The suburbs of North Dallas were once the headquarters of a very particular
pre-MAGA version of the Republican party: genteel, gun-toting, and church-going.
The men wore beaver-fur cowboy hats, and the women were hairsprayed to the high
heavens. As we reported in 2011, the 75205 zip code—some of which falls into the
32nd congressional district of Texas—was the “most enthusiastically Republican
enclave in the country.” But then, changing racial demographics made the
district ripe for Democratic picking. In 2018, a 35-year-old Black civil rights
lawyer named Colin Allred ousted Pete Sessions, an eleven-term Republican
congressman. Allred, a stocky former NFL linebacker, has been re-elected to the
seat twice since, campaigning on his moderate sensibilities and willingness to
reach across the aisle.
Now, Allred is running that same play against Sen. Ted Cruz, the hard-line
Republican, in an ever-tightening race. At the Texas Tribune Festival in
September, Allred seemed to be nostalgic for that fading Republican archetype
who once populated the district he now represents. He described growing up with
the “real conservatives,” whom Cruz, he said emphatically, is not. Allred paints
Cruz as a divisive extremist and has been courting Republicans who “don’t see
themselves reflected in this version of the Republican party.”
And that strategy seems to be working—last week, the Cook Political Report
shifted the race to “lean Republican.” Most polls show Allred within single
digits of Cruz, and one has Allred leading by one point. With Democrats
defending incumbents in Ohio and Montana, flipping Texas could make the
difference in maintaining their governing majority in the Senate. After some
Democrats pushed the party to invest more in Allred’s campaign, both the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and the Democratic National Committee
announced investments in Texas.
But Texas Democrats have not won a statewide election since 1994. The closest
they have come was former El Paso Rep. Beto O’Rourke’s freewheeling 2018
campaign against Cruz. O’Rourke famously campaigned in all 254 counties,
criss-crossing the state in his maroon Dodge Caravan. He live-streamed his every
move on Facebook: chatting away while getting a haircut, skateboarding in a
Whataburger parking lot, and going on pre-dawn jogs with supporters. O’Rourke
ultimately lost by fewer than three points—which some Democrats count as a
victory—and won a place as a mythic figure in the state party. He is the ghost
haunting Allred’s campaign. Every dollar raised, poll conducted, and door
knocked inspires comparisons to 2018’s high-water mark.
By most measures, Allred is a strong candidate and has assembled quite a war
chest, having outraised Cruz this year. And the junior senator from Texas
certainly appears concerned about the race—Cruz’s campaign has called the
election the “fight of our lives.” And, in a surprising twist, the
hyper-partisan Cruz, who built his career as a culture warrior, has attempted to
gain an advantage by arguing that he has a bipartisan record.
Allred, who can come off as stiff and overly scripted, hasn’t inspired the kind
of Democratic fervor that O’Rourke enjoyed. But he has been appealing to
moderate Republicans and independents who may be alienated by Cruz’s MAGA
approach, talking openly about Democratic failures to address the border crisis.
The central question: Is running a middle-of-the-road campaign the strategy for
winning a race that O’Rourke so narrowly lost?
Rep. Colin Allred, D-Texas, speaks on the final night of the Democratic National
Convention at the United Center in Chicago.Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/AP
Campaigning for statewide office in Texas, which is slightly larger than France
and has a population of 30 million, is comparable to running for the president
of some countries. Hispanics are now the largest population group in the state,
and the number of Black and Asian residents is also growing. Texas contains four
of the most populous cities in the US and some of the most expensive media
markets. Allred’s robust campaign coffers have made it possible for him to
blanket urban centers with television ads. But a more difficult challenge is
what veteran journalist and editor of the website Quorum Report Scott Braddock
called the “imagination gap:” Texans under the age of 30 have never seen a
Democrat win a statewide election.
The last Democrat to do so was Bob Bullock, who was re-elected as lieutenant
governor in 1994, the same year that former president George W. Bush first
became governor. Since then, there have been a series of high-profile losses.
From the “Dream Team” of statewide candidates in 2002 to popular Houston mayor
Bill White’s gubernatorial campaign in 2010, Democrats have routinely raised
their hopes only to be crushed by Republicans. In 2014, they thought they had a
real shot for the governor’s mansion with Wendy Davis, the state senator who
rose to national prominence when her marathon filibuster delayed a restrictive
abortion bill. Bolstered by Battleground Texas, a new PAC launched by two Obama
campaign alums, Davis ran on a compelling biography as a single mother who wound
up at Harvard Law School. But her campaign struggled to stay on message and was
out-raised and out-spent by Greg Abbott in his first gubernatorial campaign. She
lost by 20 points.
