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On Saturday, Roberto Treviño, the architect of the Chick-fil-A ban in the San Antonio airport, lost his re-election bid to upstart Mario Bravo, an environmentalist. The Chick-fil-A ban inspired a similar ouster in Buffalo, N.Y., and it inspired the Texas legislature to pass a “Save Chick-fil-A” bill to prevent anti-religious discrimination. Four Texans filed a lawsuit against San Antonio under that new law, and the lawsuit has reached the Supreme Court of Texas.It remains unclear whether the Chick-fil-A ban played a role in the runoff. Treviño finished first in the general election on May 1, taking 44.9 percent of the vote (5,645 votes) to Bravo’s 33.6 percent (4,225 votes). Yet Bravo pulled ahead on Saturday.
Architect of Chick-fil-A Ban Loses San Antonio City Council Seathttps://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/tyler-o-neil/2021/06/07/architect-of-chick-fil-a-ban-loses-san-antonio-city-council-seat-n1452570Though the winner might be as bad or worse in non-Chick-fil-A respects.