Jack County Democratic Party

Jack County Democratic Party Official page for Jack County Democratic Party. This communication is not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.

12/01/2025

Cold front blew through Jacksboro like it owed us money, then left as quick as it came. One thing that shouldn’t change with the wind: Faith Community Hospital ready when our people need it. 🌾

When a hand gets stepped on in the pens or a kid spikes a fever after practice, minutes matter. Keeping care close to home means steady EMS support, fair pay to the folks in scrubs, mental health help that isn’t a 60‑mile drive, and telehealth that actually loads because our internet doesn’t sputter out. It also means bringing our own tax dollars back to Jack County instead of letting them sit on somebody’s talking points in Austin. Rural hospitals are lifelines; you don’t cut the rope and expect folks to climb.

Tag a nurse, EMT, or clinic worker we should thank — and tell us what Faith Community needs most. ❤️🤝

11/29/2025

If you drove past a pasture before sunrise and saw taillights in the dew, odds are a neighbor was checking calves, water, and fences before you hit the coffee pot.
That same kind of backbone keeps Jack County standing tall every day.

From the volunteer firefighters in Bryson and Jacksboro, to the ag teachers and bus drivers, to the nurses at Faith Community and the linemen who climb in the wind, our folks do the quiet work that keeps lights on, kids safe, and families cared for.
They stretch a dollar so far it waves hello at both ends, and they shouldn’t have to pass the hat for turnout gear, classroom supplies, or ER staffing.
Rural pride isn’t a slogan out here; it’s service without fanfare and the promise that we don’t leave each other behind, whether it’s a grass fire, a busted bridge, or a neighbor short on hay.
Let’s match their grit: shop local, back our volunteer departments, show up for school events, and demand that Austin remember small towns when it writes the checks.

Tag your local hero and tell us how they’ve kept Jack County strong.

🌾🤠💪

11/28/2025

That north wind will blow the dust off a fencepost, but it won’t fix a road or keep our hospital strong. That’s on us, neighbors.

I’ve seen Jack County races swing on fewer folks than fit in the Dairyland lunch line. School boards, hospital boards, water and roads—real kitchen‑table stuff—get decided by whoever shows up. If you love this place, make a plan: check your registration, learn what’s on the ballot, and offer a ride to a neighbor. We may not share the same yard sign, but we share the same dirt—and it needs all of us pitching in.

Tell us the one local issue that’ll get you to the polls—and tag two neighbors you’ll bring with you.

🌾🗳️🤝

11/27/2025

Took 380 to grab feed at sunup and counted more potholes than raindrops. By the time I hit 281, the cell signal packed up and went home.

This isn’t politics; it’s daily life. Kids shouldn’t have to sit on the library steps for homework, nurses shouldn’t lose a call, and small shops shouldn’t pray over a card reader. We paid our dues—our roads ought to be striped and safe, our bridges solid, and real broadband should reach every county road, not just Main Street. There’s money on the table for rural Texas, but the maps won’t fix themselves. Let’s push the county, the co-ops, and the providers to run fiber down the spurs and patch what’s busted so business, school, and ranch work can keep rolling.

Tell us the worst dead zone or roughest stretch—drop the road name or nearest crossroad in the comments so we can take a clean list to Commissioners Court and the grant folks.

11/24/2025

Cold north wind had the gate creaking at daybreak, and the cows looked about as impressed as my knees. Days like this remind me how much we count on the folks who patch us up.

Keeping care close to home means standing up for Faith Community Hospital, our clinics, and EMS — so chest pain, busted wrists, or thorn-snagged feet don’t turn into highway marathons. That takes steady funding, fair pay to keep our nurses here, working equipment, and broadband strong enough for telehealth when the roads ice up. Let’s push Austin and the insurers to quit the runaround, and back local solutions that keep the ER open, the lights on, and our families treated right. This isn’t red or blue; it’s Jack County taking care of its own.

Tag a nurse, doc, or EMT who’s helped your family, and tell us the one thing our hospital needs most right now.

🤝🌾❤️

11/23/2025

Sunday morning in Jack County means diesel dust settling, choir warming up, and a casserole headed toward someone who needs a lift. We don’t wait on perfect; we show up for each other.

I’m grateful for the quiet heroes — nurses at Faith Community, volunteer fire crews, teachers grading by lamplight, and ranch hands checking tanks before daylight. We’ve had our share of hard weeks, but hope here isn’t a speech; it’s a neighbor with jumper cables and an extra chair at the table. Next week, let’s put that same good sense to work: keep care close to home, back our schools, fix the dead zones, and make sure every voice in Jack County counts. Pull the rope together and there’s nothing from Perrin to Bryson we can’t set right.