In 2018, Texas Democrats found a new standard bearer in O’Rourke, the lanky,
indefatigable 46-year-old US congressman from El Paso. He made a point of
throwing out the Democratic playbook, initially pledging to go without pollsters
and consultants and to refuse donations from corporations and super PACs.
O’Rourke was a kind of political Rorschach test. Mark Jones, a political science
professor at Rice University, said, “O’Rourke was successfully able to be
everything to everyone.” He had progressive bona fides, supporting universal
healthcare, abortion rights, and an assault rifle ban. He capitalized on
Democratic outrage around former president Donald Trump’s family separation
policies, leading a Father’s Day protest outside a detention facility for
immigrant children. But he could also be, as Jones put it, a “post-partisan
pragmatist.” He had a centrist voting record in Congress and a long-standing
friendship with Republican Congressman Will Hurd—the two live-streamed their
road trip from San Antonio to Washington, DC, in 2017. Ignored by Cruz for the
first several months of the campaign, O’Rourke’s shifting and sometimes
contradictory narratives went largely unchallenged.
> “O’Rourke was successfully able to be everything to everyone.”
With an army of volunteers and record-breaking fundraising from both inside and
outside the state, O’Rourke came tantalizingly close to defeating Cruz, losing
by 2.6 points. As Gus Bova writes in the Texas Observer, O’Rourke “broke the
mold” in 2018, defying political gravity and reinvigorating Texas Democrats. But
after disappointing showings in the 2019 Democratic presidential primary and the
2022 gubernatorial race, some have wondered if O’Rourke’s political career is
over. O’Rourke now heads a voter registration PAC and recently joined second
gentleman Doug Emhoff on a fundraising turn through Texas—including a stop at
his beloved Whataburger.
When it comes to the prospect of a blue Texas, one can’t blame Democrats for
feeling like Charlie Brown winding up to kick the football again, despite
knowing that Lucy is going to yank it away every time. And it might be hard to
rustle up enthusiasm for a candidate who is decidedly less compelling than
O’Rourke.
Beto O’Rourke, the 2018 Democratic candidate for Senate, gives the thumbs up as
he took the stage to speak at the Pan American Neighborhood Park in Austin,
Texas. Nick Wagner/Austin American-Statesman/AP
For the last eight years, Democrats have harbored hopes that, eventually, Trump
and his allies will become so extreme they will alienate their own base. And,
for many, Cruz could be the perfect example of a Republican who should have been
jettisoned by the GOP long ago. When he arrived in the Senate in 2013, fueled by
the insurgent tea party, he made a name for himself as a far-right
obstructionist with a penchant for showmanship. In 2013, his long-shot attempt
to undercut the Affordable Care Act—involving a 21-hour Senate speech and a
reading of “Green Eggs and Ham”—led to a two-week government shutdown and was
harshly criticized by other Republicans. Then there was his ill-fated and
embarrassing presidential primary bid in 2016, which culminated in a surprising
speech at the Republican National Convention during which he urged delegates to
vote their consciences and declined to endorse Trump. But Cruz walked back his
condemnation of Trump when it became apparent that it would irreparably harm his
political career. And, of course, there is Democrats’ favorite Cruz gaff of them
all: jetting off to Cancún during a deadly winter storm in 2021. (He apologized
upon his return.) These days, Cruz also makes time to record his thrice-weekly
podcast.
Nonetheless, polling finds that Cruz remains very popular among Texas
Republicans, and he may be bolstered by Trump’s appearance on the ticket. But a
June poll found that only 25 percent of self-identified Independents, a key
voting group, approved of him. His recent attempts to rebrand as an effective
legislator and unsung bipartisan hero may speak to that concern.
Early in the race, Allred’s campaign was so lackluster that it inspired a great
deal of grumbling from within the Texas Democratic party. “Where is Colin
Allred?” asked a prominent West Texas lawyer and Democrat on X in August. Allred
had done few public events and made even fewer media appearances before the
final night of the Democratic National Convention when he gave a speech shortly
before Vice President Kamala Harris. For most people outside of Texas (and even
some people within it), this was likely the first time they heard that Cruz was
facing a challenger. In the weeks since then, Allred’s campaign has picked up
its pace. But he has mostly opted for smaller meetings over large rallies and
town halls, and his campaign has organized mostly identity-focused coalition
groups—including women, Asian Americans, and Black Texans. Last week, his
campaign announced “Republicans for Allred,” chaired by former US congressman
Adam Kinzinger, a prominent anti-Trump Republican who also endorsed Harris.
