Texas SOT

Dem's largely fail in their primary strategy

The #1 community for Gun Owners in Texas

Member Benefits:

  • Fewer Ads!
  • Discuss all aspects of firearm ownership
  • Discuss anti-gun legislation
  • Buy, sell, and trade in the classified section
  • Chat with Local gun shops, ranges, trainers & other businesses
  • Discover free outdoor shooting areas
  • View up to date on firearm-related events
  • Share photos & video with other members
  • ...and so much more!
  • oldag

    TGT Addict
    Rating - 100%
    7   0   0
    Feb 19, 2015
    17,566
    96
    Politico:

    Top takeaways from the Texas primary
    Democratic enthusiasm was real, but not as off-the-charts statewide as early voting numbers had hinted.


    By GABRIEL DEBENEDETTI and ELENA SCHNEIDER

    03/07/2018 05:30 AM EST

    Here are POLITICO’s six takeaways from the first primaries of 2018:

    Democratic enthusiasm is real, but may not be enough in Texas

    It’s a familiar pattern by now: every few years, Democrats insist they’re going to be competitive statewide in Texas because of their party’s energy and demographic change sweeping the state. And every few years, they fall short. This year, though, the state’s Democrats were certain the landscape would look different after more Democrats — 465,000 — than Republicans — 420,000 — voted in Texas’ 15 largest counties in early voting.

    It appeared to be a clear continuation of the boundless Democratic energy popping up all across the country in opposition to Donald Trump, but by the time Election Day numbers came in, the enthusiasm dimmed — slightly. Data from the state’s other 239 counties favored Republicans, and by the end of the night, there were roughly a half-million more votes in the GOP primary than in the Democratic primary.

    It was a clear improvement over the 2010 and 2014 midterm cycles, when Republicans made up roughly 70 percent of primary voters. And more Democrats voted in the senatorial and gubernatorial primaries than in any comparable race since 2002. But it likely suggested that much of the Democratic Party’s early vote came from existing primary voters who were excited to participate this year, rather than any enormous tranche of newly activated voters.

    That means competing statewide — including against Sen. Ted Cruz — remains an uphill challenge for Democrats. And Rep. Beto O’Rourke, the Democratic standard-bearer in that race, still must consolidate his party after two relatively unknown rivals picked up over 38 percent of the primary vote.

    Still, their voters’ newfound exuberance may be enough to swing individual down-ballot races both in Texas and around the country.

    D.C. Dems get brushed back

    Laura Moser isn’t going anywhere — and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s first attempt at thinning a primary field failed.

    The DCCC dumped opposition research against Moser, a journalist and activist, viewing her as a candidate with too much baggage to win in November. Instead, Moser will face off against Lizzie Pannill Fletcher, an attorney, in May for a shot at a suburban district that Democrats believe is key to flipping the House.

    Moser, who raised more than $130,000 after the DCCC’s attacks late last month, is now laying the groundwork for an outsider, Bernie Sanders-style campaign. In a TV ad, Moser urges voters to reject “Washington party bosses [telling] us who to choose,” adding, “we tried that before, and look where it got us.”

    “The DCCC’s attack backfired, showing them to be a little toothless,” said a Democratic strategist, granted anonymity to talk candidly about party strategy. “And once the DCCC inserted itself, it became inevitable that the same ghosts of Debbie Wasserman-Schultz, Bernie Sanders and 2016 will pop up.”

    The DCCC, in a memo released early Wednesday morning, said that voters “[picked] a clear frontrunner” and remain “in a strong position to win in November,” DCCC spokesman Cole Leiter said in a statement.

    Fletcher, who’s backed by EMILY’s List, has drawn opposition from unions. Working Families Party spent $20,000 on negative ads against her in the primary, accusing her law firm of “[attacking] the right of immigrant women to stand up for themselves in the workplace,” according to one digital ad.

    Trump's popularity even helps a Bush — in Texas, no less

    By avoiding a run-off in his reelection bid as Land Commissioner on Tuesday night, George P. Bush — son of Jeb, nephew of George W., grandson of George H.W. — showed Republicans that sometimes it pays to lean all the way into your ties to the president, no matter how close to the party establishment you may seem.

    At least in conservative states like Texas.

