If Democrats have a political unicorn regarding the
Electoral College, it’s Texas. How often have we heard that Texas is
turning blue, and Republicans win every time on Election Day? Wendy
Davis, who led the abortion filibuster that elevated her profile in
2013, was supposed to win the 2014 gubernatorial race, remember?
Democrats thought there were shy Democrats that dotted the suburbs of
the state, hiding like the Viet Cong until that cycle. That was brutally
wrong, as Davis barely broke 40 percent of the vote. With Kamala
Harris, we’re back to these same games.
Take this Newsweek piece
with the headline, “Can Kamala Harris Turn Texas Blue?” It’s a piece
that led Tom Bevan, co-founder of RealClearPolitics, to tweet “holy
s**t” after reading the piece and zeroing in on the buried passages that
wreck this piece of science fiction [emphasis mine]:
Holy shit. Newsweek took this quote ("I do not think that Texas will be in play. At all") and turned it into this:https://t.co/WIugbVHE93 pic.twitter.com/JAsghYyGXU
— Tom Bevan (@TomBevanRCP) August 14, 2024
Matthew
Eshbaugh-Soha, a professor of American politics at the University of
North Texas, suggested that even Harris' momentum and a close
high-profile state level race doesn't necessarily mean the vice
president will be competitive in Texas.
"I do not think that Texas will be in play. At all," Eshbaugh-Soha told Newsweek.
"This
does not mean that Harris will avoid Texas. She will visit, to raise
money and generate some exposure for herself and her campaign," he
added. "There is nothing in the mix that indicates future performance
will be any different from past performance; I don't see anything that
may shake up the presidential vote in Texas."
Eshbaugh-Soha said that one
issue which could harm Harris is that voters in Texas may still
associate her with the record breaking levels of illegal migrant
crossings seen at the border during the Biden administration.
[…]
Kimi
Lynn King, a University of North Texas political science professor,
said that while Harris in enjoying a "bump" in her White House bid, it
is unclear how that will help shift the narrative in Texas, a state
where "pundits have been predicting since 2006 that there was going to
be a purple wave."
"In 2022, up and down the statewide
ballot, solid red candidates like Governor [Greg] Abbott and indicted
and impeached, but not convicted, Attorney General Ken Paxton enjoyed
double-digit victories over Democrats," King told Newsweek.
Mark
Jones, professor of political science and fellow in political science
at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy in Texas, added:
"At the present time, while Harris is likely to make the race more
competitive than it would have been had Biden been the Democratic
nominee, I don't see Harris doing much better than Biden did in 2020, and thus a Trump victory in the mid-to-high single digits is the most likely scenario today."
In other words, like a longhorn, Harris is due to be politically
slaughtered and devoured by Trump and the Republicans here. Yet, the GOP
also has their issues on the map. Pennsylvania has long tortured the
Republican Party, who have only won this state in the 1988 and 2016
elections. The Keystone State has an electorate where you’d think the
GOP would perform better, but no dice. This year, it could flip. It was
on its way to becoming solid Trump country until Joe Biden dropped out.
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