Texas Democrats are licking their wounds this week after learning that our state remains a good distance from becoming the Red vs. Blue battleground that many of them wish would occur.
I admit to being one of those Texans who wished for a different outcome from the 2022 midterm election.
Texas Republican officeholders — who occupy every statewide office in Texas — all scored significant victories over their Democratic challengers. They were elected or re-elected by double-digit percentage margins.
Beto O’Rourke raised and spent a lot of dough in his attempt to defeat Gov. Greg Abbott; the governor finished with 54% of the vote compared to O’Rourke’s 43%. Ouch, man.
Texas Democrats keep touting how they are “on the verge” of turning the state into a battleground. Hmm. Well, the election returns from Tuesday night say something else. We ain’t there.
Indeed, we might not get there in 2024, or perhaps even in 2026. I won’t venture any guesses beyond that.
The Texas Tribune reported: “Voters seem to be fine with the status quo,” said Drew Landry, assistant professor of government at South Plains College in Levelland, west of Lubbock.
Texas election results show the state is far from turning blue | The Texas Tribune
Yep. That “status quo” satisfaction will kill a political movement every time that comes from supposed dissatisfaction.