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Chapter 128: Daughters Party (LDP)

  BREAKING NEWS: Sofia Nguyen, Izzy Cortez, and Jasmine Flores Resign from Democratic Party—Launch New Political Movement

  Dateline: Austin, Texas – April 16, 2025

  In a seismic political shift shaking the entire state and reverberating across the nation, Texas State Representatives Sofia Nguyen, Izzy Cortez, and Jasmine Flores held a joint press conference today to announce the formation of a new, independent political party for Texas, marking their official resignation from the Democratic Party.

  Fnked by banners reading "Women Will Not Be Silenced" and "Texas Deserves Better", the trio delivered an emotional, blistering takedown of their former party—accusing it of cowardice, incompetence, and betrayal.

  STATEMENT HIGHLIGHTS:

  Sofia Nguyen opened the statement, her voice firm:

  “The Democratic Party has failed us. It has failed women. It has failed Texas. While the Republican machine pushed through a w straight from the 6C pybook, the Democrats stood by, divided and dithering. We have lost confidence in their ability to fight.”

  Izzy Cortez followed with fire:

  “They let a polygamy w pass. They let male dominance become w. And they were silent while women’s voices were mocked, ignored, and dismissed. I will not serve a party that negotiates with misogyny.”

  Jasmine Flores, emotionally charged, added:

  “We warned them. We screamed. We fought. But we were alone. And now, we will lead. We are unching a new movement, a new political force built by and for women—and all Texans who refuse to bow to theocracy.”

  THEIR DEMANDS AND VISION:

  The trio’s new political party—tentatively named Liberty Daughters Party (LDP)—will be centered on:

  Absolute rejection of theocratic influence, including 6C infiltration.

  Constitutional protection for women's autonomy, including family structure, reproductive rights, and civil liberties.

  Legistive rollback of polygamy ws and formation of Communal Care Networks as an alternative to patriarchal households.

  Reform of state political systems to prevent religious extremism from shaping civil w.

  NATIONAL MEDIA EXPLOSION

  Within minutes, Fox News, CNN, CBS, and ABC broke the story with wall-to-wall coverage:

  Fox News: “The Three Heroines of Texas: A New Revolution Begins”

  CNN: “Nguyen, Cortez, Flores Defect—A Historic Blow to Dems”

  CBS: “Women Take Power Into Their Own Hands—New Party Rises”

  ABC: “Texas Earthquake: The Trio Who Said ‘Enough’”

  Anchors across all networks hailed them as modern-day revolutionaries, drawing comparisons to Susan B. Anthony, Dolores Huerta, and Ange Davis.

  SOCIAL MEDIA ERUPTS

  #NewTexasParty and #LibertyDaughters are now the top trending hashtags on X/Twitter.

  TikTok clips of the press conference are being remixed into feminist anthems.

  Memes of the trio leading a “21st-century Texas secession” go viral.

  Reddit forums explode with posts like: “Is this the Third Party we’ve been waiting for?” and “Finally, someone has the guts to fight both parties.”

  THE AFTERSHOCK:

  Political analysts predict a major realignment in Texas politics, with specution that disaffected independent voters, moderate Republicans, and progressive women may flock to this new movement.

  Meanwhile, Democratic Party leaders are scrambling for damage control, while Republican operatives quietly panic over the rising threat of a new, highly energized, media-savvy rival.

  BOTTOM LINE:

  What started as a legistive conflict over plural marriage has now sparked a full-blown political revolution. And as of today, Texas is no longer just red or blue—it’s on fire.

  The Liberty Daughters have arrived.

  And they’re not asking permission.

  ****

  BREAKING: Texans React to Rise of the Liberty Daughters Party (LDP)

  April 17, 2025 – Statewide Coverage

  The sudden formation of the Liberty Daughters Party (LDP) by Sofia Nguyen, Izzy Cortez, and Jasmine Flores has sent shockwaves through Texas politics, media, and the cultural ndscape. Just 24 hours after their explosive joint press conference, Texans across the political spectrum are sounding off—with passion, pride, confusion, and in some cases, rage.

  TV News Coverage Across Texas

  KXAN Austin:

  "A historic rebellion or political stunt? Sofia, Izzy, and Jasmine are being hailed as the boldest voices in Texas politics in decades."

