A high-stakes constitutional and partisan showdown has erupted at the top of Fort Bend County’s government. On Wednesday, Interim County Judge Daniel Wong forcefully pushed back against claims that his temporary appointment has expired, setting up a volatile confrontation ahead of Thursday’s scheduled Commissioners Court meeting.
The crisis ignited after Fort Bend County Attorney Bridgette Smith-Lawson issued a formal legal opinion declaring that Wong no longer possesses any lawful authority to act as county judge. Wong, the Republican nominee for the permanent judgeship in the upcoming November 3, 2026 election, openly rejected the directive, accusing political rivals of attempting to “sow chaos and division.”
The Legal Spark: A “Non-Suit” and a Expired Order
The dispute centers around the exact expiration conditions of the court order that originally put Wong in power.
- The Appointment: Visiting District Judge Jeth Jones appointed Wong as interim county judge on April 10, 2026. The appointment followed Judge Jones’s temporary suspension of elected County Judge KP George, who was facing a civil First Amendment lawsuit parallel to criminal investigations.
- The Expiration Condition: Judge Jones’s order stipulated that Wong’s temporary appointment would remain in effect until the underlying civil case involving KP George was formally resolved or disposed of.
- The Dissolution: On June 16, 2026, George was sentenced to jail time in an unrelated felony money laundering case, effectively barring his return to office despite a pending appeal. The following day, June 17, Judge Jones signed an Order of Nonsuit, officially dismissing the civil case that had triggered the suspension.
According to County Attorney Smith-Lawson and the court’s Democratic commissioners, that June 17 order legally dissolved Wong’s interim authority.
The County Attorney’s Verdict vs. Wong’s Defiance
The rift has divided the county leadership into two distinct legal and political camps, completely clouding who is legitimately in charge of the suburban Houston county.
| Position / Player | Core Argument & Stance |
| County Attorney Smith-Lawson | The Law is Absolute: Issued an unambiguous opinion stating that the non-suit officially concluded the litigation. “Consequently, Mr. Wong no longer possesses the legal authority to act as County Judge,” she wrote, warning that any votes taken with Wong presiding could be legally voided. |
| Commissioner Dexter McCoy (Democratic Nominee) | An Illegal Stay: McCoy, who is running directly against Wong for the permanent county judge seat in November, blasted Wong’s refusal to step down. “He’s not the county judge anymore. Period,” McCoy stated. “Instead of leadership, it would appear that Mr. Wong now seeks to break the law to stay in office.” |
| Interim Judge Daniel Wong | “The County Judge is The County Judge”: Wong bypassed traditional press requests and took directly to his campaign’s social media platforms on Wednesday, publishing a graphic declaring his continued authority. “His appointment remains in effect, and County Judge Wong will continue to serve the people,” his statement read, claiming his mandate is untouched. |
Showdown at the Commissioners Court
The power struggle will reach a boiling point at 1:00 PM on Thursday, June 25, when the Fort Bend County Commissioners Court is scheduled to convene.
With the County Attorney ruling that Wong cannot legally participate or preside, the court’s four elected precinct commissioners find themselves in an unprecedented logistical bind. By Texas state law, in the absolute absence of a valid county judge, the most senior member of the court—Democratic Commissioner Grady Prestage—is designated to step in as the presiding officer.
However, because the agenda has not been formally amended to address a leadership vacancy, a chaotic procedural battle is expected to play out on the floor if Wong physically attempts to take the center seat and wield the gavel.