Monterey Herald

Impatient Dems want Biden to do more in Texas

- The Associated Press

AUSTIN, TEXAS >> The whispers about Texas are picking up again.

Polls are unusually tight. Political money is piling up. Millions of new voters are on the rolls, and Jill Biden flew in this week for an 800-mile campaign swing that stretched from El Paso to Houston. Taken together, all signs point toward November’s election being the closest in America’s biggest red state in decades.

But that is no high bar given a long trail of blowouts. And with early voting already underway, the surprise of Democrat Joe Biden appearing viable in Texas so late in the game is making some party leaders and supporters impatient for the former vice president to go all in.

“They’ve stuck their toes in the water and they figured out that it’s pretty warm,” said Gilberto Hinojosa, the longtime chairman of the Texas Democratic Party. “They’re going through the strategic thinking process to determine whether or not to make the additional investment.”

They’re not alone in trying to figure out Texas — as sure a bet there was for the GOP for a generation — with less than three weeks before Election Day. It’s a mixed picture. Republican Sen. John Cornyn is in the first real reelection fight of his career. Democrats have made the Legislatur­e a tossup. And Texas is just one Sun Belt state where Biden is making an unusual late push.

Texas is the rainbow Democrats have chased for years, confident that shifting demographi­cs and a booming population will eventually hand them the state’s 38 electoral votes and leave Republican­s with virtually no path to the White House. No Democratic presidenti­al candidate has won Texas since 1976, and although President Donald Trump’s 9-point victory here was the thinnest margin in a generation, the race was no squeaker.

There is no question that what Biden has sunk into Texas is practicall­y historic for a Democratic presidenti­al nominee — even though that’s not saying much after decades of token efforts. Biden’s ground game includes more than 60 staffers and $6 million in television airtime.

Republican­s have dismissed the investment as unserious, designed to whip up headlines and little else while Biden himself has not visited Texas since becoming the nominee but has hit Arizona and Florida

osing Texas would amount to an existentia­l moment for Republican­s, who have won every statewide race here over the past 25 years. But warning signs abound: Their majority in the Texas House, which over the last decade has rammed through some of the nation’s toughest immigratio­n crackdowns and abortion restrictio­ns, is in jeopardy. Congressio­nal seats held by Republican­s are also in play as more women voters peel away from Trump and the suburbs turn purple.

Trump hasn’t held a rally in Texas since July and has scaled back on television, which Democratic strategist­s see as a sign of vulnerabil­ity but Republican­s say shows he’s not worried.

But even among some GOP insiders, Biden’s investment in Texas is not viewed as insignific­ant.

“My point of view is that they’ve placed enough chips in the game to be at the table,” said Steve Munisteri, a former Texas GOP chairman who served in the Trump White House for two years.

“They’re concentrat­ing in areas where there are a lot of competitiv­e state, House and congressio­nal seats,” Munisteri said of Biden’s strategy. “If he has enough money to run in the other swing states where he can still put some money into Texas, it makes sense to do that.”

Munisteri is now an adviser to Cornyn, who among red- state Senate Republican­s seeking reelection has spent much of this election year in better shape than others. But Democrat MJ Hegar, an Air Force veteran who narrowly lost a U.S. House race in 2018, raised nearly twice as much money Cornyn in the latest fundraisin­g period — raking in nearly $14 million — while a Democratic super PAC focused on flipping the U.S. Senate also announced a big television ad buy in Texas.

 ?? LM OTERO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ann Grannan puts a flag on her car before a Ridin’ With Biden event Sunday in Plano, Texas.
LM OTERO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ann Grannan puts a flag on her car before a Ridin’ With Biden event Sunday in Plano, Texas.

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