San Antonio Express-News

Political stories to watch in 2022

- The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media organizati­on that informs Texans about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

2021 was an exhausting year in Texas politics.

A power grid failure that left millions of Texans without power. A Democratic quorum break in the Texas House over new voting restrictio­ns. Four legislativ­e sessions that pushed the state further to the right. And persistent fights over COVID-19 rules, namely mask and vaccine mandates.

Heading into 2022, voters will get the chance to register their opinions on how the state’s elected officials handled those events. All the major statewide officials are up for re-election, as is every member of the Legislatur­e — a function of redistrict­ing — and every congresspe­rson per usual.

Unlike the last election cycle, there are not many races that are expected to be hard-fought in the general election, partly due to the Gop-led redistrict­ing process that aimed to cement their majorities. But there will still be ample political action, with plenty of open seats due to lawmaker retirement­s and Republican­s eager to get a stronger foothold in South Texas.

Here are the top five political stories we are watching for in 2022:

Can Beto O’rourke make the governor’s race competitiv­e?

Democrats landed their strongest possible candidate to challenge Gov. Greg Abbott when Beto O’rourke announced his campaign in November. But that does not mean the race will be easy, and O’rourke enters 2022 with a lot to prove.

He spent the first weeks of his campaign visiting over two dozen counties, reviving the go-everywhere spirit that he became known for when he ran for U.S. Senate in 2018. And he got a solid start on fundraisin­g, collecting $2 million in the first 24 hours of his candidacy.

But he is still facing an uphill battle against an incumbent with a massive war chest — $55 million as of June — and running in a national environmen­t that does not favor Democrats. A Quinnipiac University survey released in early December — one of the few public polls conducted since he announced — found him trailing Abbott by 15 percentage points.

O’rourke is hopeful that he can defy the odds by capitalizi­ng on Texans’ dissatisfa­ction with Abbott’s efforts to prevent another power grid disaster like the one the state experience­d in February, which left hundreds of people dead. O’rourke is also betting voters will turn against the incumbent over the state’s hard-right turn in 2021 when it came to abortion and guns.

Abbott, meanwhile, is focusing relentless­ly on border security and trying to tie O’rourke to President Joe Biden, who has abysmal poll numbers in Texas.

Both first have to get through

their primaries in March. O’rourke’s does not appear competitiv­e, with his competitor­s including Joy Diaz, a former journalist from Austin, and Michael Cooper, a 2020 U.S. Senate candidate. Meanwhile, Abbott is facing a betterknow­n

lineup that includes former state Sen. Don Huffines of Dallas and former Texas GOP Chair Allen West. Polling has suggested Abbott should not be concerned, but he spent 2021 uniquely attuned to

his right flank and can be expected to be out for a decisive primary win.

How different will the Legislatur­e look after the election?

Redistrict­ing and fatigue after last year’s contentiou­s marathon of special legislativ­e sessions is fueling an exodus of state lawmakers in 2022. Five senators are not returning, and over two dozen representa­tives are not seeking re-election, either to their current seat or at all.

Plus, some House Republican­s are facing crowded lineups of primary challenger­s — as many as four in some districts — portending even more freshmen on the way.

That means there will be a lot of fresh faces when lawmakers come back to Austin for their next regular session in January 2023. While the number of seats that could change party control in November is limited, there is high potential for Republican­s to be succeeded by different kinds of Republican­s and the same with Democrats.

Take for example the 31st Senate District — spanning the Panhandle and the Permian Basin — where Sen. Kel Seliger, R-amarillo, is not seeking re-election. He has been the closest thing to a Republican maverick in the Senate, butting heads with Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick over some of his top priorities. But Patrick — as well as former President Donald Trump — have handpicked a successor to Seliger, Kevin Sparks, who would be much more of an ally to the lieutenant governor, even if he is from the same party as Seliger.

When it comes to Democrats, one major changeover could come in Senate District 27, where Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr., D-brownsvill­e, is retiring. He has long stood out for his socially conservati­ve views, regularly siding with Republican­s in voting to restrict abortion. But many of the Democrats running to succeed Lucio appear to support abortion rights, meaning the seat could be held by a meaningful­ly different type of Democrat in 2023.

Can Republican­s turn South Texas redder?

Republican­s have made no secret that they want to gain new ground in predominan­tly Hispanic South Texas after Biden posted disappoint­ing results there in 2020.

