Sen. Creighton named sole finalist for Texas Tech chancellor

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State Senator Brandon Creighton i9s the final candidate to become the next chancellor of the Texas Tech University System.

From community reports

State Sen. Brandon Creighton, the architect of major higher education reforms that banned diversity programs, limited faculty influence and tightened rules on campus protests, is poised to become the next chancellor of the Texas Tech University System.

The Texas Tech Board of Regents unanimously voted Thursday to name Creighton the sole finalist for the position.

“He’s known and proven to be a respected leader, and his experience leading major legislation efforts, I believe, has prepared him to take on this important role, and I’m confident he will bring that same vision and determination to the system,” board member Arcilia Acosta said.

From the Senate floor late Wednesday, Creighton’s colleagues in the upper chamber congratulated him on his legislative tenure and the expected Tech vote.

“I’m proud to join the Red Raider family and to work hard to advance that institution,” Creighton said.

Chair Cody Campbell signaled the board’s choice earlier this week in a post on X, writing Creighton “has been a strong voice in the fight to get our colleges and universities back on track and clearly shares the values and vision of the Texas Tech community.”

“Texas Tech stands at a pivotal crossroads and is poised to accelerate the pace of massive growth and progress that we have achieved,” Campbell wrote.

“We are confident that Senator Creighton will continue to advance our mission of serving students, driving research, and strengthening communities across the State, and especially in West Texas. He is, unquestionably, the right person for the job, and we all look forward to working with him.”

Board Vice Chair Dustin Womble echoed Campbell’s message in his own post, while congratulations from conservative lawmakers poured in.

“Senator Creighton’s leadership and expertise on higher education matters will be a tremendous benefit to Texas Tech,” House Speaker Dustin Burrows, a Texas Tech alum, wrote.

Creighton’s current Senate term runs through January 2027. He will have to vacate his seat before then, at which point Gov. Greg Abbott would be authorized to call a special election to fill the vacancy. U.S. Rep. Jodey Arrington, R-Lubbock, who was also considered for the role, offered his congratulations, as well.

“I am at the ready to help Brandon ‘bear our banners far and wide’ in our nation’s capital and beyond as he leads the greatest University System in all the land. Guns up, and Go West Texas!!” Arrington wrote on X.

Creighton’s selection continues a broad trend of politically connected leaders — rather than career academics — taking top roles at Texas universities. Earlier this year, former Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar became chancellor of Texas A&M University System, and former state Rep. John Zerwas became chancellor of the University of Texas System.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, speaking late Wednesday before the Senate adjourned its second special session, framed the shift as positive and praised Creighton’s time in the Senate.

“We are proud of you and this is really a historic moment, and Texas Tech made the right decision for all of Texas,” Patrick said.

Creighton on Wednesday called working with Patrick on education issues a “blessing.”

“I wouldn’t be leaving the Senate for another opportunity if I felt for one second that Texas would not be positioned for greatness because of who’s here remaining,” he said.

In the last three years, Creighton, who chairs the Texas Senate’s education committee, has authored some of the most impactful legislation for Texas higher education in decades: Senate Bill 17, which bans diversity, equity and inclusion offices at public universities; Senate Bill 37, which gives governor-appointed regents more authority over university operations and limits faculty’s influence on their schools; and Senate Bill 2972, which sets new rules on when, where and how protests can take place on campuses.

Together, these measures have significantly shifted control over higher education from campus leaders to regents and state lawmakers, upending a longstanding balance of power that has traditionally given universities greater autonomy.

The Texas Conference of American Association of University Professors said Creighton’s record has raised concern among some faculty. Creighton’s appointment could strengthen Texas Tech’s
political influence at the Capitol. He helped create the Texas University Fund, a $3.9 billion endowment approved by voters in 2023 that sends hundreds of millions of dollars to Texas Tech, the
University of Houston, Texas State University and the University of North Texas. Lawmakers established the fund to help these schools compete with the state’s two flagship university systems,
the University of Texas and Texas A&M, which draw billions in support from the Permanent University Fund, a $39.5 billion oil-and gas-funded endowment that other emerging research universities cannot access.

Creighton will be new to Raider Country. A graduate of the University of Texas at Austin, he earned his law degree from Oklahoma City University. He was a state representative for seven years before winning a Senate Seat in 2014, representing Chambers, Galveston, Harris, Jefferson and Montgomery counties.

The Texas Tribune first reported on Thursday that Creighton and Arrington were in the running to succeed Chancellor Tedd Mitchell, who announced his retirement in July. The board met behind closed doors for four hours on Saturday and then adjourned without taking any action. By law, the board must wait 21 days before finalizing Creighton’s appointment. If confirmed, Creighton would become the sixth chancellor since the system’s creation in 1996.

The system, based in Lubbock, includes five institutions that enrolled 69,502 students in 2024: Texas Tech University, Texas Tech Health Sciences Center, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso, Angelo State University and Midwestern State University.

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