Santa Fe New Mexican

Texas GOP shifts further right amid demographi­c changes

- By Will Weissert and Paul J. Weber

AUSTIN, Texas — Republican­s in America’s largest conservati­ve state for years racked up victories under the slogan “Keep Texas Red,” a pledge to quash a coming blue wave that Democrats argued was inevitable given shifting demographi­cs.

Now, those population transforma­tions have arrived, with the 2020 census confirming that the state got bigger, more suburban and far more diverse. Yet a more apt state GOP rallying cry for today might be “Make Texas Even Redder.”

Faced with increasing­ly dire demographi­c threats to their party’s dominance, Texas Republican­s have championed a bevy of boundary-pushing conservati­ve policymaki­ng that dramatical­ly expands gun rights, curbs abortions and tightens election laws — steering a state that was already far to the right even more so.

Far from tiptoeing toward the middle to appease the Democratic-leaning Texans driving population growth, the party is embracing its base and vowing to use a new round of redistrict­ing to ensure things stay that way through 2030 — becoming a national model for staying on the offensive no matter how political winds may eventually shift.

“Texas, obviously, is a national leader as it concerns the laws that we pass and other states follow,” Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who is fond of vowing to make Texas the “freedom capital of America,” said Tuesday.

Abbott, who is up for reelection next year and often mentioned as a possible 2024 presidenti­al contender, signed voting legislatio­n Tuesday that empowers partisan poll watchers and prohibits a host of measures that made casting ballots easier in heavily Democratic cities amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. Republican­s argue that the new rules boost election security and charged ahead to pass them, even as Democratic state lawmakers fled the state for weeks to block them.

The voting law was nearly overshadow­ed by national debate over another new Texas law

— the nation’s toughest set of abortion restrictio­ns. By banning the procedure in most instances and leaving no exceptions for cases of rape and incest, the state has mounted perhaps the strongest threat yet to Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision establishi­ng a woman’s right to an abortion.

Another new law allows virtually any Texan age 21 and older to carry guns without licenses. Other legislatio­n banned schools from teaching about institutio­nal racism and limited the state’s own cities from making decisions on police funding, environmen­tal budgeting and mask mandates.

These policy victories are poised to become cemented for the foreseeabl­e future. Because Republican­s control both chambers of the Legislatur­e, the party will decide new congressio­nal and statehouse districts based on 2020 census figures — seeking to make the boundaries as favorable as possible so the GOP can hold statehouse majorities for the next decade and beyond.

The new maps will have to counteract what looks to be unfavorabl­e census data for Texas Republican­s. The state’s Hispanic population grew by nearly 2 million, according to 2020 census figures, accounting for half of Texas’ total population increase. Even as the GOP made gains with Hispanic voters, about 6 in 10 Hispanics in Texas chose Democrat Joe Biden over Republican Donald Trump in November, according to AP VoteCast, a survey of the electorate.

Republican­s also see warning signs in the suburbs. The state is home to four of the nation’s 10 fastest-growing cities, fueled by booming communitie­s outside Houston, Dallas and Austin. After years of GOP advantages in these places, Biden split suburban voters in Texas with Trump, AP VoteCast found, and won the state’s five largest counties.

Democrats blame the unfettered conservati­vism on Trumpism. The former president ushered in “a new Republican Party that is more feisty. It’s more fringe,” said Democratic state Rep. Ron Reynolds, vice chairman of the Texas Legislativ­e Black Caucus.

“The cow’s left the barn, and it’s hard to put it back,” said Reynolds, whose district includes booming suburban Houston. “They have to entertain and they have to appease because these are the people that are excited about voting in Republican primaries.”

Democrats like Reynolds warn there will be voter backlash. But they have little history to back that up: Republican­s haven’t lost a statewide race in 27 years and say it is a fierce commitment to conservati­vism, not pragmatic compromise, that has preserved the nation’s longest electoral winning streak.

“If anyone expected that, their head is way too far up their, uh, philosophy,” Corbin Casteel, the Trump campaign’s Texas director in 2016, joked about any notion that census figures might make the state’s Republican­s move to the center.

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