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Dems Mess With Texas

  
Via:  Bob Nelson  •  4 years ago  •  5 comments

By:   Lisa Lerer - NYT

Dems Mess With Texas



I started writing this newsletter today from the window seat of an airplane, flying over a country that is casting many, many ballots.

But even stranger than the experience of flying in a pandemic (they haven’t changed the movies since March!) might just be my destination.

Texas.

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This will be interesting.
With the number of early ballots cast going through the roof

- and not knowing exactly which demographic(s)
are driving this turnout - we could have any result!

320
BIDEN 2020




S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



320 Yes, the Texas of George W. Bush , former Gov. Rick Perry and cowboy conservatism. The place that last voted for a Democratic presidential candidate more than four decades ago. Ruby red, Grand Old Party Texas.

Something is clearly happening in the Lone Star State. The  national press   has descended  — myself included. The state leads the country in early voting, with  more than 8.5 million people  having already cast ballots — that’s 95 percent of the total number of people who voted in Texas in 2016.

Democrats have been talking about Texas going blue for years, pointing to political shifts brought by the state’s fast-growing and diversifying population. Donald Trump has supercharged those changes, plunging the traditionally conservative suburbs into open revolt against what many college-educated voters, particularly women, see as a divisive presidency.

Take a place like Plano, a once-reliably conservative city north of Dallas that has tilted Democratic in the Trump era. After I landed, I went there this afternoon to see Senator John Cornyn fight for his political life.

The shift is happening up and down the ballot. Two years ago, Julie Oliver lost a House race in Texas’ 25th Congressional District, based in suburban Austin, by nine percentage points — a far closer margin than the 20 points that Representative Roger Williams, a Republican, won by in 2016.

Now, she says, internal polling has her candidacy within single digits. Republicans fear they could lose at least five congressional seats in the state,  as well as control of the Texas House of Representatives .

“I actually think Biden can win Texas. I really do,” said Ms. Oliver, a progressive Democrat. The huge early turnout should bode well for the former vice president, she said: “It’s hard for me to get my head around the idea that people turning out in the numbers they are here in Texas are excited for Trump.”

I must admit that I don’t share Ms. Oliver’s confidence. Despite a late visit by Senator Kamala Harris, who will campaign across Texas tomorrow,  the Biden campaign hasn’t put significant time or money  into the state. Frankly, it’s a bad investment for them: Texas has multiple expensive media markets and it’s not an essential stop on their path to 270 electoral votes.

Some Democrats say that even if Joe Biden doesn’t need Texas, more help from his campaign could have helped them in down-ballot races, delivering a political benefit that could last for years. Others still see a path to victory, arguing that if they can pair record-breaking turnout in the cities with their new strength in the suburbs, all while boosting their margins in the heavily Democratic Rio Grande Valley, they could take command of the state.

But whether Mr. Biden wins or not, the shift in Texas is emblematic of a broader political realignment. If the suburbs are revolting against the G.O.P. outside of Dallas and Houston, they’re also rebelling outside of Phoenix and Atlanta, Raleigh and Charlotte, areas in states that are even more winnable for Democrats than Texas.

If Republicans lose across the South and West next week, the Democrats would probably win back control of the Senate. And if Democrats also pick up a number of congressional seats in those regions, they could expand their margin in the House, making it even harder for Republicans to climb back into power.

Those kinds of losses would force Republicans to grapple with big questions about their ability to win over voters in the country’s fastest-growing and most diverse regions.

As for Texas? Well, Democrats say it’s only a matter of time.

“If the president gets another four years and continues down the same road, Texas won’t be blue this time, but it will next time,” said Representative Henry Cuellar, a moderate Democrat from South Texas. “Once Texas is blue, how in the world does a Republican candidate put together a coalition that can win nationwide? You just can’t do it. Not with these kinds of politics.”


Above is an NYT newsletter. Below, you have articles from other sources



Democrats Dream of Flipping Texas With Early Vote Exploding

A dramatic surge in early voting across Texas cities is infusing fresh   hope   in Democrats’ dream of shaking Republicans’ once-solid grip on the state.

From Austin to Houston, and in their sprawling suburbs, voter turnout is shattering records in Texas, which hasn’t gone for a Democratic presidential candidate since 1976. Polls show the party’s nominee, Joe Biden, within striking distance of President Donald Trump, and the Cook Political Report on Wednesday   moved   Texas to a “toss up” from “leans Republican.” Biden’s running mate, Kamala Harris, will visit Houston, Fort Worth and McAllen this week.

Almost 8.5 million Texans had cast ballots by Wednesday, representing about 95% of the entire vote in 2016. Rapidly growing and increasingly diverse suburbs are the sites of some of the biggest upticks in early voting, and Democrats point to a surge in female voters as cause for optimism. Unmarried women make up a third of the Texans voting in this election who didn’t cast a ballot in 2016, the party’s state headquarters said earlier this week.

