A Non-Republican Could Win a Statewide Office in TX for the First Time in Nearly 25 Years

by Glasstire June 6, 2018

The last time a politician who was not a member of the Republican Party won a statewide race in Texas was in 1994, making Texas the state with the longest dry spell for Democrats winning anything other than a local race. No other state, including Idaho, South Carolina or Utah, has gone so long without electing a Democratic candidate for a statewide office.

But for the first time in nearly 25 years, a Democratic candidate is within spitting distance to win the race for Texas Senator. Public Policy Polling just released numbers that show Senate candidate Beto O’Rourke with 42% of the statewide vote, against Ted Cruz with 48%. O’Rourke’s campaign released a jubilant call for donations based on the news. Meanwhile, Ted Cruz paused for 18 seconds this week before responding to a reporter’s question about whether a president can pardon himself, as President Trump claimed recently.

Will this be the year that Texas’s blood-red statewide electorate goes just a teensy bit magenta? Only time, and voter turnout, will tell.

2 comments

You may also like

2 comments

Techang June 7, 2018 - 09:12

Anyone thinking about doing any art fundraisers? I know a good amount of us would donate.

Reply
Mavis Bryant June 7, 2018 - 23:53

To support Beto O’Rourke, explore options at BetoforTexas.com

Reply

Leave a Comment

Funding generously provided by: