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‘There Is Only One God’: Texas GOP Chair’s Response to Hanuman Statue Controversy Draws Fire

NRI PULSE STAFF REPORT

Austin, Texas, November 7, 2025 — Texas Republican Party Chair Abraham George has come under criticism after publicly backing the theological views of a GOP candidate who described Hindu deities as “false gods.”

George’s remarks appeared Wednesday on X (formerly Twitter) in response to the controversy surrounding Alexander Duncan, a Republican candidate who recently opposed the construction of a 90-foot statue of the Hindu god Hanuman in Sugar Land, calling it a representation of a “false god.”

In his post, George said he had not met Duncan and was not endorsing him in the primary election, but agreed with the Christian belief underlying the candidate’s comments.

“I don’t think I’ve met this candidate, and in the primary election he does not have my endorsement or the Party’s,” George wrote. “But as an individual and a Christ follower who was born in India to a Pentecostal preacher’s family, I agree with him that Christians need to be concerned about idols and false gods. There is only one God, and that is Jesus Christ Himself. The commandments are clear: you shall not have any other god, and you shall not worship idols. I know it is not politically correct, but I honestly don’t care!”

The comment quickly drew condemnation from Hindu American organizations, who accused George of promoting intolerance toward the Hindu faith.

The Hindu American Foundation (HAF) responded directly on X, writing:

“When we asked @TexasGOP to condemn @AlexDuncanTX’s anti-Hindu remarks over a Hanuman statue, we expected a commitment to our Constitution and the Establishment Clause. Instead, the @TexasGOP chair offered this. It’s not a winning strategy; it’s wrong; and it’s un-American.”

HAF and other interfaith groups argued that the state party’s top official should uphold religious pluralism rather than echo exclusionary rhetoric. “Freedom of religion means freedom from being denigrated for one’s faith,” an HAF representative added in a separate statement.

Supporters of George defended his right to express personal religious beliefs, noting that he explicitly said he was speaking as an individual Christian, not on behalf of the Republican Party.

Neither George nor Duncan has issued further comments following the backlash.

Photo credit: Abraham George/TexasGOP.

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3 comments

Linda November 7, 2025 at 7:24 pm

Jesus Christ is the Son of God. Almighty God is the father. Please read your Bibles (KJV)
John Chapter 3 and John Chapter 17.

Reply
Pat November 8, 2025 at 5:29 pm

Sahari laws is not compatbale with the USA , it must be forbidden by law just like Texas has done.

Reply
Piasan November 8, 2025 at 6:13 pm

What many who demand Christian beliefs be supported by government forget that under the constitution all religions must be treated equally.

That means if you display Christian symbols you must also allow symbols of other beliefs including Satanism and even the, “Service of Mankind Church” whose beliefs based on female domination.

For some reason, I don’t think those demanding their Christian beliefs be displayed would like that very much.
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Reply

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