“We as Democrats are voting like our lives depend on it,” said Cynthia Ginyard, chair of the Democratic Party in Fort Bend, a fast-growing county that encompasses Houston suburbs such as Sugar Land and Katy and has come to embody the demographic shifts that Democrats are seeking to capture.

By Wednesday, 61% of all registered voters in Fort Bend had cast their ballots, either in person or by mail, making it one of nine counties that had surpassed their total vote counts for the entire 2016 election. The county went for Hillary Clinton by a margin of 6.6 percentage points in 2016.

Travis County, which includes Austin and its rapidly expanding suburbs, has also seen early voting exceed the total of all 2016 ballots. Dallas County, another solidly blue one, is on track to reach the same milestone. In Harris County -- the state’s largest and home to Houston -- almost 1.3 million people have voted early.

For more than a quarter-century, Texas was firmly conservative, producing gun-toting, church-going politicians like President George W. Bush and Rick Perry, a former governor and U.S. energy secretary. Dallas, Austin, Houston and San Antonio were liberal blips on an expansive red radar. But a population boom driven by immigrants and newcomers has put the state’s politics up for grabs.

Corporations like   Apple Inc.   and   Toyota Motor Corp.   have expanded, bringing employees who also pack their politics. As the cost of living rises within city limits, young people are putting down roots in places like Katy and Round Rock, in Williamson County.

And since 2011, Texas has been one of five majority-minority states. Its suburbs, like many other parts of the country, are no longer predominantly white enclaves. In Harris County, 8,800 early voters have the Vietnamese last name Nguyen, according to a Houston Chronicle reporter’s tweet.

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National Democrats contend that turnout like that puts the state within reach. Michael Bloomberg, founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP, has said he’s spending $15 million to support Biden in Texas and Ohio. In Texas, his Independence USA   PAC   will air TV ads in both English and Spanish that will focus on the coronavirus.

Even if Biden falls short, cinching competitive races for the state House of Representatives could give Democrats a strong hand in redistricting after the census.

Caution Signs

For all the gawking at early vote counts and narrowing polls, experts caution that it’s difficult to draw conclusions.

“You have to be impressed by the volume,” said Jim Henson, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who heads the Texas Politics Project. “But at the same time, I think until we see what the actual Election Day numbers look like, it’s not clear whether or how much this is going to carry through.”

The surge is likely influenced by a lack of options. Unlike in other battleground states, Texas voters are unable to cite fear of Covid-19 as a reason for mail-in voting. That means virus-wary residents may be going to the polls early to avoid long lines on Election Day.

Red counties have also seen a spike in early voting, with Denton, in North Texas, reaching 60% turnout as of Wednesday. In suburban Dallas, closely watched Collin County, which has emerged as a battleground even though Trump won it by double digits in 2016, saw turnout of 62%.

After converging to show Trump and Biden as even over the weekend, an updated average of 2020 polls by FiveThirtyEight widened slightly this week, with Trump holding a 1-point lead as of Thursday. And the state’s senior U.S. senator, Republican John Cornyn, is running well ahead of his Democratic challenger, former U.S. Air Force helicopter pilot MJ Hegar.

Still, Texas is historically lightly polled, and residents don’t align themselves with a party when they register to vote, making it difficult to see who’s showing   up to   cast their ballot early.

Statewide, voters who most recently participated in a Republican primary have about a 350,000-vote advantage over those who did so in a Democratic primary, according to Derek Ryan, a Republican voter-data expert in Austin. But about 3.5 million early voters didn’t participate in either party’s primary. “That leaves a huge chunk of the early voters that I just don’t know about,” he said.

Hispanics Crucial

Key to a Biden upset in Texas is the Hispanic vote, with Latinos making up 30% of all eligible voters. Nationally, Latino participation in early voting is more than double what it was in 2016. Like the rest of the country, the vast majority of Hispanic votes in Texas is expected to go to Biden, and Harris’s visit to McAllen will take her to the heart of the four-county Rio Grand Valley border region. But polling has been all over the place, leaving room for a stronger-than-expected showing of conservative Latino voters.

“In Texas, the Latino vote has tended to lean Democratic, but that’s exactly it: It leans Democratic,” said Renée Cross, senior director at the Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston. “I don’t think there’s any doubt that the majority of Hispanics will vote for Biden, but the question is how many of the ones who vote Republican will vote for Trump.”

Uncertainty aside, the early voting and closer-than-usual polls are a wake-up call for Republicans who thought they had time before the party’s grip on the state was in real jeopardy, said Brendan Steinhauser, a GOP strategist who’s worked on campaigns for Republicans including Cornyn and Representative Dan Crenshaw.

“We’re almost in crisis mode,” he said. “The party’s base is very white, it’s very old, it’s rural in a state that’s getting younger, more diverse and more urban. Everything is working against Republicans right now.”




