Leticia Van de Putte has become the latest candidate for Texas lieutenant governor.
The biggest news of all simply might be that she isn’t a Republican. She’s a Democratic state senator from South Texas who now stands as the prohibitive favorite to win her party’s nomination in next spring’s primary.
http://www.texastribune.org/2013/11/24/women-led-ticket-shows-where-democrats-pin-hopes/
Van de Putte will face a tough challenge if she hopes to break the GOP’s vise-grip on statewide offices. She joins another prominent Democrat, state Sen. Wendy Davis, at the top of the ballot; Davis is an equally prohibitive favorite to be the Democratic nominee for governor.
As the Texas Tribune points out in the link attached to this blog post, Democrats may be targeting suburban women as their essential voting demographic group. Women, Democrats hope, just might be upset enough at Republicans’ view of abortion that they’ll turn out in sufficient numbers next year to elect fellow women to high office.
It’s a big risk. Texas Republicans have good reason to be confident as election year approaches.
Their candidates — namely Attorney General Greg Abbott — are flush with money. Abbott is the clear favorite to win the GOP governor’s primary and he is in strong position to win the big prize next November. Davis presents Democrats with their strongest gubernatorial candidate in many election cycles. Van de Putte joined Davis this past spring in battling legislative Republicans over a restrictive GOP-sponsored abortion laws.
Will these two candidates be able to parlay that notoriety into votes this coming fall?
Democrats hope so. In a state that remains solidly in Republican hands, their hope might resemble a pipe dream.
I do know this: A most interesting lieutenant governor’s race just got even more so with Leticia Van de Putte’s entry.