Skip to content

Commentary

Brexit Today. Texit Next.

By Daniel Miller3 min read
Brexit Today. Texit Next.

Today is Brexit Day. The impact on Texas should not be understated.

For the Texas Nationalist Movement, our support for Brexit was more than just support for the fundamental right of self-determination. It was a "proof of concept". It answered a question that has been posed to us without ceasing since our inception - "Can TEXIT happen?"

Our answer has always been an emphatic "yes" and Brexit was the example. When the naysayers said there would never be a Brexit referendum, and that meant that Texans would never have a Texit referendum. They had a referendum. When the naysayers said that the vote would be lost, and that meant that Texas would never choose to reclaim our independence. Against all predictions, the people of the UK voted to leave.

The Texit naysayers changed their tactics. They said that Brexit and Texit were so dissimilar that no conclusions could be drawn from the Brexit results. However, they were back to their old tactics as Westminster bureaucrats fought to deny the outcome of the referendum. Indeed, these naysayers were quick to say that as the EU and certain members of the political class conspired to deny the outcome of the Brexit vote, the federal government and its apologists in Texas would stifle any and all attempts of a similar fashion by Texas. Their mantra - "It'll never happen."

Yet, today it's happening. Although our opposition has been thoroughly inconsistent in their positions and consistently wrong in their predictions, the TNM has been absolutely consistent in our position on Texit and 100% correct in our predictions.

As we stated in the years leading up to the Brexit referendum, the arguments that the UK had against the intractable union centered in Brussels were far milder than the arguments that Texas has against the intractable union centered in Washington.

Across all measures, the relationship between Texas and the federal government is far worse than what has been experienced by the UK. We have less sovereignty. We sit under the weight of a far greater number of unelected bureaucrats. We send far more of our hard-earned money into the federal system and receive far less in return. We have less of a voice in policies that affect our daily lives and groan under the weight of those policies that we don't want and didn't vote for. More importantly, our fundamental rights are under assault or have already been abridged or warped into privileges that would be unrecognizable by those who founded this nation in 1836.

Texans, our time is coming. We can have a vote on independence. We can win a vote on independence. We can stand as a nation among nations. If you choose to be sheepish and give excuses as to why your country should remain shackled to an irredeemable federal superstate, then understand that you are standing on the wrong side of history. We've been right every single time and the opposition has been wrong every single time. I would suggest that standing with the TNM is where you'll want to be to avoid any undue embarrassment.

Our congratulations to those in the UK who championed the right of self-government. Tomorrow starts a new chapter in your history. We urge you to seize the opportunities laid before you by the choice that you made. Know that one day we intend to fulfill the prophetic words of Sam Houston when he said that, "Texas would again lift its head and stand among the nations."

In the meantime, please keep our old embassy in good repair. We'll be needing it sooner rather than later.

More Like This

Commentary

Decided Without Us

On June 29, 2026, the Supreme Court of the United States decided that Election Day does not have to end on Election Day. The case was Watson v. Republican National Committee. Federal law sets a single day for a federal election. Mississippi counts mail ballots that arrive as many as five days after that day, so […]

Daniel Miller · June 29, 2026

Commentary

190 Years Ago, 59 Texans Changed Everything

March 2, 1836. Washington-on-the-Brazos. Fifty-nine men in a drafty, unfinished building put their names on a document that most of the world thought was suicidal. Mexico had an army. Texas had farmers, lawyers, a few doctors, and a whole lot of nerve. I’ve stood in that spot on the Brazos. If you haven’t, you should. […]

Daniel Miller · March 2, 2026

Commentary

The Far Chair

I’m at my daughter’s house for Christmas. It got crowded inside, so I stepped out to the back porch where they have a round table with four chairs. Without thinking, I took the seat farthest from the door. I sat there for a minute before I caught myself wondering why I’d made that choice. Nobody […]

Daniel Miller · December 25, 2025

Stay in the loop

Join the newsletter for new writing, media, and event news. Subscribe and get a free chapter of TEXIT.