Why the GOP hold on Texas is loosening

The record surge of early voting in Texas' rapidly growing cities and inner suburbs, which on Friday helped  power the state past its total votes  cast during the entire 2016 election, likely marks the end of unchallenged Republican dominance in America's second largest state -- a seismic shift in the nation's electoral landscape.

Even if  President Donald Trump  retains enough rural strength to hold Texas in Tuesday's election, which many still consider the most likely outcome, the swelling voter turnout in and around the increasingly Democratic-leaning cities of Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio and Fort Worth points toward a return to political competition in the state after more than two decades of almost uninterrupted Republican ascendancy.

Just alone in Harris County, which is centered on Houston,  nearly 1.4 million people  had voted through Thursday evening, compared with 1.3 million total in the 2016 election. The state's other big cities and inner suburban counties are experiencing comparable increases, with  Texas' 10 largest counties  alone accounting for more than 5.3 million ballots cast through Thursday out of more than 9 million in the state.

"We expected a lot of turnout," Lina Hidalgo, the Harris County judge (the equivalent of a county executive) told me. "We didn't expect  this  level."

Texas 2020 presidential election polls

Some local analysts believe that with turnout cresting, and a recoil from Trump swelling Democratic support,  Joe Biden  could win the counties centered on those five big cities by more than a million votes combined -- roughly double Hillary Clinton's margin in them in 2016 and possibly  10 times  Barack Obama's advantage across the same places in 2012.

Whether or not Biden wins the state, or even precisely meets that prediction, a shift of anything approaching that magnitude would provide Democrats a formidable foundation from which to challenge the Republican hegemony over Texas -- a foundation that will only grow stronger through the 2020s as these urban and inner suburban counties across what's known as the "Texas triangle"  drive the vast majority of the state's population and economic expansion .

"If the explosive growth in the urban centers and suburbs continues [for Democrats] that will be the whole ballgame," says Richard Murray, a longtime political scientist at the University of Houston who has forecast the 1 million vote metro advantage for Biden.

While Trump and other Republicans are consolidating crushing advantages in small-town and rural communities, Murray says, the stagnant or shrinking population in those places means Republicans "just can't keep pace with this big [metro] vote." 

How 2020 may reconfigure politics in the Southwest

Republicans still have many advantages in Texas -- particularly overwhelming support in its sprawling rural areas -- and most observers consider Trump something between a slight and a substantial favorite to hold it.

New York Times/Siena College  and  University of Houston  polls released Monday showed Trump leading by about 5 percentage points (though a  University of Texas at Tyler/Dallas Morning News survey  released Sunday gave Biden an edge). But the trend line in the state's urban centers -- a microcosm of the GOP's retreat in big metro areas almost everywhere under Trump -- is ominous for Republicans.

And the consequences of failure are almost unthinkable for them: Given the Democratic dominance of other large states -- including California, New York and Illinois -- there is no viable path for Republicans to win the White House without holding Texas and its 38 Electoral College votes.

Losing Texas -- either next week or in 2024 -- would register in Republican circles as a uniquely powerful earthquake that would rattle their confidence in the party's direction and message, many GOP insiders agree.

A return to competition


"Texas is in transition on steroids now," Matthew Dowd, a former top adviser to Republican former Texas Gov. (and later President) George W. Bush, told me in an email. Dowd, who was earlier an adviser to top Democrats in the state, says that "Republicans will not be able to consolidate [control] again. The change is already past the point of doing that. They may still have slight advantage in 2022, but that advantage will dissipate in each year ahead."

Bill Miller, a prominent Texas lobbyist and consultant who has also worked for politicians in both parties, says he believes Republicans retain an advantage in Texas for now, particularly if Biden wins nationally.

In that circumstance, he says, Republicans would benefit from less attention to Trump -- who has repelled many suburban voters in Texas, just as in other states -- and more focus on the agenda Biden will try to pass, particularly his push for higher taxes on high-income earners and corporations. That could help the GOP recapture some of the suburban White voters now rejecting Trump, he says.

But even with those potential tailwinds, Miller agrees that the days of impregnable GOP control over the state have likely ended.

"It's never going to be the way it was," Miller says. "Six years ago, Republicans looked at a seat, they won it. The only races were [the] Republican primaries: who could be the most conservative. That's over. Now it's very competitive. It's not that Republicans have all the money and good candidates and Democrats don't. Now they have money and good candidates too. It's all in."

Even if Biden doesn't win the state, a commanding showing in the metro areas could lift Democrats seriously competing for as many as half a dozen Republican congressional seats and bidding to flip enough seats in the state House of Representatives to regain control of the chamber for the first time since 2002.

The New York Times poll released Monday showed Biden leading Trump across the 12 mostly suburban Texas congressional districts considered most competitive, terrain that almost entirely overlaps with the seats Democrats are contesting in the state Legislature. The University of Texas poll likewise showed Biden leading Trump in all four of the state's major metropolitan areas.

