Yours, Not Theirs

A mom, a neighbor, and a fighter for Precinct 4. Angie Unger is running a 100% grassroots campaign with no corporate money. Just neighbors funding neighbors.

Upcoming EVents

Buda Treehouse: Fundraiser - July 17, 2026

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PigPen BBQ: Fundraiser - July 26, 2026

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Angie is one of us.

After watching her community grow without the roads, water protections, and support it needs, she decided to step up. This is what grassroots look like, with no corporate money, focused on giving Precinct 4 the leadership and resources it deserves.

What She’ll Fight For

What does a county commissioner do?

County commissioners sit on the Commissioners Court alongside the county judge, and together they run the day-to-day business of Hays County. Each commissioner represents one of four precincts and is directly responsible for maintaining the roads and bridges in their precinct. Beyond roads, the court sets the property tax rate, approves the county budget, decides how many people the county employs, approves new subdivisions and wastewater plans, oversees emergency services like rural ambulance and fire support, and calls and certifies elections. These decisions touch nearly every part of daily life in Hays County, from how fast an ambulance reaches a rural home to whether a new neighborhood gets approved next door.

Why should you care?

Most residents pay far more attention to national politics than to county government, even though county decisions shape daily life more directly. The commissioners court sets your property tax rate. The court decides whether the road outside your house gets fixed this year or five years from now. The same four people approve the developments reshaping Buda, Kyle, and Dripping Springs, and decide how the county responds when water runs low or a storm knocks out power. This is local government with real teeth, run by four people most voters can name only on election day.

Why Angie?

Angie has spent years showing up to the meetings, forums, and neighborhood groups where these decisions get made, long before she considered running. She is a small business owner who manages real budgets for a living, not a career politician learning the job after taking office. Her priorities mirror what the commissioners court actually controls: protecting water before approving more growth, fixing roads before expanding them, and keeping the budget process open so residents understand where their tax dollars go. She is running a 100% grassroots campaign with no corporate money, which means her decisions on this court would answer to neighbors, not donors.

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