. I want to negotiate when I can, find compromise when I can and pass as much good legislation for people.鈥

From Oct. 29 to Dec. 31, Worku received $900 in contributions and spent $776. As of Dec. 31, he had $203 in cash on hand.

runs through Feb. 27. Election Day is March 3.

McKinnon Rice is the higher education reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact her at mckinnon.rice@fortworthreport.org

The Fort Worth Report partners with Open Campus on higher education coverage.

At the Fort Worth Report, news decisions are made independently of our board members and financial supporters. Read more about our editorial independence policy .

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