Texas Designates Muslim Brotherhood, CAIR as Terrorist Organizations

The proclamation grants the Texas Attorney General the authority to initiate legal action to shut them down.

On Nov. 18, Texas Governor Greg Abbott issued a proclamation officially designating the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the Muslim Brotherhood as foreign terrorist and transnational criminal organizations under Texas law, amid rising concerns about foreign influence in the state.

The move bans both groups from purchasing or acquiring property in Texas, and authorizes the state’s attorney general to file lawsuits to shut them down. Posting via social media, Abbott wrote: “Today, I designated the Muslim Brotherhood and Council on American-Islamic Relations as foreign terrorist and transnational criminal organizations. This bans them from buying or acquiring land in Texas and authorizes the Attorney General to sue to shut them down.”

The proclamation points to previous legal findings and federal designations that connect the Muslim Brotherhood and its affiliates to Hamas, which has been classified as a foreign terrorist organization since 1997.

It specifically references the Texas-based Holy Land Foundation case, where jurors determined the charity operated as a Hamas front and was part of a broader U.S. Muslim Brotherhood network allegedly aiming to “wage jihad” and “destroy Western civilization from within.”

The proclamation further asserts that several U.S. organizations—including the North American Islamic Trust, the Islamic Society of North America, and CAIR USA—are linked to the Muslim Brotherhood, and claims that CAIR has “repeatedly been found to have provided support to Hamas through its employees and members.”

With this designation, Texas can seize the groups’ property, block real estate transactions, and restrict their ability to contract with government entities under the Texas Property and Penal Codes.

The proclamation also states that CAIR Texas has participated in a variety of activities, including funding operations and public advocacy for Muslim Brotherhood affiliates and Hamas, as well as offering legal support through lawsuits and civil rights initiatives. It further alleges that CAIR has promoted efforts to defund the police, challenged the Patriot Act’s counterterrorism provisions, spread pro-Hamas messaging, and encouraged religious and political radicalization through events and recruitment drives.

CAIR responded on X by calling the proclamation defamatory and “has no basis in fact or law.” The group said they have sued the governor “three different times for shredding the First Amendment to benefit the Israeli government, and we are ready to sue him again if he attempts to turn this publicity stunt into real policy. See you in court again, Greg…if you dare.”
One notable lawsuit was filed in 2024, in which CAIR challenged an executive order by the governor that directed Texas public universities to revise their policies in response to what was described as a sharp rise in anti-Semitic speech on campuses amid escalating tensions over the Israel-Gaza war.

The lawsuit, brought by the Students for Justice in Palestine chapters at the University of Houston and UT Dallas, along with the Democratic Socialists of America, argued that the executive order infringed upon free speech rights.

For CAIR and its local chapters, the ban on property acquisition, along with the threat of civil suits, could disrupt operations in Texas. For the nation, the proclamation joins a growing list of individual state-level initiatives to regulate land ownership and nonprofit activity linked to organizations linked to terrorists, criminal networks, violence, or a threat to national security.

The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in Egypt in 1928 and is often described as a transnational Islamist movement with affiliates worldwide. According to the Program on Extremism at The George Washington University, the group “advocates a bottom-up, gradual Islamization of society that would eventually lead to the formation of a purely Islamic society and political entity.”

CAIR, founded in the U.S. in 1994, identifies itself as a Muslim civil-rights organization whose “mission is to protect civil rights, enhance understanding of Islam, promote justice, and empower American Muslims,” according to its website.

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