A new era of political competition in Texas would mark a back-to-the-future trajectory for the state. Like most Southern states, Texas, which seceded to join the Confederacy, unflinchingly supported Democrats for most of the first century after the Civil War. Although Republican John Tower broke through to win a Senate seat in 1961 (replacing Lyndon Johnson when he became vice president), the GOP didn't really establish a beachhead in the state until Republican Bill Clements won the governorship in 1978.

The next 16 years offered the longest period of sustained political competition in the state's history. The two parties alternated winning the governorship in the four elections from 1978 through 1990 (starting with Clements and ending with tart-tongued Democrat Ann Richards), and while Republicans easily carried the state in each presidential election over that period, Democrats maintained control of the state Legislature and US congressional delegation.

Over this era, the Republican coalition was centered on suburbs filled mostly with White voters who had joined a "White flight" exodus from cities as minority populations grew and who remained intently hostile to taxes. Democrats relied on a big urban vote combined with support in rural areas with voters whose ancestral loyalties to the party were so great that it was said they would vote for a "yellow dog" before a Republican (at least in state races).

"Historically, this is really hard to understand, the rural areas had been the base of the Democratic Party," says Garry Mauro, a Democrat who served as the state's elected land commissioner from 1983 through 1999. "The Republicans carried Dallas and Houston and Austin."

That competitive balance collapsed in 1994. In the backlash that developed -- especially across the South -- against Bill Clinton's chaotic first two years as president, Bush ousted Richards as governor that year, even though she remained personally popular. Democrats have not elected another Texas governor since.

190315150607-bush-ranch-draper-exlarge-169.jpg
President George W. Bush at Prairie Chapel Ranch, August 7, 2001, in Crawford, Texas.

Mauro was part of a class of tough and salty Texas Democrats (including Lt. Gov. Bob Bullock and state Comptroller John Sharp) who held their statewide offices against the Republican tide that year. But Bush and his political consigliere Karl Rove solidified Republican dominance over the state.

In 1998, Republicans -- with candidates including Rick Perry as lieutenant governor and John Cornyn as attorney general -- swept to control all of Texas' statewide offices, including the governorship, when Bush soundly defeated Mauro, the Democratic nominee, for reelection. Democrats have not won  any  Texas statewide office since.

Over the next few years, Republicans gained unified control of the Texas Legislature and haven't surrendered that since either, in part because of aggressive gerrymanders. Republicans have controlled a majority as well of the state's US congressional delegation since early this century and have held both US Senate seats since 1993 (when Lloyd Bentsen resigned to serve as Clinton's treasury secretary).

Factors for change


For roughly two decades, from 1998 until the 2018 election, Texas Democrats faced what Mauro called a "bleak" landscape. With unified control of state government, Republicans fortified their position not only through the aggressive gerrymanders, but also by passing a series of laws that made it more difficult to register or to vote, including one of the nation's toughest voter identification laws.  One comprehensive academic study  recently labeled Texas as by far the state in which it is most difficult to vote.

Long-term and near-term factors have combined to scramble this equation -- and to do so, as Mauro says, "faster than I thought, and I've been preaching it."

The most visible long-term change in the state has been its  growing racial and ethnic diversity.  With the Hispanic and Asian American populations growing particularly fast, people of color have increased from 34% of the Texas electorate in 2004 to a projected 40% this year, according to forecasts from the nonpartisan States of Change project.

Texas is growing, but it's all in metro. It's not in rural anymore; rural population is declining. It is a metro state.STEVEN PEDIGO, DIRECTOR OF THE LBJ URBAN LAB AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN

Less visible but also critical has been the shift of the state's population, economic activity and voting totals to the state's metro areas. The so-called "Texas Triangle," which extends from Houston in the Southeast to San Antonio in the Southwest and then north through Austin and Dallas/Fort Worth, accounts for more than 7-in-10 of the state's jobs and about three-fourths of Texas' economic output.

These prospering cities -- and the rapidly growing suburban counties around them, such as Collin and Denton near Dallas, Williamson and Hays around Austin and Fort Bend outside Houston -- have become a magnet for well-educated transplants from other states, such as California and New York.  The Census Bureau recently reported  that the Texas Triangle accounted for fully 6 of the 10 counties  nationwide  that added the most population in the past decade.

The Texas Triangle "is where all the population growth, all the job growth, all the talent is, where all the Californians are moving," says Steven Pedigo, director of the LBJ Urban Lab at the University of Texas at Austin. "Texas is growing, but it's all in metro. It's not in rural anymore; rural population is declining. It is a metro state."

201014115044-10-barrett-hearing-1014-cruz-exlarge-169.jpg
Sen. Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican, during the Supreme Court confirmation hearing
for Amy Coney Barrett, October 14, 2020, in Washington.