  KHOU Houston:

  "From silence to fire—these three women are igniting a new base of support, especially among suburban and college-educated women."

  WFAA Dals:

  "The LDP threatens to fragment the Democratic base, while also siphoning off moderate and younger Republicans dissatisfied with the current direction."

  KENS San Antonio:

  "Latina and Asian-American communities express pride in seeing women of color lead a movement in Texas politics."

  Social Media Eruption

  Twitter/X Trends:

  #LibertyDaughters

  #TexasRevolt

  #IzzySofiaJasmine

  #NewPartyNow

  #NoToPolygamyYesToPower

  Top Viral Tweets:

  “The Liberty Daughters Party might be the political spark we’ve been waiting for. I’m a Republican woman and I’m listening.”

  — @TexasMamaStrong

  “Dems didn’t fight hard enough. Reps pushed theocracy. LDP is what happens when women take the wheel.”

  — @MillennialFuryTX

  “I don’t even care about politics. But I want these women to run the whole damn state.”

  — @LatinaWithAnAttitude

  “If LDP runs candidates in 2026, GOP is finished in the suburbs.”

  — @PollJunkie

  “Cynical media move? Maybe. But watching Sofia Nguyen stare down 6C from the House floor? Iconic.”

  — @QueerCowgirl

  Grassroots Reaction in Texas

  College Campuses (UT Austin, Rice, Texas A&M):

  Student groups rapidly form LDP campus chapters, hosting livestream discussions, rallies, and TikTok expiners.

  Suburban Women (Frisco, Katy, Round Rock):

  Facebook groups with titles like “Texas Moms for Liberty Daughters” emerge overnight, with thousands of members.

  Conservative Men:

  A growing backsh online—terms like “radical feminism,” “man-haters,” and “betrayal of traditional values” surface on alt-right Telegram and X accounts.

  6C-Affiliated Groups:

  Silent but monitoring. Online forums suggest 6C is pnning counter-influence operations, fearing LDP could weaken their hold in surrounding states.

  Polling Snapshot (Snap Survey - 3,000 Texans)

  61% of women under 40 support the Liberty Daughters' message.

  48% of independent voters are “curious” or “open” to supporting LDP.

  29% of Republican women say they feel "betrayed" by recent GOP actions.

  62% of Republican men support the Plural Marriage Law—but 36% are now “concerned” about the fallout.

  What’s Next?

  Political analysts warn that the LDP could realign the bance of power in Texas if it sustains momentum. A wave of independent fundraising, national endorsements, and grassroots chapters is already forming. If the Daughters decide to run a gubernatorial candidate in 2026, Texas politics will never be the same.

  The Lone Star State just got a new consteltion.

  And it’s shaped like three women holding fire.

  ***

  INT. PRIVATE LOUNGE – DALLAS HIGH-RISE – NIGHT

  Soft jazz hums in the background. The city skyline glitters below. A sleek penthouse suite lit in gold and crimson. Velvet couches, low lighting. A private meeting is underway. Four women sit around a marble coffee table, drinks untouched.

  ELISE CARTER (29, radiant and terrifying, in a blood-red pantsuit) lounges with calcuted ease. Her legs are crossed, cigarette between her fingers, though she never smokes. She’s the chairman of the 6 Commandments—and Hezri’s favorite weapon.

  Across from her sit IZZY CORTEZ (28), sharp-eyed and restless, SOFIA NGUYEN (28), quietly thoughtful, and JASMINE FLORES (25), idealistic but exhausted. The air buzzes with uncertainty.

  IZZY

  We flipped the statehouse narrative, Elise. We shattered party lines, shook the media. But we need to know—can the Daughters Party win? In Texas, I mean. In 2026, 2028...

  SOFIA

  Or are we just burning bridges with nowhere to go?

  JASMINE

  We’ve alienated everyone. The Dems think we’re traitors. The GOP wants us dead. Even the feminists don’t trust us anymore.

  Elise leans forward slowly. Her eyes glint with that strange mix of seduction and steel.

  ELISE

  You're still thinking like Texans. Still thinking in terms of parties, polls, and elections.

  She flicks the ash from her untouched cigarette. Lets the silence linger before delivering the truth.

  ELISE (CONT’D)

  The purpose of the Daughters Party was never to win Texas.

