lpetrich
Contributor
Texas faces turbulent political moment | TheHill
The Republicans have been dominant in that state for the last quarter century, but that is changing. Last year, Beto O'Rourke barely lost a Senate race to longtime Texas Republican Ted Cruz.
In 1994, California Governor Pete Wilson pushed an anti-immigrant law that was very controversial, and that provoked a lot of Hispanics to start voting. However, that has yet to happen to Texas.
The Republicans have been dominant in that state for the last quarter century, but that is changing. Last year, Beto O'Rourke barely lost a Senate race to longtime Texas Republican Ted Cruz.
Reps. Kenny Marchant, Pete Olson, Will Hurd, and Mike Conaway, all Republicans, are all retiring.Now, the mounting tensions of racially motivated rhetoric, a polarizing president and Republican infighting have rocked Texas’s political leadership to its core. And the state may soon face a tipping point brought on by shifting coalitions of voters who want change, in Austin and Washington.
Such arrivals have taken their politics with them in other states, like Oregon, Nevada, and Colorado.The nation’s attention has been focused on Texas this week because of the killings of 22 people by a long shooter who attacked a Walmart in El Paso. The shootings were even more disturbing for a manifesto allegedly written by the accused shooter that described an “invasion” of immigrants.
So far, newcomers to Texas from blue states — states with stricter gun control laws, a stronger social safety net and a looser approach to immigrants — have been bigger change agents in the state than Hispanics, a large number of whom have tended to stay home on Election Day.
In 1994, California Governor Pete Wilson pushed an anti-immigrant law that was very controversial, and that provoked a lot of Hispanics to start voting. However, that has yet to happen to Texas.