In Which Democratic Dreams of a Hispanic-Driven Blue State Texas Come A Cropper

As fewer and fewer Democrats were elected in Texas over the past two decades, liberals would console themselves with the thought that demographics were on their side. “Just you wait, Hispanics will turn Texas back into a blue state.” Indeed, the likes of Ruy Teixeira considered the triumph of Democrats riding an ever-rising tides of Hispanic immigrants to permanent majority party status all but inevitable.

But a funny thing happened on the way to Blue State Nirvana: Illegal alien amnesty failed, even with Democratic majorities in both House and Senate, depriving Democrats of what they assumed were certain Democratic voters. And thanks to both the recession and various state-level illegal alien measures in places like Arizona and Alabama, illegal aliens are now leaving the United States faster than they’re entering it.

Worse still for Texas Democrats, Republicans suddenly became successful at wooing Hispanic voters and recruiting high profile Hispanic candidates, many of whom won.

Now fast forward to 2012. After the Ricardo Sanchez’s withdrawl from the senate campaign, there are now absolutely no Hispanic Democrats running a statewide race in Texas this year. As horrible and lackluster a candidate as Sanchez was, at least you could see him protecting down-ballot races. But now Republicans will have at least one Hispanic (incumbent Judge Elsa Alcala of Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Place 8) and as many as three (including incumbent Judge David Medina in Texas Supreme Court Place 4), one of whom, Ted Cruz, could be the top statewide name on the ballot.

Hell, even the Libertarians (Texas Railroad Commission Place 2) and the Greens (U.S. Senate) managed to find Hispanic candidates to run statewide. That’s a major Hispandering failure for the Texas Democratic Party. And to add insult to injury, by failing to run a candidate for Railroad Commission Place 2, where the Greens do have a candidate, Democrats have pretty much ensured that Greens will continue to qualify for automatic ballot access (and thus continue to leach liberal votes away from them).

In an ideal world, people would choose all their candidates based on the content of their character, not the color of their skin. In the real world, ethnic identification does affect voting patterns. Even a few percentage points of Hispanic voters crossing the aisle to vote for Cruz rather than straight-ticket Democratic might be enough for Republicans to pick up a handful of down ballot races.

And that dream of a Blue State Texas grows still more distant.

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2 Responses to “In Which Democratic Dreams of a Hispanic-Driven Blue State Texas Come A Cropper”

  1. […] all the persistent talk of Hispanic’s being the future of the Texas Democratic Party, it’s still old white guys […]

  2. Elise Renee Gingerich says:

    I’m A Democrat But I Have Never Voted, I Have Never Even Voted Not Even For The Democrats….:( Elise Renee Gingerich Age 40 In This Highway Town Of Greenville Texas yee haw! Also: I Think I Have Been In This Apartment, That I Just Moved In To, Before, Like In Some Kind Of A Repeat Space Time Loop Or Something! I Don’t Know How Or When Or When Or How, But I Think I Have Actually Been In This Apartment That I Just Moved In To, Just A Few Days Ago, I Think It Was Just A Few Days Ago Anyways, In Some Kind Of A Space Time Repeat Loop Or Something Like That!

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