Murray, the University of Houston political scientist, has chronicled the impact of this population shift on the state's voting patterns.  Murray and colleague Renee Cross calculated  that in 1980, the 27 counties in the metropolitan areas centered on Houston, San Antonio, Austin and Dallas/Fort Worth cast about 55% of the state's votes. By the 2018 election, that number had soared to 69%. Over that same period, the share of the vote cast in the 28 largely Hispanic southern and western Texas counties drifted down slightly from 10% to just below 8%.

The big change came in the state's 199 non-urban counties, which have become the foundation of the Republican Party: They've fallen from about 37% of the vote in 1980 to just over 23% now.

For years the political impact of this population shift was muted because Democrats did not make gains in the Texas suburbs comparable to their breakthroughs since the early 1990s in demographically similar communities elsewhere. More college-educated suburbanites in Texas than elsewhere are conservative on both social and fiscal issues, in part because a much greater share of them than in Northern suburbs are evangelical Christians. Largely as a result, Republican presidential nominees carried the full 27-county metro area, which comprises cities and their suburbs, in every presidential election from 1968 through 2012, according to the Murray and Cross study.

But once Trump became the GOP's face, the Republican hold on the Texas metros loosened. Hillary Clinton narrowly outpolled Trump across the full 27-county area. Two years later,  Democratic former US Rep. Beto O'Rourke , in his narrow Senate loss to Republican incumbent Ted Cruz, blew past Clinton's markers. O'Rourke won nearly 55% of the vote across the full 27-county metro region and became the first top-of-the-ticket Democrat since favorite son Johnson in 1964 to win each of the state's four large metropolitan areas.

Democrats' growing margins


The change is even more apparent when looking at the five core urban counties inside the burgeoning Texas Triangle: Harris (Houston), Dallas, Travis (Austin), Bexar (San Antonio) and Tarrant (Fort Worth). In 2012, Obama won all of them except Tarrant but by a modest combined margin of about 130,000 votes. Four years later, Clinton again won all of them except Tarrant, with a more robust margin of 562,000 votes. Then in 2018, O'Rourke won all five of the core urban counties by a combined total of 790,000 votes -- six times as much as Obama's advantage only six years earlier. Whereas Obama won Harris County by 1,000 votes and Clinton by 162,000, O'Rourke pushed the margin to 200,000 votes.

Early voting has exploded across all of these metro areas in 2020. Harris County has seen an especially dramatic outpouring. Hidalgo, a 29-year-old Democrat and immigrant from Colombia who ousted an older White Republican in 2018, says that in 2016, the county invested $4.1 million to run the election.

This year, the county increased that to $31 million, funding an extensive array of innovative measures that have eased access to the polls, from expanding early voting sites and keeping them open longer to allowing drive-thru voting and even holding a 24-hour voting session later this week. In the process, Harris County has become a powerful example of what voter participation might look like if governments affirmatively make voting more accessible.

Build your own road to 270 electoral votes with CNN's interactive map

"If you build it, people come, and we have lowered the barriers to entry, to safe, secure election," Hidalgo told me. "We see that when you lower the barriers, it wasn't that people were apathetic -- they were ready to participate -- but it was hard [to vote]."

With the county poised to soon surpass its total 2016 vote, Hidalgo says it's not unreasonable to ask how close it can come to the total voter registration of 2.3 million: "I don't see why, with this energy, we can't get as close as humanly possible to that full participation," she says.

Likewise, Steve Adler, the Democratic Austin mayor, told me he expects record turnout there -- in part because the county has registered an incredible 97% of its eligible voters. Enough of them may show up, he says, to push the county's total vote this year up near 700,000, possibly 200,000 more than in 2016.

"That would be historic," Adler says. "The number of people that are voting that are young is just incredible. We're talking about over 35% of people voting in the city are under 40."

200819005209-09-room-rater-dnc-opinion-beto-orourke-exlarge-169.jpg  
Beto O'Rourke

Not only is turnout up in Texas' core urban counties, but most observers also expect Biden to exceed Clinton's vote share in them and to match or even surpass the elevated levels of support that O'Rourke achieved in them two years later.

As a result, Murray projects that Biden could win Harris, Travis and Dallas counties by at least 300,000 votes each -- stunning numbers. Bexar and Tarrant (which Murray expects Biden to capture) could add another 200,000 votes to his pile. That could put Biden's total lead from the five core counties at roughly 1.1-1.2 million, about double Clinton's level.

The lingering Republican tilt in many of the suburban counties around this urban core will reduce the overall Democratic advantage in the Texas metro areas, but probably not by as much as in the past; Biden is likely to win several of the big Texas suburban counties (such as Fort Bend near Houston and Williamson outside Austin) and at worst significantly reduce the traditional GOP margins in several others (particularly Collin and Denton outside Dallas).