    A member of perhaps the state’s most prominent modern political family, the 41-year-old Bush nonetheless relied heavily on his support from both Trump and Donald Trump Jr. to clear 50 percent in a race against a field that included former Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson.

    Patterson had loudly criticized Bush for his first term in the job, including his work on preserving the Alamo, but a final-stretch ad blitz from Bush underscored the incumbent's conservatism as he hit Patterson for not backing Trump in 2016.

    At a time Republicans around the country are trying to figure out how to position themselves with respect to Trump, Bush demonstrated that in a consistently Republican playing field like Texas, the combination of universal name identification and appeals to the Trump-loving base can be enough to overcome even harsh intra-party attacks.

    Cash isn't necessarily king

    Three Democrats — who led fundraising throughout much of 2017 — failed even to reach the runoffs in top-tier congressional races, despite their early money advantage. Now Democrats are left watching candidates who have demonstrated less fundraising prowess battle it out over the next two months for the nomination before being able to reload against GOP incumbents with a head start in the general election.

    Ed Meier, a former State Department administration official, led his Democratic opponents in fundraising throughout 2017 and headed into the primary for a competitive, Dallas-area seat with the most cash on hand. But Meier, who aired TV ads in the expensive Dallas media market, finished in fourth place. Colin Allred, a former NFL football player, didn’t air any TV ads and struggled to raise money, but was the top vote-getter.

    “You have to do more than be the biggest fundraiser, because Democrats want to be inspired,” said Isaac Baker, a Democratic media consultant who worked on Allred’s campaign.

    In the Houston-area battleground district, Alex Triantaphyllis raised more than $1 million — topping all of his primary opponents in total raised during the race. But Triantaphyllis, a nonprofit executive, still finished behind three of them.

    Jay Hulings, a former federal prosecutor who was running in Texas 23rd District, a traditional swing district, picked up early national support from Minority Whip Steny Hoyer and Blue Dog PAC. He posted strong fundraising numbers throughout last year, but he failed to make the top-two runoff.

    The suburbs rule

    Lawmakers and leading operatives on both sides of the aisle have grown increasingly convinced that suburban districts will be 2018’s central battleground in the war for control of the House. And the matchups created by Tuesday’s primary in two highly targeted races likely cement that expectation. Much of the party’s turnout gains were focused in metro and suburban zones like these.

    Outside of Dallas, Allred posted an unexpectedly large margin of victory in a crowded primary to set himself up as a clear favorite in May’s runoff before taking on Republican Rep. Pete Sessions, in a district that went for Hillary Clinton in 2016.

    And in suburban Houston, in another Clinton district, the vulnerable Culberson will also have to wait until May to find out his opponent’s identity. The vote totals — the number of votes in the GOP primary exceeded the Democratic primary tally by only 5,000 — reflect serious interest from Democrats in the district Culberson has represented for nine terms.

    “This is proof positive of everything we’ve been taking about with these newly-competitive districts — growing in diversity, highly educated oftentimes,” said Charlie Kelly, executive director of House Majority PAC, the main Democratic super PAC for House races. "Places that, I think, are now really competitive. We saw the transition in 2016, and we’re seeing more evidence today.”

    The 'Year of the Woman' starts off strong

    Texas is on track to get its first two Latina members of Congress, while also elevating women in some of the most hotly contested primaries in top-tier races throughout the state.

    “The Democrats coming out of the Texas primaries tonight are women and people of color in greater numbers than we’ve seen in the past, and it reflects the diversity of the modern-day Democratic Party,” Baker said.

    The Democratic nominee facing Rep. Will Hurd for his battleground seat will likely be a woman: Obama administration alum Gina Ortiz Jones finished first in a Democratic primary on Tuesday night, while Judy Canales, another former Obama administration official, was battling a male candidate for second place Wednesday morning. In Houston, Moser and Fletcher are squaring off, before one of them turns to Culberson. In Dallas, Lillian Salerno will run against Allred.

    All of EMILY’s List-endorsed candidates in Democratic primaries either won outright or advanced to a runoff. The pro-abortion rights group president, Stephanie Schriock, called it a “historic night” in a statement.

