Outgoing Tarrant County Judge Glen Whitley warned against the dangers of partisanship at his final State of the County address Friday.
Whitley has served as the county鈥檚 top elected official since 2007, and before that, for 10 years as county commissioner. He鈥檚 a budget-focused accountant and 鈥渂ean counter鈥 who came to greater prominence through his handling the county鈥檚 COVID-19 response and .
Whitley is not running for reelection, and on Friday, he declined to make an endorsement in the race for his job.
The two candidates, and are both the former chairs of their respective parties in the county and could move the county judge鈥檚 seat in a more partisan direction. O鈥橦are promised at his primary victory speech to make Tarrant County "more Republican every single day.鈥
"What I pray for is that what we're seeing in the campaigns may not be what we see in actuality after the election," Whitley told reporters Friday.
Whitley, a moderate Republican, has been a vocal critic of O鈥橦are, who is also a former mayor of Farmers Branch and founder of , a conservative group that fought against diversity efforts in the Southlake school system.
Whoever wins needs to remember that they must collaborate with the four other county commissioners, Whitley said.
"In county government, you got to count to three,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou've got to get your [vote], plus two more, before you're going to get anything done.鈥
Whitley lamented the low turnout in Tarrant County鈥檚 March primary elections, cast a ballot for county judge candidates.
鈥楾he best 26 years of my life鈥
Hundreds gathered in a hotel ballroom in downtown Fort Worth as Whitley remembered his time on the commissioners court, which he called 鈥渢he best 26 years of my life.鈥 He took the stage wearing a black pair of cowboy boots from the , with the state of Texas and the words TARRANT COUNTY embossed in white.
Texas county governments oversee emergency management, and the COVID-19 pandemic threw the county into a constant state of emergency. Whitley looked back on the pandemic鈥檚 early days, when his main goal was to keep the hospitals open. He said a willingness to work together made a good response possible.
"We had weekly calls with the cities, with the schools, with the hospitals. The thing that we learned is we had to stay flexible," he said.

Whitley鈥檚 tenure has not been without controversy.
The commissioners court has faced criticism and protests in recent years for approving the 287(g) program. The federal program gives county jail staff some of the same powers as federal immigration agents, like flagging undocumented inmates for deportation 鈥 including those who have not yet been convicted of a crime.
Whitley is still happy the program is in place, he said Friday.
"These are folks who you don't want out on the streets,鈥 he said.
Whitley is also leaving the office as critics call for an independent investigation of the Tarrant County Jail over a spike in the number of jail deaths in recent years, a lack of transparency surrounding those deaths, and concerns over jail conditions.
The circumstances of one death after a Fort Worth Star-Telegram investigation found that inmate Robert Miller was pepper-sprayed at close range before his death. He also likely did not have sickle cell disease, which the medical examiner listed as his cause of death, the newspaper found.
Whoever wins the county judge鈥檚 seat on Tuesday will take on these issues. Whitley told the crowd on Friday he鈥檒l offer all the help he can to help the new members of the court.
"On November the 9th, I will call all three new court members on our commissioners court. And at that point in time, I will offer to do anything I can do to make this transition to January the 1st as smooth as possible," he said.
Got a tip? Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org. You can follow Miranda on Twitter @MirandaRSuarez.
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