In all, Murray expects the 27 counties in the state's four big metro regions to cast a record 70% of the total vote, and to provide Biden a margin of nearly 900,000 votes. He expects the largely Hispanic counties to add another 350,000 votes to Biden's lead.

Until we start having statewide Democratic leaders, who is the foil for Republican leadership? The foil in that situation is going to be cities. It used to be just Austin, and obviously we're still bearing the brunt, but it's more than just us.STEVE ADLER, AUSTIN'S DEMOCRATIC MAYOR

That might be a best-case scenario for the former vice president. But even if Biden doesn't quite reach those numbers, the question will remain whether Trump can squeeze out enough votes from the remaining non-urban, mostly White counties. He won 75% of the vote in those places last time and Murray, like most observers, expects he will match or exceed that again.

What's unclear is whether those counties can keep pace with the explosive turnout in the state's urban centers. Murray thinks they won't quite and their share of the statewide vote will slip to a little over 1-in-5, allowing Biden to narrowly capture the state.

Most others still give Trump the edge. Matt Mackowiak, an Austin-based Republican consultant, says it's a mistake to assume the early vote totals guarantee the non-urban share of the vote will decline. Trump will pull out plenty of rural votes, he says.

"If you are analyzing data right now and rural voter is behind suburban and urban, I don't think it means so much," he says, since those non-urban voters are more likely to vote on Election Day than early. If anything, Mackowiak says, compared with 2018, "the rural turnout is going to be so much higher, because they connect with Trump in a way they don't connect with Cruz."

The hurdles that remain


While optimistic that Biden will post strong numbers in the metro areas, many Democrats say they would feel better about their overall Texas prospects if the former vice president's campaign invested meaningful money in turning out voters in the predominantly Hispanic communities along the Mexican border, where participation historically runs low.

I spoke with O'Rourke on Saturday morning, when he was canvassing voters in Collin County, a diversifying Dallas suburb that may tilt away from Trump and the GOP this year.

"While you have a lot of concentrated spending in the Dallas/Fort Worth and Houston metro area because of competitive congressional and state House campaigns, there is a great opportunity for the Biden campaign to invest in the Rio Grande Valley, Laredo, El Paso," he told me. "If you are looking at a neck-and-neck presidential race [in the state] that is going to be won perhaps at the margin you need a presidential campaign to spend in those [areas]."

Mauro is equally frustrated. "When people spend a billion and a half dollars and they can't find money to spend in Texas, I'm sorry, that's pure stupidity," he says.

Beyond his choice to invest only modest sums there, Biden still faces formidable hurdles to capture the state this year. Mackowiak says the deep ideological contrast visible in the presidential race, around issues from taxes to the Supreme Court, may allow Trump to regain some college-educated suburban voters who drifted away from Cruz in 2018. (While Biden may reach 60% support from college-educated Whites in states such as Pennsylvania and Colorado, the latest polls released Monday show him still stuck in Texas well below the 44% of them O'Rourke carried.)

Even Democrats acknowledge that Biden's pledge at last week's debate to eventually  "transition away"  from the use of oil may hurt him in midsized Texas cities that have become dependent on oil services -- though the state's overall reliance on oil jobs has significantly diminished, and Biden's focus on climate change could help encourage more youth turnout.

Turnout in the Hispanic counties may not reach the level Democrats need as well -- and, while media polls often have difficulty accurately measuring Hispanic sentiment, Monday's surveys also showed Biden failing to match Hillary Clinton's margin with those voters.

But if Biden wins the presidency with or without Texas, expanding the Democrats' beachhead in the Lone Star state -- with an eye toward fully contesting the state in 2024 -- would surely rank among the party's highest political priorities.

State Republicans may be creating an opening by emulating Trump in running against, rather than trying to court, the state's thriving metropolitan centers: In the past few months,  Gov. Greg Abbott has overridden local mask ordinances from Hidalgo and others  (though  he later changed course to order mask-wearing  when coronavirus cases spiked),  forced cities to reopen more widely  than they wanted during the pandemic and  threatened to somehow seize control of Austin's police force  because he opposes funding decisions the City Council has made.

The outgoing Republican speaker of the state House, from a small town at the edge of the Houston area,  was secretly recorded  telling a conservative activist, "My goal is for this to be the worst session in the history of the Legislature for cities and counties."

200820095754-texas-gov-greg-abbott-0818-exlarge-169.jpg
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott

The state's GOP leaders have pursued "a shortsighted and destructive" posture toward the cities, says Adler. "Until we start having statewide Democratic leaders, who is the foil for Republican leadership? The foil in that situation is going to be cities. It used to be just Austin, and obviously we're still bearing the brunt, but it's more than just us."

Adds Hidalgo: "The leadership of the state has made a political calculus they would rather pander to a certain extreme than deliver to these urban areas."