The Allred campaign declined to make the candidate available for an interview
and instead suggested I speak to Olivia Julianna, a social media activist who is
advising the campaign on youth voter turnout. When asked why larger rallies
haven’t been a focus of his campaign, she replied, “This is a more strategic,
targeted way of reaching people and bringing them in on these very issue-focused
events that are about [what] they care about the most.”
At the Texas Tribune Festival, Allred was asked about a note from O’Rourke, who
said in an interview that he’d like to see more of Allred, particularly in
“unscripted” moments. It’s difficult to campaign in such a large state, Allred
said, a bit defensively, and he pointed out that he had made 50 stops in 22
cities in the past month.
Allred’s restraint is underscored by comparisons with O’Rourke, who was
endlessly available to voters. Even Cruz, perhaps relieved to know that he will
not have to face O’Rourke again, has spoken with some admiration about O’Rourke
and noted that he and Allred are “very different candidates.” In August, Cruz
told the Texas Tribune, “Beto O’Rourke was charismatic. He was tireless. He
campaigned all over the state, and he became a phenom.”
Matt Angle, a longtime Democratic political strategist in Texas, said Allred’s
more traditional, buttoned-up campaign can still be successful since having high
message discipline is usually considered to be a good thing in a candidate.
“Some people like the excitement of someone who is spontaneous [and] there’s a
lot to be said about leading a pep rally,” Angle told Mother Jones. “But I like
candidates who are trying to figure out how to win.”
> “Democrats in Texas always face this a no-win situation: the more they appeal
> to moderate voters, the greater the risk they run that the base doesn’t turn
> out for them…The more they focus on the base, the more they alienate moderate
> voters and push them over to the Republicans. ”
Some Democrats have worried that Allred is taking the base for granted and
focusing too much on moderates. Even though he endorsed Harris’s presidential
bid, he’s largely kept her and other national Democrats at arm’s length. In
fact, it sometimes seems as if Allred would rather voters not view him as a
Democrat at all. In May, he told Texas Monthly that the race is “not about
voting for Democrats. This race is about me versus Ted Cruz, specifically.”
Jones, the professor from Rice University, said that the best strategy, which
Allred seems to be employing, is relying on Harris to mobilize progressives
while he targets moderate Republicans and independents. “Democrats in Texas
always face this a no-win situation: the more they appeal to moderate voters,
the greater the risk they run that the base doesn’t turn out for them,” said
Jones. “However, the more they focus on the base, the more they alienate
moderate voters and push them over to the Republicans. You’re damned if you do,
damned if you don’t.”
Allred’s policies are generally consistent with those of the Democratic party:
he wants to expand Medicaid, codify Roe v. Wade, and reduce gun violence. But he
has attempted to distance himself when it comes to immigration and border
security, which have become the centerpieces of his campaign. A June poll found
that 47 percent of Texans strongly disapproved of President Joe Biden’s approach
to immigration and border security. Immigration has become a weak point for
Democrats at large, as border crossings have risen to record levels and strained
federal and local resources. To combat accusations of being weak on the border,
Democrats have begun to support some immigration policies that they opposed
under Trump, and, as many have pointed out, are sometimes indistinguishable from
Republicans in their rhetoric of being “tough” on the border.
Allred is not an exception, and he has been willing to go further than other
members of his party. In January, he voted alongside two other Texas Democrats
in support of a Republican-led congressional resolution that condemned Biden’s
border policies. On the campaign trail, he often cites his family connection to
the Rio Grande Valley—his maternal grandfather was a customs agent at the
Gateway Bridge in Brownsville—and he’s said that current immigration policies
have placed an undue “burden” on border communities.
But Allred’s rhetoric on border security was not always so tough. In 2018, when
he was running for the House of Representatives, he called Trump’s border wall
“racist” and pledged to tear it down. Yet, last October, he commended President
Joe Biden’s decision to continue border wall construction, describing it as a
“necessary step.” In a recent TV spot reminiscent of a Ford F-150 ad, Allred
emerges from a white pick-up truck to survey the border wall. The law
enforcement officials accompanying him declare that Cruz has been “all hat, no
cattle” on border security, while Allred has been “tough” and “[stood] up to
extremists in both parties.”
