The Arizona Republic

O’Rourke may give coattail assistance

- Gromer Jeffers Jr.

DALLAS – Texas Democrats are hoping to win with Beto O’Rourke as their candidate for governor – even if he loses.

With his ability to raise large amounts of campaign cash, mobilize volunteers and target voters, Democrats are banking that O’Rourke will have long coattails that will help their down-ballot candidates.

That’s what happened in 2018, when O’Rourke’s close contest against U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz helped make winners out of other Democrats on the ticket. That included victories by U.S. Reps. Colin Allred of Dallas and Lizzie Fletcher of Houston. Democrats also had a net gain of 12 seats in the Texas House, and they took control of the Fifth District Court of Appeals.

But analysts warn that Beto 2.0 won’t have the down-ballot influence he did in 2018. It’s unclear whether he can generate that same excitement with voters, particular­ly after his failed 2020 presidenti­al campaign. The thrill may be gone, critics say.

Then there are structural changes in the electoral process that make it more difficult for a top-of-the ballot candidate to have coattails. Unlike the 2018 elections, there is no straightti­cket voting. That means any new or infrequent voters produced by O’Rourke, or his likely rival, Republican incumbent Greg Abbott, must manually vote on the entire ticket to help down-ballot candidates, instead of picking the entire party slate in one motion.

Scott Griggs, a Democrat and member of the party’s state executive committee, said O’Rourke’s candidacy for governor will pay dividends across the ballot.

“He has rock star status. He has a huge following,” Griggs said after attending O’Rourke’s rally Sunday in Dallas. “It’s easy for him to draw a crowd and create excitement, and that helps the whole ticket all the way down.”

But state Rep. Jasmine Crockett, who met with O’Rourke before the rally, said the absence of straight-ticket voting makes it harder for any candidate at the top of the ticket to have a major effect.

“It doesn’t help the rest of the ticket like it used to,” said Crockett, who unsuccessf­ully pushed a bill in the Legislatur­e to restore party line voting. “Obviously the Republican­s were nervous, so they got rid of straight party ticket voting. So it’s going to be important that those down-ballot candidates do as much as they can with the little resources that they have to make sure that the people know exactly who they are.”

Crockett said O’Rourke is still a net positive for Democrats.

“He’s going to bring a lot of people out, but it’s not going to be as many people being swept in,” she said.

The filing period for the March primary election ends Dec. 13, and Democrats don’t have proven vote-getters up and down their statewide and local tickets.

Their last big-name candidate for governor was former state Sen. Wendy Davis, whose star-making filibuster that stalled an anti-abortion bill made national headlines. But Abbott beat her by 20 percentage points, winning his first term as governor.

While O’Rourke came out of relative obscurity to challenge Cruz in 2018, the rest of the ticket featured little-known and sparsely funded former Dallas County Sheriff Lupe Valdez for governor.

Part of the calculus for Democratic operatives for the 2022 midterm elections was to have a candidate for governor who could raise money and inspire enough voters to give Abbott a credible challenge, while helping the rest of the ticket.

A tele-meeting in January with party leaders across the state was essentiall­y a “Draft Beto” call, according to several people who participat­ed. O’Rourke took nearly the rest of the year to make up his mind.

O’Rourke says he can beat Abbott. “I’m confident that we can win. And it is not about the candidate, and not about my political party,” O’Rourke told The Dallas Morning News. “It is about Texas and the big things that we want to do.”

O’Rourke’s campaign raised $2 million in 24 hours, which it says is a record.

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