  A long pause. Izzy frowns. Jasmine looks confused. Sofia stiffens, processing.

  IZZY

  Then what was the purpose?

  ELISE

  To break Texas.

  The words fall like a bde. Cold. Precise.

  ELISE (CONT’D)

  To fracture the illusion of unity. To turn Democrats against their daughters. Republicans against their wives.

  To turn gender into the new fault line.

  Jasmine’s breath catches. Izzy sits back, eyes narrowing. Sofia clenches her jaw but doesn’t speak.

  ELISE (CONT’D)

  While they scream about polygamy, they won’t notice the quiet shift in the countryside. While they fight each other, we move in—through the schools, the churches, the rural clinics.

  She smiles faintly, more animal than human.

  ELISE (CONT’D)

  The Daughters Party was a grenade. And you three? You were the perfect messengers.

  SOFIA

  So we’re... just pawns?

  ELISE (gently, mockingly)

  No, Sofia. You’re symbols. Symbols don’t need to win elections. They just need to st.

  The room falls silent. The city lights pulse behind the gss.

  ELISE (CONT’D)

  The game isn’t about Texas anymore. It’s about what comes after Texas falls.

  Fade out as Elise rises, her gloves are marked with the 6C seal.

  ***

  EXT. DIRT ROAD – NORTHEASTERN TEXAS – LATE AFTERNOON

  Dust kicks up as a pickup truck rolls down a gravel road fnked by wide fields and broken-down wire fences. The sun casts long shadows across the hills. A simple wooden sign reads: “Welcome to Oak Hollow – Pop. 813.” Below it, someone has carved a smaller word in the wood: “1 God.”

  INT. CONVERTED CHAPEL – MOMENTS LATER

  The chapel used to be Baptist, but the stained gss has been repced. Now a stylized 6 glows above the pulpit. The walls are painted bone-white. Rows of families—men with multiple wives, dozens of barefoot children—sit quietly as an elder finishes his reading.

  ELDER SIMON (60s, gray-bearded, solemn) stands at the front, holding a leather-bound book with a 6C insignia on its spine. Behind him is a banner: “Honor the Household. Multiply the Righteous.”

  ELDER SIMON

  And now we bow our heads in gratitude—to the only God, Alh, and to the w that lives beyond borders.

  Heads bow. The women wear linen head coverings. No one speaks.

  INT. COMMUNITY CENTER – LATER

  A rge open-air structure, half-barn, half-hall. Women knead dough in rows. Teenage boys repair farm tools. Girls fold uniforms with 6C patches. A TV mounted in the corner suddenly switches from static to a breaking news alert.

  TV ANCHOR (V.O.)

  —historic moment in Austin today, as the Texas legisture passes the controversial Plural Marriage Reform Act. The w allows a man to legally marry up to three women...

  A hush falls. Gasps. Hands freeze mid-motion.

  YOUNG MOTHER (early 30s)

  Three? Just three?

  TEEN GIRL

  Does that mean we’re not illegal anymore?

  An OLDER WOMAN (50s) with authority—MOTHER REINA—steps forward, wiping her hands on her apron. She speaks with quiet gravity.

  MOTHER REINA

  It means the outside is catching up to what we already knew. We were never illegal in the eyes of the righteous.

  YOUNG MAN

  But Texas never allowed us before. What changed?

  *A second woman runs in with a crumpled flyer—a printed screenshot from a social media video of Elise Carter’s press conference. A quote is highlighted:

  “Texas has taken its first step toward obedience.”

  MOTHER REINA (reading aloud)

  “Republicans have joined the path of restoration. The Daughters have cleared the way. We do not need to conquer Texas—Texas is walking willingly.”

  She sets the paper down. Her face is alight with something halfway between relief and revetion.

  MOTHER REINA (CONT’D)

  This is the sign. We’ve been preparing for this for generations.

  Behind them, the view through the open barn doors reveals what’s changed in Oak Hollow:

  —A new health clinic with no cross, only a glowing 6 symbol.

  —A radio tower broadcasting 6C sermons, hidden in pin sight.

  —A schoolhouse painted fresh, funded by unknown donors.

  —And at the edge of town, a shipping depot, bringing supplies weekly from an “out-of-state distributor.”