Allred’s campaign declined to respond to specific questions from Mother Jones on
border security. His campaign website says that he supports “common-sense”
immigration measures and pathways to citizenship for those who are “obeying the
law, working hard, [and] paying taxes.”
I asked Joaquin Castro, the Democratic congressman from San Antonio about
Allred’s position on the border. He said that his congressional colleague is
trying to strike a “reasonable balance,” disagreeing “with the dehumanization of
people” while pushing for more funding for border security.
Earlier this year, a bipartisan border security bill failed to pass because of
pressure from former president Trump. Described by Biden as the “strongest
border deal the country has ever seen,” the measure was the result of
negotiations with some of the most conservative members of Congress, including
Okalhoma Sen. James Lankford. It would have increased funding for enforcement,
restricted asylum applications, and expanded the government’s authority to
deport migrants. The bill’s failure presented a unique opportunity for Democrats
to turn the border blame game back on Republicans. Allred has campaigned widely
on Cruz’s opposition to the deal, saying that Cruz voted against it only
because, like the former president, “he wanted to have the issue to run on in
November.”
A persistent Democratic mantra is that Texas is not so much a red state as a
non-voting blue one. In 2020, Manny Garcia, who was then the state Democratic
party’s executive director, told Reuters, “Texas is in play because there are
more of us than there are of them.” But organizers emphasize that electoral
transformation takes time and investment. Michelle Tremillo, the co-executive
director of the Texas Organizing Project, said that her group focuses on
engaging Black and Latino first-time voters and “building that cycle of
participation is long term work.” Democrats already have made progress in county
and district elections—such as Lina Hidalgo, a 27-year-old Colombian immigrant
who defeated a popular Republican incumbent to lead Harris County in 2018. “With
each election cycle, we are chipping away at a statewide gap,” Tremillo said.
Such voter mobilization efforts are relatively new in Texas, particularly on the
statewide level. A decade or so ago, political infrastructure for Democrats in
Texas was like “actual infrastructure in Afghanistan,” said Braddock, the
journalist. There were Democrats concentrated in large urban counties, but there
was “nothing to connect them,” he said. State-level campaigns were largely left
to do everything on their own: fundraising, coordinating events, and organizing
volunteers to phone-bank and door-knock. Angle, the political strategist, told
Mother Jones that, back then, “the resources to expand and coordinate to win a
statewide race weren’t available.”
The 2018 O’Rourke campaign showed Democrats that a state-wide grassroots effort
was both possible and effective. There are now more progressive voter groups in
Texas—some run by O’Rourke campaign alums. Katherine Fischer, who worked on
O’Rourke’s senate campaign and now runs Texas Majority PAC, said, “There’s now a
much stronger network performing organizing work, which lessens the campaign’s
burden.”
> “Success this year is not measured by who wins. It’s measured by watching how
> much closer they get.”
This past summer, Texas Democrats announced that Allred’s campaign would bundle
its efforts with down-ballot Democratic candidates, coordinating volunteers and
sharing data. Called the “Texas Offense,” the campaign described it as the
“first statewide coordinated grassroots effort in 20 years.” A recent press
release reported that the coalition had logged 600 events and 3,000 volunteer
shifts.
Democrats like to call Texas a “game-over” state—if they secure its 40 electoral
college votes, Republicans will find it very difficult to win the presidency.
Though Jimmy Carter was the last Democratic presidential candidate to win in
Texas in 1976, Democrats are quick to point out that the margins have
progressively narrowed in the last decade. In 2012, Obama lost Texas by 15.8
points. Hillary Clinton lost by nine, and Biden lost by 5.6. This year,
Democrats are simply hoping to move the needle closer in the presidential race.
“Success this year is not measured by who wins. It’s measured by watching how
much closer they get,” said Tory Gavito, the president of Way to Win, a
Democratic advocacy group.
However much Democrats may hope for an Allred victory, not many are expecting
one. After 30 years of being proven wrong, Democrats are tempering their
optimism—and their low expectations might prove to be a real liability for
Allred. On a recent episode of the Bulwark Podcast, O’Rourke told journalist Tim
Miller that politics is a “confidence game.”
“Can [Allred] generate enough excitement to convince people that he can win?”
O’Rourke asked. “If people believe this is possible, then they’ll act like it’s
possible.”