Los Angeles Times

Will these voters stand by the GOP?

Increasing­ly uneasy over Trump, women in Texas suburbs may stray

- By Melanie Mason

COLLEYVILL­E, Texas — Vanessa Steinkamp is the kind of voter that Texas Republican­s counted on. She’s a devoted conservati­ve who volunteere­d for Bob Dole’s presidenti­al campaign, interned for former GOP Sen. Bill Frist and lives in an affluent suburb between Fort Worth and Dallas that is the reddest pocket of a reliably Republican district.

These days, though, Steinkamp feels alienated, not energized, by her party. The thought of voting in 2020 brings on a weary sigh.

“It feels like there’s no place for lifelong Republican­s like me,” she said.

Her unease underscore­s a larger problem for Texas Republican­s: Suburban female voters like Steinkamp are no longer a sure bet for the party, injecting new competitiv­eness into the Lone Star State’s politics.

That dynamic captured the national spotlight last week when Rep. Kenny Marchant, a Republican who represents communitie­s outside Dallas and Fort Worth, including Steinkamp’s home of Colleyvill­e, said he would not seek reelection next year — the fourth Texas Republican congressma­n to announce plans to retire.

Across the nation, Republican­s are increasing­ly worried about their strength in once-friendly suburban terrain. Last week, Democrats officially took the lead in voter registrati­ons in California’s Orange County, the storied GOP stronghold. Suburban districts in red

states such as Georgia and North Carolina have become hotly contested.

Democrats have pined over Texas for decades, tantalized by the diversifyi­ng population and liberal lean of the state’s urban cores. But those hopes had largely been dashed by low voter turnout, a conservati­ve streak among older Latinos, and Republican strength in rural and suburban areas.

Recent elections, however, have signaled a shift. Donald Trump won the state in 2016 by 9 percentage points — the narrowest margin for a Republican presidenti­al candidate in 20 years. In 2018, voter turnout surged by double digits, and Democrat Beto O’Rourke got within 3 percentage points of unseating incumbent Republican Sen. Ted Cruz.

The news was equally grim for Republican­s farther down-ballot. Marchant, who won his first congressio­nal race in 2004 by more than 30 percentage points, eked out a 3-point win last year. Rep. Pete Olson, whose suburban Houston district was once represente­d by GOP icon Tom DeLay, beat his Democratic challenger by less than 5 percentage points. Olson announced in July he would not seek reelection.

The retirement­s reflect the uphill battle Republican­s face in winning back the U.S. House, said Emily Farris, professor of political science at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth.

“It’s not that fun to have to go home every two years, raise a lot of money and have a very close election to be then in the minority,” Farris said.

The suburbs have become increasing­ly purple due to an influx of new residents. Some are coming from the state’s big cities in search of larger, more affordable houses and better school districts. Others are coming from out of state and around the world as the healthy economy attracts more workers.

Republican woes have been compounded by a flagging performanc­e among white women in suburban areas. GOP operatives around Dallas-Fort Worth acknowledg­e this constituen­cy was a glaring weakness in 2018.

Jill Tate, a Colleyvill­e resident who is active in Republican Party groups, said she consistent­ly heard other suburban women express qualms about the GOP over healthcare and immigratio­n.

“They saw the kiddo being separated from their mom at the border, and it’s sad,” said Tate, 45. “We had a lot of [women] voting with their heart.”

Looming over specific policy critiques is a widely felt exasperati­on among suburban women over the rancorous political environmen­t — and the blame is falling largely on President Trump and his party.

Steinkamp is among those who despair over Trump’s behavior, which she said falls short of statesmanl­ike.

“I just wish he would talk about policy and he wouldn’t tweet all the time,” she said as she ferried her three children to the dentist for backto-school checkups. “He tweets every thought that goes through his mind. I can’t stand that.”

Steinkamp, 42, and her family moved to Colleyvill­e four years ago for her husband’s financial services job. Once predominan­tly pasture, the town boasts wellmanicu­red subdivisio­ns of big houses sitting on even bigger lots. The median income is $165,000.