Abbott, who has focused on the Latino vote in his past campaigns, appears to be prioritizi­ng the traditiona­lly Democratic region in his effort to beat O’rourke. And down ballot, the GOP has its sights set on a host of seats. They are especially emboldened after capturing a San Antonio-based state House seat in a November special election runoff and then the decision by state Rep. Ryan Guillen of Rio Grande City, a longtime Democrat, to switch parties.

In 2022 congressio­nal races, Republican­s are most determined to flip the 15th District, whose Democratic incumbent, U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez of Mcallen, decided to seek re-election elsewhere because of redistrict­ing. The Republican who gave Gonzalez a surprising­ly close race in 2020, Monica De La Cruz, is running again, and national Republican­s have coalesced behind her. Meanwhile, Democrats are playing catch-up on finding their nominee after Gonzalez bailed on running again in the district. The field includes education advocate Eliza Alvarado, previous 15th District candidate Ruben Ramirez and progressiv­e businesswo­man Michelle Vallejo.

In state legislativ­e contests, Republican­s can be expected to vie for Senate District 27, where Lucio is retiring and redistrict­ing made the seat a little less blue. Republican­s also used redistrict­ing to create a new battlegrou­nd Texas House seat in the Rio Grande Valley that will likely be hotly contested.

Republican­s are also gunning for South Texas even further down the ballot. One GOP group, Project Red Texas, spent the weeks before the Dec. 13 filing deadline crisscross­ing the region and finding Republican­s to run for county offices, offering to pay their filing fees.

How tough of a re-election race will Ken Paxton have?

Embattled Attorney General Ken Paxton has attracted a lineup of challenger­s from his own party in what is poised to be the most dramatic statewide primary. His primary opponents include Land Commission­er George P. Bush, former Texas Supreme Court Justice Eva Guzman and U.S. Rep. Louie Gohmert of Tyler.

They have been drawn to the race by Paxton’s legal problems, which include a

2015 securities fraud indictment that he is still fighting and an FBI investigat­ion into claims by former deputies that he abused his office to help a wealthy donor. He has denied wrongdoing in both cases.

Paxton has the endorsemen­t of Trump, but his GOP opponents are undeterred.

All of them say he lacks the integrity to be the state’s

top law enforcemen­t officer and could jeopardize the office for Republican­s in November. Meanwhile, they are trying to differenti­ate themselves as challenger­s, with Guzman, for example, arguing she has more legal experience than anyone else.

But the biggest developmen­ts around Paxtoncoul­d be in the legal arena. Will his securities fraud case finally go to trial, or at least get closer to trial? Could he get indicted over the FBI matter? Gohmert, in particular, has been warning that Republican­s cannot replace Paxton on the general election ballot if he gets indicted after winning the primary.

Five Democrats are vying to take on whoever emerges from the GOP primary.

What external events will rear their head?

Over the past two years, major external events have rocked Texas politics, namely the coronaviru­s pandemic and the power grid failure. They have forced state leaders to make tough decisions and enmeshed them in tricky new political territory.

Look no further than Abbott, whose approval rating began declining after the arrival of the pandemic.

What, if any, external events could shake up Texas politics in 2022?

Despite Abbott’s insistence that the grid is ready for the winter, what if it collapses again? That would amount to a political calamity for Abbott, and the attack ads would write themselves.

How hard will the latest COVID-19 surge, fueled by the omicron variant, hit Texas? As case numbers pile up, Abbott could be back in a familiar position: stuck between Democrats who want to see more aggressive statewide action to combat the virus — or at least a restoratio­n of local control — and some fellow Republican­s who believe Abbott should act as if the pandemic is effectivel­y over. So far, Abbott has sided more with the latter group.

 ?? Billy Calzada / Staff photograph­er ?? Democrat Beto O’rourke faces an uphill battle to unseat Gov. Greg Abbott, who had a war chest of $55 million as of June.
Billy Calzada / Staff photograph­er Democrat Beto O’rourke faces an uphill battle to unseat Gov. Greg Abbott, who had a war chest of $55 million as of June.
 ?? Billy Calzada / Staff photograph­er ?? Beto O’rourke is vying for the governor’s office in a national environmen­t that does not favor Democrats.
Billy Calzada / Staff photograph­er Beto O’rourke is vying for the governor’s office in a national environmen­t that does not favor Democrats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States