Texas AM can’t ban 'Draggieland' drag show, federal judge rules
Apr 02, 2025
AUSTIN (Texas Tribune) — A federal judge has temporarily blocked Texas A&M University System from enforcing a ban on drag shows being held at its special event venues.
The ruling allowed Draggieland, an event scheduled for March 27 at the flagship university’s Rudder Theatre in College St
ation, to go on as planned.
Draggieland is an annual pageant where contestants wear clothing or makeup that often, but does not always, run counter to their expected gender identity. The contestants dance and answer questions afterward about what drag and LGBTQ culture means to them. It has repeatedly sold out the 750-seat venue since it started in 2020.
In her March 24 ruling, Judge Lee H. Rosenthal said the student group that organizes Draggieland, the Queer Empowerment Council, was likely to succeed in showing the ban violates the First Amendment.
“Anyone who finds the performance or performers offensive has a simple remedy: don’t go,” Rosenthal wrote.
The students said while their fight isn’t over, they were overjoyed by the decision and vowed to share that joy by putting on the best show possible.
Plaintiff’s argument
The Queer Empowerment Council sued after the system’s board of regents passed a resolution Feb. 28 banning drag performances across all 11 campuses. The council argued that the public universities are not allowed to censor student performances based on their personal dislike of its content or perceived ideology.
Defendant’s argument
The regents said they were trying to comply with recent executive orders issued by President Donald J. Trump and Gov. Greg Abbott telling agencies not to promote “gender ideology” or else they could lose funding from the federal and state government.
They’ve also argued drag shows mock and objectify women, which violates federal antidiscrimination law.
A day after Draggieland, the Texas Attorney General's Office, which represents Texas A&M, appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
The Attorney General's Office has also asked the ban to continue pending the outcome of the appeal, arguing the Queer Empowerment Council wouldn't be harmed by this because Draggieland won't happen again until Spring 2026.
Broader impact
This follows previous drag show bans and First Amendment fights in court.
In 2023, Republican state lawmakers portrayed drag performances as inherently sexual and obscene. They passed Senate Bill 12, which prohibited performers from dancing suggestively or wearing certain prosthetics in front of children. But a court struck down the law as unconstitutional.
That same year, West Texas A&M University President Walter Wendler cancelled a student drag show, similarly arguing that such performances degrade women.
The students sued, but the judge in that case has so far held that drag shows are not clearly protected under the First Amendment in part because children were expected to attend.
Draggieland was marketed as an event for people 18 and older.
Texas A&M’s resolution also spurred the University of Texas System and the University of North Texas System to prohibit its institutions from sponsoring or hosting drag shows.
This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at www.texastribune.org. The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media organization that informs Texans - and engages with them - about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues. ...read more read less