Patriot Mobile Chief Operating Officer Jenny Story questioned religious turnout patterns in Frisco’s recent mayoral runoff after Mark Hill defeated Rod Vilhauer.
Story discussed the results during an interview posted by Bannon’s WarRoom on X, arguing that turnout in precincts she described as Muslim and Hindu helped shape the outcome.
Religious Turnout Claims
“What we saw happen was that the candidate many Christians were pushing for did not get elected,” Story said.
“And what we found through looking at the numbers was that the candidate won because a majority of the Muslim and Hindu precincts had a high percentage of folks vote in those precincts.”
Story further claimed that turnout among Christian voters lagged behind other groups.
“In fact, two polling locations by mosques had the highest voter turnout, and unfortunately Christians voted less than 25 percent,” Story said.
The Dallas Express has not independently verified Story’s analysis of voting patterns or her characterization of specific precincts.
Hill’s Runoff Win
As previously reported by The Dallas Express, Frisco voters elected former Frisco ISD board president Mark Hill as their next mayor, giving him a decisive runoff victory over businessman Rod Vilhauer.
Hill won 58.12% of the vote compared to Vilhauer’s 41.88%, according to unofficial election results with all precincts reporting. Hill received 19,632 votes, while Vilhauer received 14,146 votes.
Hill received the endorsement of the American Hindu Coalition during the campaign, as previously reported by DX.
GOP Reaction Follows Race
The runoff also drew criticism from U.S. Rep. Brandon Gill (R-Texas), who pushed back after U.S. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) shared a post describing Vilhauer as an “Anti-Islam Candidate.”
“Yes, mass migration – something you’ve supported your entire career – fundamentally changes American communities. Remind me again, who else did voters recently reject?” Gill wrote on X.
Story argued that Hill actively sought support from those communities during the campaign.
At the same time, Story criticized what she described as divisive rhetoric that emerged during the election.
“That is simply not what we are fighting for,” Story said. “There are folks that are intentionally trying to divide our party through racist comments.”
The Frisco mayoral runoff drew statewide attention as the rapidly growing North Texas city continues to debate immigration, development, religious land-use issues, and cultural change.