Tell us what you’re grateful for this Sunday — and what you want us to tackle first tomorrow.

🌾🤝❤️

11/22/2025

Out here, the forecast may be guesswork, but our neighbors are a sure thing.
When the wind kicks up or a tire goes soft on 380, somebody stops.

Today we’re tipping our hats to the folks who keep Jack County stitched together: volunteer firefighters rolling out at midnight, teachers stretching paychecks and patience so our kids can shine, ranch families mending fence by headlamp, and nurses at Faith Community Hospital who know your name. They don’t ask who you voted for; they ask what you need. That’s the way we make progress here—fix the problem in front of us and leave the place better than we found it. Let’s carry that spirit into county decisions—standing up for first responders, backing our schools in Jacksboro, Bryson, and Perrin, and keeping care close to home.

Tag your local hero we should spotlight next Saturday.

🤠🌾🤝

11/19/2025

Morning fog lifted off the hay fields just as the school buses made their rounds. That’s Jack County’s future riding on four worn tires.

In Jacksboro, Perrin, and Bryson, our teachers can turn a box of markers into a semester of miracles — but they shouldn’t have to. Let’s back them with fair pay, modern shops and labs, and broadband so homework doesn’t mean hunting for Wi‑Fi. Strong schools keep our kids here with real pathways — welding, ag science, nursing — real jobs, right here at home. Keep the politics out and the respect in: safe campuses, counselors who know every kid by name, and communities that show up.

Tag a Jack County teacher, coach, or bus driver who deserves a thank-you, and tell us what our schools need most.


🌾⭐🤝

11/18/2025

That west wind tried to roll my hat clear to Bryson this morning. If your boots picked up more dust than dew, you’re in good company.

Out here, cows don’t care about talking points; they care about hay on the ground and water in the tank. Feed and diesel are still high, and some tanks look like a coffee cup after church — mostly empty. Our local economy runs on what we grow, weld, and haul — from Perrin to Bryson, Jermyn to Jacksboro.

And now we’ve got another challenge blowing in with that dust: data centers like the one they’re dealing with in Young county. Folks in the cities love the idea of “digital infrastructure,” but out here we know the truth — those big server barns drink water like a herd in August. While ranchers pray for rain and watch their ponds shrink, these facilities can use millions of gallons a day just to stay cool.

No one’s saying progress is bad. But progress shouldn’t leave rural Texans dry. Before any company lays a concrete pad, we need honest answers about water usage, long-term impact, and who pays the price when the wells drop.

Let’s press for real drought relief that arrives on time, fair markets for our calves, real investment in rural water systems — and the kind of planning that protects the people who already call this land home.

11/16/2025

Morning rolled over Jacksboro slow as syrup, and the cows still expected breakfast on time. Out here, faith looks like a casserole on a doorstep and a hand on your shoulder when life gets loud.

Some weeks felt like twelve rounds with a mesquite tree—prices jumped, rain teased, and too many folks drove miles for a doctor. Still, this

11/15/2025

If you smelled mesquite smoke and diesel this morning, you know it’s a Jack County Saturday. The kind where work gloves live on the dashboard and folks wave with all five fingers.

From the nurse at Faith Community Hospital who stays after shift, to the Perrin ag teacher who hustles jackets for kids at the barn, to the Bryson volunteer firefighter who leaves supper when the siren hollers — this county runs on quiet heroes. They don’t wait for a ribbon-cutting; they back the trailer up and get to work. That’s our way: see a need, bring a wrench, call a neighbor. If we want our kids to stay and our elders to thrive, we lift these folks up and make sure they’ve got the tools, training, and thanks to keep going.

Tag your local hero

11/13/2025

If you’ve ever hit that same pothole on 380 so hard your coffee tried to bail out, you know the roads need love. And if your signal disappears halfway to Bryson, that internet’s as skittish as a spring fawn.

Community strength isn’t theory; it’s smooth routes for school buses and ambulances, and broadband that lets homework upload before bedtime. Ranchers need market prices in real time, Main Street shops need customers online, and first responders need comms that don’t quit in the hills. The dollars are out there—grants, co-ops, and state funds—but they flow to places that speak up with a plan. Let’s map our worst dead zones and rough spots, back our county crews, and push together for shovel-ready projects that keep the work and the wages right here at home.

Tell us your roughest road and weakest signal—drop the mile marker or crossroads—so we can build a community map and take it to the folks holding the checkbook.

🚜🤝🌾

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1914 Loop 187
Windthorst, TX
76389

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