    Sylvia Garcia, a state senator, and Veronica Escobar, a former El Paso County judge, both clinched the nomination in their respective primaries — clearing their path to likely becoming the first Hispanic women to represent the state in Congress. Garcia drew a strong challenge from Tahir Javed, a health care executive who self-funded much of his bid, but her name ID in the district outstripped his endorsement from Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).

    Escobar won the primary in Democratic Rep. Beto O’Rourke’s El Paso-based seat, and will be a prohibitive favorite in November in a majority-Hispanic district that backed Hillary Clinton by a 46-point margin.
    DK Firearms
     
    Last edited:

    vmax

    TGT Addict
    TGT Supporter
    Rating - 100%
    8   0   0
    Apr 15, 2013
    17,459
    96
    maxresdefault.jpg
     

    karlac

    Lately too damn busy to have Gone fishin' ...
    TGT Supporter
    Lifetime Member
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Aug 21, 2013
    11,846
    96
    Houston & Hot Springs
    Incumbents, as usual, are hard to beat.
    Rode herd on our household voters and got'em to the polls.
    Was hoping RINO Sarah Davis would get her comeuppance.
    Not the case ...
     

    oldag

    TGT Addict
    Rating - 100%
    7   0   0
    Feb 19, 2015
    17,566
    96
    WSJ take on this:

    By
    James Freeman
    March 7, 2018 11:40 a.m. ET
    170 COMMENTS

    “Texas voting: 2018’s first primary points to liberal enthusiasm,” announces a Washington Post headline today. It’s an interesting interpretation of Tuesday’s results, which point most of all to conservative victory.

    The Post wrote exactly the headline that many journalists had been expecting to write before the votes were counted in Texas. On Sunday, National Public Radio’s website noted signs of significant political change in the nation’s second most populous state. With a report entitled, “In Texas Primary, Early Signs Of A 2018 Democratic Surge,” the state-sponsored media reported:

    ...Democrats are already seeing reasons to be excited deep in the red, beating heart of Texas. The Lone Star State holds the nation’s first primary on Tuesday, and in the 11 days of early voting Democrats reached record levels in a midterm year. They surpassed GOP early voting turnout this year and their own party’s numbers during the same period in 2016, a presidential election year where voting numbers are typically much higher, and more than doubled their turnout from the last midterm election in 2014.
    Larger turnout among Democrats than Republicans in Texas elections would certainly count as news. Would the early voting totals hold up? With almost all precincts having reported, the Post writes:

    Democratic voters showed up in force in Texas on Tuesday for the nation’s first primary of the year, providing fresh evidence that liberal enthusiasm could reshape even deeply Republican states come November. Turnout appeared to be up for both parties, but the Democrats showed the greatest growth. From Houston to the border with Mexico, they voted in numbers far greater than in 2014 primaries, motivated by a surplus of candidates, concern over one-party control of Washington and dissatisfaction with President Trump.
    Following that preamble, the Post reports the results:

    Republicans continued to have a clear advantage in the state, with more Texans voting in their primary than in Democrats’.
    But isn’t primary turnout a sign of enthusiasm and didn’t we just learn that the enthusiasm is occurring among liberals? While Post readers mull this over, the paper returns to the central theme:

    The turnout from the left in Texas follows a string of races around the country where Democrats have shown new enthusiasm for voting in nonpresidential years. Democrat Ralph Northam won the Virginia governor’s race in November, even though the Republican candidate, Ed Gillespie, received more votes than any GOP candidate for state office in Virginia’s history. Democrats have also been winning special state legislative elections around the country, in states including Florida, Wisconsin and Kentucky that were once considered safe for Republicans. “WAKE UP CALL,” tweeted Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) in January, after a Democrat handily won a state legislative seat that Republicans won by 27 points in 2016.
    The Post is right on target about the Virginia results. If the nation follows the voting patterns of the Old Dominion, a Democratic wave will wash away the Republican majorities in Congress. Republican members of Congress will be especially fearful of a political flood if their candidate loses a special election on Tuesday in a Pennsylvania district that Donald Trump won easily in 2016.

    But it’s the voting patterns in Texas that are the subject of today’s news. And they do suggest an enthusiasm gap, but not the one that has fascinated so much of the press corps.

