Moms for Liberty chapter forms in Rockwall County under Navy veteran
Jennifer Naj's new Moms for Liberty chapter enters Rockwall County as Rockwall ISD board meetings and school materials fights become the likely battlegrounds.

A new Moms for Liberty chapter has formed in Rockwall County under U.S. Navy veteran Jennifer Naj, bringing one of the country’s most watched parental-rights groups directly into local education politics. The launch was celebrated locally on June 15 and immediately raised the stakes around school board meetings, curriculum disputes and library reviews.
Moms for Liberty says it now has 320-plus chapters nationwide, part of a network it describes as organized parents working in school-related and other local government fights. PBS News has described the group as a far-right parental-rights organization that is trying to expand its influence on school boards across the country. In Rockwall County, that national playbook now has a local foothold.

The timing matters because Rockwall Independent School District already has a built-in public forum for those fights. Trustees normally meet on the third Monday of each month at 6:00 p.m. in the Board Room of the Administration Building at 1050 Williams Street in Rockwall. Those meetings are where parents can expect debate over instructional materials, library books, board policy and any future candidate endorsements or campaign activity that may spill into school politics.
Rockwall County is not starting from scratch. The area already has an active conservative political network, including Rockwall County Republican Women, along with long-standing civic organizations that know how to mobilize volunteers and turn out members. Rockwall County Aggie Moms says its Lone Star Chapter was chartered in 1983 and has served the community for more than 40 years, a sign that organized parent groups already have deep roots here.
That backdrop makes the new chapter more than a symbolic arrival. In districts like Rockwall ISD, parent organizations can quickly shape the tone of board meetings, file objections to materials, back or oppose candidates, and pressure trustees to act on controversial content. The next few months will show whether Naj’s chapter becomes another voice in that mix or a force that helps drive the agenda.
For Rockwall County families, the immediate question is not whether the chapter exists. It is how quickly it will move from announcement to action inside the school board room at 1050 Williams Street, where the next round of education decisions will set the tone for the year ahead.
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