  ELDER SIMON (O.S.)

  Gather the council. And prepare the road team—we’ll send word to the other hollows.

  MOTHER REINA (nodding)

  The time of hiding is over.

  YOUNG MOTHER

  So what happens now?

  MOTHER REINA turns to the girls folding uniforms.

  MOTHER REINA

  Now... we raise daughters ready to be wives of the new world. And sons who know how to lead it.

  As the camera pulls back, the sound of children singing a 6C hymn rises from the chapel. Oak Hollow doesn’t cheer. It prepares. The war for Texas has entered its quietest, most dangerous phase.

  ***

  6C CHURCH – OAK HOLLOW, NORTHEASTERN TEXAS – EVENING

  A full moon shines through the high windows of the converted church. The original cross has been repced by a stylized 6 embedded in polished brass above the altar. Long benches are filled with dozens of rural men, dusty from the fields. Most wear denim and boots, but a few have donned simple linen shirts out of respect for the meeting.

  At the front of the sanctuary stand three men in 6C uniforms—bck-and-tan robes with silver pins bearing the 6-point household sigil. These are not locals. Their accents mark them as outsiders—Preacher DANNERS from Iowa, Preacher MARKHAM from Kentucky, and a younger man simply called Brother Eli.

  A ntern hums gently overhead. The only other sounds are the creaks of old wood and the breathing of anticipation.

  PREACHER DANNERS (50s, firm but warm)

  Brothers... the time you waited for has come. Texas may not fly our banner, but it has cracked its door to Providence.

  Murmurs ripple through the crowd. A man with sun-wrinkled skin, AMOS GENTRY, rises from the front bench.

  AMOS

  What exactly does that mean, Preacher? We’ve lived quiet out here for decades. No one ever cared how many wives we took... long as we kept to ourselves.

  PREACHER MARKHAM (leaning forward)

  But now the w of the nd has moved closer to the w of Heaven. The Plural Marriage Reform Act—it’s their wording, not ours—legalizes up to three wives. That gives you the chance to come above ground. To register your households.

  BROTHER ELI (younger, sharp-eyed)

  It's not just a formality. It’s a cim. You file, you pnt your family in the system. Once you're in the books, the state can't erase you.

  A tall, quiet man in the back—JOEL STRICKLAND, father of four wives and nearly two dozen children—raises a hand.

  JOEL

  What about the rest of us with more than three? We file for just three and keep the rest quiet?

  PREACHER DANNERS nods slowly.

  PREACHER DANNERS

  For now, yes. Register the first three by age or order of covenant. The others remain in grace, off-paper but not unloved.

  A pause. The tension is thick. Then HENRY ALDERSON, mid-40s, speaks with caution.

  HENRY

  You boys from Kentucky and Iowa... this legal stuff—does it actually hold? We sign these papers, the government won’t turn around and take our children?

  PREACHER MARKHAM

  Iowa did this a year ago. Kentucky st fall. Families that signed early—got protections. State-funded health. School recognition. If Texas copies what we saw there... you’ll finally get acknowledgment without compromise.

  Brother Eli holds up a small stack of state marriage registration packets, marked with official county seals.

  BROTHER ELI

  These forms are now accepted at the Sulphur Ridge town office—just fifteen miles east. We have a man on the inside. Quiet. Loyal. He won’t ask questions.

  A beat. The crowd sits in stunned quiet. Men look to one another—many with deep-lined faces, work-worn hands, tears welling at the corners of their eyes.

  Then Amos stands again, chest rising.

  AMOS

  You’re saying we don’t have to lie anymore.

  PREACHER DANNERS (softly)

  We’re saying your households can walk in daylight.

  A long silence, then Joel rises beside Amos. One by one, men begin to stand. Not cheering—just standing. Resolute.

  PREACHER MARKHAM

  We’ll stay the week. Hold registration workshops. Counsel your wives. Teach the nguage needed to speak to the state.

  BROTHER ELI

  This ain’t the end. It’s the start of legal plurality.

  PREACHER DANNERS (quiet, prayerful)

  You are no longer hidden. You are the frontier.

  As the ntern dims slightly overhead, the camera pans to a hand-lettered chalkboard at the edge of the room. Written in clean script:

  “The House is Legal Now. Prepare the Daughters.”

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