    In the primaries for governor and U.S. senator in Texas, Democrats had a range of candidates competing in open races, while Republicans were going through the formality of endorsing their incumbents, Gov. Greg Abbott and Sen. Ted Cruz, who faced only modest opposition. Put simply, Democrats had more reason to show up and vote.

    Yet for each of these two significant statewide offices, roughly 50% more Republicans than Democrats voted in their respective primaries. In each case, around 1.5 million Republicans voted, compared to about a million Democrats.

    A Politico chart reports that while participation in Democratic primaries surged compared to several recent elections, fewer Democrats voted in this year’s primaries than in 1994. Meanwhile, on Tuesday GOP primary voting appears to have hit a new high—breaking the record set in the Tea Party year of 2010.

    The much-discussed hypothetical “blue wave” may still come rolling in this November, but Tuesday’s results in Texas suggest that’s not the way to bet. 2018’s first primary points to conservative enthusiasm.
     

    Younggun

    Certified Jackass
    TGT Supporter
    Local Business Supporter
    Rating - 100%
    6   0   0
    Jul 31, 2011
    53,746
    96
    hill co.
    As I said in another thread or maybe this one already, the Dems are like Cowboys fan. Every season they run out and say how "this is the year", and as the season progresses they realize that they are still just a bunch of media whores with no real prospect of winning.Meanwhile their loyal followers mull around quietly making up excuses for the failures and suppressing the memory so that they can boldly make the same claim again the next season.
     

    sharkey

    Well-Known
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Feb 25, 2013
    1,342
    96
    I will be honest with you, I was worried about it in TX. Ft Worth is the only big city left that is not blue. Leftists might have enough in 2020. I was shocked when I was at the DA’s Ofc and Watkins won. Dls County has since been in the toilet with the County Commissioners, a leftist Sheriff, a leftist mayor and inept city council with at least one racist on it. It is all the imports we took in from CA and east coast as well as fraudulent votes no doubt from illegals. Of course, I am a racist bigot for saying this.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
     

    sharkey

    Well-Known
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Feb 25, 2013
    1,342
    96
    Also, don’t more Republicans typically vote in primaries than Democrats. The general election could be very different.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
     

    karlac

    Lately too damn busy to have Gone fishin' ...
    TGT Supporter
    Lifetime Member
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Aug 21, 2013
    11,846
    96
    Houston & Hot Springs
    This morning the Pearl Harbor sized headlines in the Houston Chronicle screamed "History in The Making ... the entire front page about dem's primary result, focusing on dem women (wopersons??). :(

    This ain't Texas anymore, Toto ...
     

    Renegade

    SuperOwner
    Rating - 100%
    1   0   0
    Mar 5, 2008
    11,771
    96
    Texas
    As I said in another thread or maybe this one already, the Dems are like Cowboys fan. Every season they run out and say how "this is the year", and as the season progresses they realize that they are still just a bunch of media whores with no real prospect of winning.Meanwhile their loyal followers mull around quietly making up excuses for the failures and suppressing the memory so that they can boldly make the same claim again the next season.

    Sums it up pretty accurately.
     

    Double Naught Spy

    Well-Known
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Mar 4, 2008
    1,060
    96
    North Texas
    If the Dems are failing so badly, why are we running around in circles, shitting in our pants, and seemingly acting like we are doomed like we are just one vote away from gun confiscation?
     

    karlac

    Lately too damn busy to have Gone fishin' ...
    TGT Supporter
    Lifetime Member
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Aug 21, 2013
    11,846
    96
    Houston & Hot Springs
    If the Dems are failing so badly, why are we running around in circles, shitting in our pants, and seemingly acting like we are doomed like we are just one vote away from gun confiscation?

    Perhaps because they have laid the groundwork with demographics and purposeful Constitutional illiteracy on their side?
     

    Double Naught Spy

    Well-Known
    Rating - 0%
    0   0   0
    Mar 4, 2008
    1,060
    96
    North Texas
    Vigilance is one thing, but we run scared after every mass shooting in response to democrats' actions and despite our claims of how inept they are.

    They aren't inept. If they had truly largely failed as claimed, we would not be reacting as we are.

    Never underestimate the opposition.
     
    Top Bottom