Texarkana Gazette

Texas House race may test educated women’s dismay over Donald Trump

- By Will Weissert

HOUSTON—Lizzie Pannill Fletcher was about to start her senior year of high school when she locked arms with other demonstrat­ors and kept anti-abortion activists from overrunnin­g a Planned Parenthood clinic near the famed Astrodome, where the 1992 Republican National Convention was in full swing.

Now running for Congress as a political novice, Fletcher wants to win a seat representi­ng some of Houston’s toniest enclaves that had already been Republican-controlled for 25 years on that scorching August day—and have remained so for the quarter century-plus since.

The district chose Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump in 2016, and Fletcher is hoping that voters disillusio­ned with the president—especially well-educated women—can help her topple nine-term Republican incumbent Rep. John Culberson.

Suburban women souring on Trump, even when they previously supported Republican­s, have lifted Democrats to upset victories or near ones during recent elections in the Washington suburbs of northern Virginia, in Pennsylvan­ia, Georgia and Ohio. Similar party-switching women could help flip congressio­nal seats in states like New York, New Jersey, Illinois and California in November.

But such defections may be harder in a race where the challenger is so proudly pro-abortion rights, especially in deep-red Texas. Couple that with Fletcher’s background as an ambitious, high-powered attorney and bona fide glass-ceiling breaker, and the result could test whether many right-leaning women are angry enough at the president to embrace a candidate they’d normally shy away from.

Fletcher says it’s a test she’ll pass, saying she believes many women “understand that family planning is essential to women’s economic and emotional wellbeing and the wellbeing of their families.”

“That value crosses party lines,” Fletcher said. “When I was in high school and volunteeri­ng at Planned Parenthood, there were a lot of women who were Republican women that supported Planned Parenthood.”

More Texans generally support abortion rights than not, but the issue could be a tough sell among Republican­s. A Quinnipiac University Poll from August showed that 56 percent of GOP voters favored a full or partial ban on the procedure. And Republican­s are numerous here—more than 38,000 people voted in the Republican primary in March compared to around 33,000 on the Democratic side .

Running west of downtown to upscale neighborho­ods around Rice University and into well-to-do suburbs, Culberson’s district features mansions on manicured lawns, gated communitie­s, French-style villas, top-dollar boutiques and the Houston Country Club. The median annual household income over $71,000 is 25 percent higher than the rest of Texas and the nation, and nearly a fifth of residents have post-graduate degrees.

Republican­s have dominated here since first sending George H.W. Bush, who still lives in the district, to Congress in 1966. But Trump lost to Clinton by 1.4 percentage points after Mitt Romney topped Barack Obama by 21 four years earlier. Culberson won re-election by 12 points two years ago.

The 62-year-old congressma­n says it’s a mistake to assume that women offended by Trump’s reputation, notably the allegation­s of philanderi­ng, payoffs to mistresses and coarse remarks, would react by lashing out at him. One of his campaign offices shares space with a political group called the Village Republican Women and he’s planning an event in two weeks with Gov. Greg Abbott’s wife, Cecilia, to energize female supporters.

“This district will simply not support that kind of extreme left-wing agenda,” Culberson said of Fletcher’s abortion rights advocacy. He argues he’s used his post on the powerful House Appropriat­ions Committee to secure federal funding for post-Hurricane Harvey rebuilding, for cutting taxes and for reducing federal spending. His yard signs declare, “Culberson keeps his word.”

 ?? John L. Mone/Associated Press ?? ■ Lizzie Pannill Fletcher, a Democrat challengin­g longtime Rep. John Culberson for his seat in Texas 7th congressio­nal district, speaks during an assembly of the Bayou Blue Democratic Club on Sept. 5 in Houston. The race could test how far women angry at Trump will go embracing a candidate they might otherwise shun.
John L. Mone/Associated Press ■ Lizzie Pannill Fletcher, a Democrat challengin­g longtime Rep. John Culberson for his seat in Texas 7th congressio­nal district, speaks during an assembly of the Bayou Blue Democratic Club on Sept. 5 in Houston. The race could test how far women angry at Trump will go embracing a candidate they might otherwise shun.

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