Speaking in her spacious brick home at the end of a leafy cul-de-sac, Steinkamp fretted about how she saw Trump’s vitriolic approach to politics spilling into her community. When she ran for City Council this year, her opponent branded her as a liberal interloper from Chicago. The sting of her defeat is still raw.

Her objections extend to Trump’s policies as well. Steinkamp, a government teacher at Tarrant County College, credited the president with signing bipartisan criminal justice reform legislatio­n, but blanched at him pursuing an $8-billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia over the objections of Congress and toying with granting clemency to imprisoned former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h.

“Now, will I vote for a Democrat over Trump?” Steinkamp said. She thought of the leading progressiv­es seeking the Democratic nomination: Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. “I do not agree with almost anything Warren says, what Sanders says. So it’s hard.”

Steinkamp said she might consider a write-in vote.

Women of both parties said Trump’s tweets are leading to a more toxic environmen­t. That polarizati­on was particular­ly stark after the shooting at an El Paso Walmart on Aug. 3 that left 22 people dead. The suspect, who drove 10 hours from an upscale Dallas suburb, later told police he was targeting Mexicans.

Anjelita Cadena, chairwoman of the Denton County Democratic Party, said the shooting was an outcome of Trump’s rhetoric that she considered dehumanizi­ng to Latinos, and faulted Republican­s for not reining in the president.

“If it were my [party], I’d be screaming and yelling, ‘Can you get him to shut up?’ ” Cadena said. “So, yeah, take away his phone, somebody put a babysitter on him or whatever. But they’re not doing that.”

Jayne Howell, chairwoman of the Republican Party in Denton County, acknowledg­es that Trump’s Twitter style jarred her early in his presidency, although she said she ultimately accepted it because “he’s from New York and that’s just how they talk.”

Howell said her pitch to win back suburban women is simple: “Look at the results.”

She rattled off a list of achievemen­ts: “Low unemployme­nt. More jobs .... We’re keeping more of what we make by lower taxes.”

But Trump’s bombast poses a peril.

“Trump is delivering a strong economy, but the messenger is so flawed and angry that people are overlookin­g the good things that are happening,” said Nancy Bocskor, director of the Center for Women in Politics & Public Policy at Texas Woman’s University in Denton.

Texas Republican­s seem to be taking the 2018 warning signs seriously. In the state Capitol — where Democrats won two state Senate and a dozen House seats — legislator­s shelved highly restrictiv­e abortion bills championed by Republican­s in other states such as Alabama and Georgia. Instead, they tried to appeal to women by passing measures to end the backlog in testing rape kits and criminaliz­ing groping.

Few people in Texas are anticipati­ng an overwhelmi­ng blue wave in the 2020 presidenti­al election. Jim Henson, director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin, said Trump’s approval ratings from suburban women have fluctuated between the high 30s and low 40s, a fairly consistent band of support.

“The bottom’s not falling out,” he said.

Henson said there was no doubt Texas was becoming more competitiv­e, but “the speed of change is going to depend on what turnout looks like.”

“It’s a hard call,” Henson said. “The turnout in 2018 increased so much. If you assume Democrats can achieve that level of increase in turnout, well sure, they’re going to be pretty successful. That’s a difficult assumption to make.”

Danee Mastagni, a Democratic strategist who lives in Colleyvill­e, said she believed Trump would win Texas next year.

“But I don’t think he wins it without spending a lot of money here,” she added. “Which means that it puts a lot of other states in play for Democrats.”

Mastagni said that her neighbors in Colleyvill­e and other affluent suburbs may be changing their political views, but that it does not mean they will become Democrats. She can see, though, some key congressio­nal seats or legislativ­e races flipping blue in a crucial year to determine which party will draw the next set of political districts.

“I still think I’d rather be a Democrat in Texas in 2020 than a Republican,” Mastagni said. “I feel like the Republican situation is a little more precarious and that might just be because I feel like they have a lot more to lose.”

‘It feels like there’s no place for lifelong Republican­s like me.’

—VANESSA STEINKAMP, a college government teacher and devoted conservati­ve in the Dallas-Fort Worth suburbs who’s unhappy with President Trump

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 ?? MELANIE MASON Los Angeles Times ??
MELANIE MASON Los Angeles Times

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