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rss-bridge 2026-03-01T14:00:44+00:00

Populist crusade and anti-Maga outrage as Texas Democrats do battle in Senate primary

James Talarico and Jasmine Crockett adopt contrasting strategies as party hopes to tap into Trump backlash in reliably red stateAt a packed town hall meeting last month in Laredo for James Talarico, the 36-year-old Democrat vying for a US Senate seat in Texas, Cristina Rodriguez took the microphone. Rodriguez, a 16-year Marine Corps veteran, said she had never cast a ballot. She didn’t identify as either a Democrat nor a Republican, and to her it didn’t matter. Regardless of what party the president belonged to, she had to obey orders.Her attitude changed after the re-election of Donald Trump, whom she viewed as spiteful and divisive. In Talarico, a state representative from the Austin suburb of Round Rock, she found the exact opposite – a former middle school teacher and current seminary student who speaks in measured tones and preaches mutual respect. Continue reading...


[a man and a women shaking hands]

James Talarico and Jasmine Crockett at a debate in Georgetown, Texas last month. Photograph: Bob Daemmrich/The Texas Tribune/Bloomberg via Getty Images

James Talarico and Jasmine Crockett at a debate in Georgetown, Texas last month. Photograph: Bob Daemmrich/The Texas Tribune/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Populist crusade and anti-Maga outrage as Texas Democrats do battle in Senate primary

James Talarico and Jasmine Crockett adopt contrasting strategies as party hopes to tap into Trump backlash in reliably red state

At a packed town hall meeting last month in Laredo for James Talarico, the 36-year-old Democrat vying for a US Senate seat in Texas, Cristina Rodriguez took the microphone. Rodriguez, a 16-year Marine Corps veteran, said she had never cast a ballot. She didn’t identify as either a Democrat nor a Republican, and to her it didn’t matter. Regardless of what party the president belonged to, she had to obey orders.

Her attitude changed after the re-election of Donald Trump, whom she viewed as spiteful and divisive. In Talarico, a state representative from the Austin suburb of Round Rock, she found the exact opposite – a former middle school teacher and current seminary student who speaks in measured tones and preaches mutual respect.

“Because of you, I decided my voice does matter,” Rodriguez told the candidate and the crowd. “You’re not spewing hate. You’re speaking truths in a compassionate way and that just resonates with me.”

[a man holding a microphone]

James Talarico speaks to supporters in El Paso earlier this month. Photograph: Alberto Silva Fernandez/Getty Images

Rodriguez’s conversion offered a trickle of vindication for Talarico’s strategy. In a reliably red state where Democrats haven’t won a US Senate seat since 1988, Talarico believes his “top v bottom” economic pitch can cut across political divides and sway a critical mass of disillusioned Trump voters and independents. His rocketing path into the national spotlight suggests he might be on to something.

Whether the New Testament-quoting Democrat can win in a state that voted by 14 percentage points for a presidential candidate whose campaign hawked God Bless the USA bibles for $59.99 will depend on whether Talarico can first beat Jasmine Crockett, currently the congresswoman for Texas’s 30th district. Beloved by Democrats craving a “fighter”, the 44-year-old former public defender has built a reputation as a sharp, partisan brawler who hurls insults as fiercely as Trump. (She has called the president “Putin’s ho” and an “old white nepo baby”.)

National Democrats are watching closely to see which style and message resonates – anti-Maga rage or a populist crusade against a “corrupt” political system. The outcome could have implications for contested Democratic primary races across the country this year, and for the nascent 2028 presidential contest.

Republicans have for decades maintained a death-grip on Texas politics. The GOP has controlled both chambers of the state legislature and the governorship for more than two decades. A Democrat has yet to win a statewide election this century. But this cycle, the party sees an opening: a powerful backlash against Trump – and the potential for Republicans to nominate a scandal-plagued Maga warrior that has national Republicans fretting they could lose a safe red seat.

Talarico and Crockett are presenting themselves as progressive antidotes to Trumpism. Polling has consistently shown that Democrats like both their options. One voter broke down in tears, telling CNN she loved Crockett but chose Talarico because she believed he had a stronger chance of defeating a Republican in November. Kamala Harris on Friday swooped in with late-breaking support for Crockett. Beto O’Rourke, a Democrat who narrowly lost to Texas senator Ted Cruz in 2018, has not endorsed either candidate, calling them “generational talents”.

[a women holding a microphone]

Jasmine Crockett at a campaign event in Richardson, Texas, this month. Photograph: LM Otero/AP

Data from early voting that shows Democrats have cast more ballots than Republicans so far, a sign of the party’s unusual excitement about their prospects this year, said Katherine Fischer, executive director of the Texas Majority Pac.

“No matter the outcome, we’re going to have someone in the general who’s just a real powerhouse,” said Fischer, who worked for O’Rourke’s 2018 Senate bid.

The same anti-Trump backlash that bolstered O’Rourke in 2018 are even more apparent today, according to Luke Warford, founder of the Agave Democratic Infrastructure Fund, a Pac working to help Texas Democrats win statewide. Trump is less popular today than he was then. Voters today are more frustrated with the economy. National Republicans are spending millions to prevent the party’s rank-and-file from electing Ken Paxton – a rightwing extremist plagued by corruption allegations and extra-marital affair scandals.

“I’m not a person who gets excited every year and says ‘this is the year we’re going to flip Texas,’ but this year you can definitely see a path to victory for Democrats if you squint,” Warford said in an interview. “One of the reasons the supporters of each candidate are arguing so vociferously is not just because they think theirs is the right candidate – it’s because they think they might win in November.”

A dead heat

Last summer, when Trump directed the Republican-controlled Texas legislature to gerrymander the state’s congressional maps to give the party an edge in the November midterms, Talarico fled the state with his Democratic colleagues in a bid to stall the effort. He became one of the party’s leading voices in the ensuing redistricting fight, appearing on Joe Rogan’s podcast in July. “You need to run for president,” Rogan, who endorsed Trump in 2024, told Talarico.

Talarico instead ran for Senate. Former Texas congressman Colin Allred was already running for the Democratic nomination when Talarico jumped in last year. Crockett entered the race in December, just before the filing deadline, prompting Allred to bow out and run for a newly redrawn congressional seat.

As a young state rep from the suburbs, Talarico entered the race with a much lower profile than Crockett. But he barnstormed the state for months in his signature Lucchese cowboy boots, rallying Democrats on college campuses, church pews and even a rodeo. Talarico says his campaign has recruited some 13,000 volunteers.

Supporters in El Paso hold up ‘Talarico for Texas’ signs. Photograph: José Luis González/Reuters

“The Talarico campaign has been working 24/7 in terms of public events, TV advertising, digital advertising, and social media activity,” Rice University political scientist Mark Jones said.

By her own admission, Crockett has run a less “traditional” campaign, largely eschewing broadcast advertising. As a sitting congresswoman, she has split her time between the campaign trail – where she prefers old-school retail politicking – and Washington, where Democrats are in a fiscal standoff with Republicans over reining in ICE.

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