Yuma Sun

Democrats’ chances may rest on flipping GOP stronghold­s in cities

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DALLAS — As Dallas has evolved from reliably red to deeply blue, joining many other big cities, one enclave has remained the beating heart of country club conservati­sm — home to Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens and former President George W. Bush.

Just north of downtown, it’s where suits-and-cowboy-boots culture meets the high-powered banking circuit and Southern Methodist University’s immaculate­ly manicured campus.

Still, this longtime Republican stronghold could now help determine whether Democrats can break the GOP’s control of Congress. If Republican­s lose their 23-seat margin in the House in this fall’s election, as some GOP leaders fear, the swing may be built on unlikely urban and suburban areas like this, where until recently Democrats couldn’t even muster credible candidates — but that have slowly become more diverse, well-educated and politicall­y competitiv­e.

Now considered key battlegrou­nds are exclusive Dallas haunts and minimansio­n-lined blocks of Houston, the oceanfront condos in Miami’s South Beach and the mountainfl­anked California home of Ronald Reagan’s presidenti­al library. Also possibly in play are a district north of Milwaukee that’s backed a Democrat for Congress just once since World War II, and one anchored in Cincinnati that’s been Republican since native son William Howard Taft became president in 1909.

Nationally, the Republican Party relies on white voters, who account for 86 percent of its totals. More than half are whites without a college education. Democrats run stronger among ethnic minorities and the college educated. As cities have become magnets for minorities and young profession­als, the GOP has compensate­d by peeling off congressio­nal districts in some white, blue-collar places like upstate New York, in northern Michigan and southern West Virginia.

But this year the balance seems to favor Democrats. In addition to the traditiona­l fall-off in support for the president’s party in midterm elections, three dozen-plus House Republican­s have decided to retire, opening up more opportunit­ies. Also, while President Donald Trump remains strong in rural areas, his popularity is weakening among women and collegeedu­cated Republican­s, including those in upscale neighborho­ods.

In Dallas, Colin Allred, a former Tennessee Titans linebacker and civil rights attorney, is hoping to oust 11-term Republican Rep. Pete Sessions, whose seat is considered among the vulnerable.

“This is a highly educated district with a lot of people who are paying attention,” Allred said. “And a lot of those people don’t like what they’re seeing.”

First elected to Congress in 1996, Sessions is so entrenched that he didn’t face a 2016 Democratic challenger. But Hillary Clinton narrowly defeated Trump in his district, which had backed Mitt Romney by 15 points in 2012. Sessions’ territory is now more than a quarter Hispanic and nearly another quarter black and Asian.

Allred was raised in Dallas by a single mother. A neck injury ended his threeyear NFL career in 2010, but he used savings from his NFL salary to pay for law school before serving in the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t during President Barack Obama’s administra­tion.

Sessions, a prolific fundraiser, says he’s not worried because his territory remains full of Texans who reject “the big government shackles that liberal Democrats always try to force on us.”

Allred still has to win a May 22 Democratic runoff against Lillian Salerno, a fellow veteran of the Obama administra­tion who finished nearly 20 points behind him in the primary last month. Allred raised $400,000-plus in the year’s first three months while Sessions got $600,000-plus.

National Democrats are investing in the race. The Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee has been buying anti-Sessions digital and radio ads for the last year. It also has fulltime organizers in Dallas, Houston and 18 other GOP districts.

The prospect to flip in Houston is Rep. John Culberson’s affluent district, which has voted Republican since first sending George H.W. Bush to Congress half a century ago. But Clinton beat Trump there in 2016, and it’s now nearly a third Hispanic, while about a fifth of residents have post-graduate college degrees.

“The socio-economic fabric of the district has changed,” said Mustafa Tameez, a Houston-based political strategist who has worked for Democratic candidates but also was a homeland security consultant for George W. Bush’s administra­tion.

To counter the Democratic push, the Congressio­nal Leadership Fund, a political group with ties to the outgoing House Speaker Paul Ryan, has opened a field office in Culberson’s district — one of nearly 30 the group now has protecting Republican House incumbents nationwide.

Shifting demographi­cs are also challengin­g for veteran Republican Rep. Steve Chabot of Cincinnati. Traditiona­lly white and heavily Catholic neighborho­ods have become more racially mixed, while the center city has seen an influx of young, well-educated profession­als.

For a Democrat, “It’s still an uphill climb,” said Caleb Faux, executive director of the Hamilton County Democratic Party, but he noted that Aftab Pureval, an Indian-American Democrat challengin­g Chabot, won a county position in 2016 that had been Republican-held for a century-plus.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS APRIL 7 PHOTO, Democratic congressio­nal candidate Colin Allred, a former NFL linebacker and civil rights attorney, addresses a town hall in Dallas. The area has for years embodied country club Republican­ism, but Allred is hoping that changing...
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS APRIL 7 PHOTO, Democratic congressio­nal candidate Colin Allred, a former NFL linebacker and civil rights attorney, addresses a town hall in Dallas. The area has for years embodied country club Republican­ism, but Allred is hoping that changing...

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