With their decision to frame cities as a threat to their rural and small-town base, the Texas GOP leaders are closely following Trump's tracks. And huge margins in the preponderantly White and socially conservative rural strongholds, as well as incremental improvement among Hispanics, may indeed allow Republicans to hold the state in the 2020 presidential race and maybe the governor's contest that follows in 2022.

But it's not difficult to forecast that the party's prospects will steadily dim through the 2020s if it cannot reverse its erosion in the diverse urban and inner suburban counties growing inexorably in both economic clout and voting numbers.

If that happens, the GOP hold on Texas will become the biggest casualty of the trade Trump has imposed on his party of attempting to squeeze bigger margins out of small-town and rural communities that are shrinking at the expense of provoking greater opposition among cities and inner suburbs that are growing.

"There is obviously huge risk there," says Mackowiak. "You get to a point to where the math doesn't work anymore. I don't think we're there, but you can see the light at the end of the tunnel and it's not daylight. It's a train coming to run you over."



Democrats Hope 2020 Is the Year They Flip the Texas House
Republicans have controlled the state government since 2003. An anti-Trump surge could give Democrats a crucial boost.

original Jeff Whitfield, a Democratic candidate for the Texas House of Representatives, talking with a voter in Bedford, Texas
Cooper Neill for The New York Times

BEDFORD, Texas — Deep in the suburbs northeast of Fort Worth, Democrats trying to win the   Texas   House for the first time in years have been getting help from a surprising source.

Republicans.

For 16 years, until he left office in 2013, Todd A. Smith was a Republican representing these suburbs in the Texas House of Representatives. His district covered a fast-growing hub of middle-class and affluent communities next door to Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

When it came time to decide whom he would support for his old seat, Mr. Smith said he had no hesitation — he threw his endorsement to the Democrat in the race, Jeff Whitfield.

“This is no longer my Republican Party,” Mr. Smith said last week while sitting outside his house, which has a “Republicans For Biden 2020” sign on the front lawn.

“This is the Trump party,” he said. “If you give me a reasonable Republican and a crazy Democrat, then I will still vote for the Republican. But if you give me a lunatic Republican and a reasonable Democrat, then I’m going to vote for the Democrat, and that applies in the presidential race, and it applies in the Whitfield race.”

After a generation under unified Republican control,   Texas is a battleground   at every level of government this year. President Trump and Senator John Cornyn are fighting for their political lives, and five Republican-held congressional seats are in danger of flipping.

But some of the most consequential political battles in Texas are taking place across two dozen contested races for the Texas State House, which Republicans have controlled since 2003. To win a majority, Democrats must flip nine of the chamber’s 150 seats — the same number of Republican-held districts Beto O’Rourke carried during his 2018 Senate race, when he was the first Texas Democrat to make a competitive run for Senate or governor in a generation.

Mr. O’Rourke has organized nightly online phone banks that are making about three million phone calls a week to voters during the campaign’s final stretch. His organization helped register about 200,000 Texas Democratic voters in an attempt to finish a political transformation of Texas that began with his Senate race.

“I actually won more state House districts than Ted Cruz,” Mr. O’Rourke said in an interview last week. “It’s just that the candidates in nine of those, the Democratic candidates, didn’t end up winning.”

Control of the Texas House comes with huge implications beyond the state’s borders. A Democratic state House majority in Texas would give the party one lever of power in the 2021 redistricting process, when the state is expected to receive as many as three new seats in Congress. It would also give them a voice in drawing Texas state legislative lines for the next decade.

Officials from both parties said the difference between the current unified Republican control of the Texas state government and Democrats controlling the state House could be as many as five congressional seats when new maps are drawn.

“Flipping the Texas House this year can be the key that unlocks a Democratic future in Texas,” said John Bisognano, the executive director of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee. “With fair maps, Democrats will be able to compete all over the state and build a deep bench of candidates who can run and win statewide.”

Nowhere in the country has there been a surge of voting to match the one in Texas. Through two weeks of in-person early voting, more than 6.9 million Texans have voted — a figure that accounts for more than three-quarters of the entire 2016 turnout.

The turnout is highest in the state’s biggest metropolitan areas, which are the core state House battlegrounds — and are   six of the 10 fastest-growing counties in the country . There are five competitive state House seats in Tarrant County, which includes Fort Worth, five more in other Dallas suburbs, and eight in greater Houston.

“I’ve always been political my whole life,” said Gina Hinojosa, a state representative from Austin whose father is the chairman of the Texas Democratic Party. “Now, suddenly, everybody is so political. The last election has had the result of engaging everyday people in our political process.”

Texas Republicans have sought to tie Democrats running for the state House, who are campaigning on issues like health care and increasing school funding, to the most liberal proposals in their party. Gov. Greg Abbott on Thursday   launched a digital advertisement   attacking Mr. O’Rourke’s past statements on police funding, gun control, tax policy and the Green New Deal.

