Republican voters also strongly supported several other propositions addressing issues such as property taxes, immigration, and education.
Proposition 1: Texas property taxes should be assessed at the purchase price and phased out entirely over the next six years through spending reductions.
Yes: 1,792,508 (88.11%)
No: 241,778 (11.89%)
Proposition 2: Texas should require any local government budget that raises property taxes to be approved by voters at a November general election.
Yes: 1,937,081 (93.76%)
No: 128,828 (6.24%)
Proposition 3: Texas should prohibit denial of healthcare or any medical service based solely on the patient’s vaccination status.
Yes: 1,504,139 (73.18%)
No: 551,255 (26.82%)
Proposition 4: Texas should require its public schools to teach that life begins at fertilization.
Yes: 1,740,012 (84.9%)
No: 309,437 (15.1%)
Proposition 5: Texas should ban gender, sexuality, and reproductive clinics and services in K-12 schools.
Yes: 1,869,444 (90.63%)
No: 193,294 (9.37%)
Proposition 6: Texas should enact term limits on all elected officials.
Yes: 1,876,666 (91.12%)
No: 182,950 (8.88%)
Proposition 7: Texas should ban the large-scale export or sale of groundwater and surface water to any single private or public entity.
Yes: 1,892,220 (93.19%)
No: 138,299 (6.81%)
Proposition 8: The Texas Legislature should reduce the burden of illegal immigration on taxpayers by ending public services for illegal aliens.
Yes: 1,912,478 (92.7%)
No: 150,713 (7.3%)
Proposition 9: The Republican-controlled Texas Legislature should stop awarding leadership positions—including committee chairmanships and vice chairmanships—to Democrats.
Yes: 1,600,728 (79.07%)
No: 423,824 (20.93%)
Proposition 10: Texas should prohibit Sharia law.
Yes: 1,903,489 (94.81%)
No: 104,290 (5.19%)
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