This week, the governor and other Republicans jumped on former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s pledge during the presidential debate on Thursday to “ transition away from the oil industr y,” a   bedrock of the Texas economy , saying that such a move would cost the state hundreds of thousands of jobs and shrink revenues that pay for schools.

“He is an albatross around the neck of down-ballot candidates in Texas,” said Jared Woodfill, a Houston conservative activist and lawyer who is a former chairman of the Harris County Republican Party. “Biden just lost Texas.”

Suburban voters do not appear to be buying Republican arguments during the Trump era that Democrats will turn their communities socialist. Polling in 10 targeted Texas state House districts shows Mr. Biden gaining an average of 8.6 percentage points, while Democratic state House candidates have gained 6.5 points since March in surveys conducted by the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, which has invested more than $1 million in Texas over the last two years.

The suburban voters of 2020, said Steve Munisteri, a former Republican Party of Texas chairman who worked in Mr. Trump’s White House, have far more in common with urbanites than they do with the more conservative voters who used to populate the outer edges of Texas metropolitan areas.

“Because of urban growth, many of what are considered traditional suburbs in Texas metropolitan areas really are just extensions of the urban areas,” Mr. Munisteri said.

Collin County, a suburban area 20 miles north of Dallas, has two competitive state House districts that Mr. O’Rourke carried in 2018. In six years, the county has added 200,000 people. It now has a population of more than 1 million people and has gone from a Democratic wasteland to one teeming with liberal volunteers.

In 2014, when John Shanks moved to Collin County, there were about 20 dedicated Democratic Party volunteers. Now Mr. Shanks, the executive director of the county’s Democratic Party, has several hundred — so many that he has trouble finding work for them all.

“We’ve had about four years of people getting used to the idea that their vote really can matter,” Mr. Shanks said. “We’ve grown into realizing that you can make a difference. And as they realize that and wake up, things become more competitive.”

Bedford sits in a part of the Dallas-Fort Worth region that has been deeply conservative for decades. Republicans have held the region’s state House seat since 1985, and the Northeast Tarrant Tea Party was one of the most influential Tea Party groups during the Obama era.

The outgoing state representative, Jonathan Stickland, is a bearded Cruz-style firebrand who supported gun rights and   wore his .40-caliber semiautomatic pistol   at the Texas Capitol. In 2015, The Texas Tribune called him the   “chamber’s antagonist-in-chief.”

Mr. Stickland   apologized   in 2016 after an online posting he made in 2008, before he ran for elected office, was unearthed by a political opponent. In the posting on a fantasy football site, he responded to a man’s request for sex advice by writing: “Rape is non existent in marriage, take what you want my friend!”

Yet after years of sending conservatives to Austin, the district has changed. In just two years, the Republican advantage shrunk from 9,100 votes for Mr. Trump in 2016 to 1,167 when Senator Ted Cruz defeated Mr. O’Rourke in 2018.

“When you’re hearing people who’ve spent a lifetime voting Republican and they say, ‘The party has left me,’ I don’t know that we’ve ever heard that before,” Mr. Whitfield, the Democratic state House candidate, said as he stood in a parking lot outside the Bedford Public Library, an early-voting site.

Steps away in the same parking lot, Mr. Whitfield’s Republican opponent, Jeff Cason, disputed any notion of a widespread Republican defection.

“I’m a man of faith, and I just believe the doors are opening for us, and if the Lord wants us in Austin, we’ll be there,” Mr. Cason said. “I’m not getting any sense of Republicans leaving our camp.”

Julie McCarty, who was the president of the Northeast Tarrant Tea Party and is now the chief executive of the group it transformed into, the True Texas Project, attributed the Democratic gains in the region to Republicans not being conservative enough.

“Republicans want to be left alone. We want smaller government. When we can’t get that, we move where we can,” she said. “Therein lies the answer to what causes Tarrant to turn purple.”

For Mr. Smith, the former Republican legislator, 2020 has been a year to split his ballot. In addition to the Biden sign and his support for Mr. Whitfield, he has a yard sign for Jane Nelson, a Republican state senator running for re-election. And he voted for Senator John Cornyn, the Trump ally locked in a tough re-election fight with M.J. Hegar, a Democrat and former Air Force helicopter pilot. Years ago, Mr. Smith threw Mr. Cornyn a fund-raiser at his house.

“I have mixed feelings about it,” he said of his vote for Mr. Cornyn. “But I trust what I believe to be his honest convictions.”




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Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
1  seeder  Bob Nelson    4 years ago
“When you’re hearing people who’ve spent a lifetime voting Republican and they say, ‘The party has left me...’ "
 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
3  XXJefferson51    4 years ago

https://www.instagram.com/p/CHB0URojsUI/?igshid=1t20sr6jk9eig

 
 
 
Bob Nelson
Professor Guide
3.1  seeder  Bob Nelson  replied to  XXJefferson51 @3    4 years ago

Are you proud of these people? 

 
 

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