The Future of Democrats in Texas

by: Mike Lux

Tue Jul 07, 2009 at 15:07


Crossposted at Burnt Orange Report

I have been involved in national politics in one way or another for about 25 years now, and have been part of literally thousands of national discussions on political targeting. For most of that time, the state of Texas sticks out as the great oddity, the exception to all other demographic trends that seem to hold true around the rest of the country. At the beginning, people in targeting meetings are always saying things like "If you look at the demographics in Texas, it ought to be winnable." By the end of every cycle, none of us at the national level is targeting the state and the state-wide Democratic candidate loses by 10-12 points.

It wasn't always this way. In the 1960s, a President from Texas led the way in getting civil rights legislation, Medicare and Medicaid, and many of the other progressive reforms of that decade. Even as the rest of the south was turning to the right and the Republican Party in those years, Texas elected crusading liberal Ralph Yarborough in 1964. A couple of decades later, Democrats - including legendary populist progressive Jim Hightower - swept to power in the 1980s, culminating with Ann Richards historic victory in the 1990 Governor's race.

But that was a while ago now. The Rove-DeLay machine has been remarkably effective over the last couple of decades. Democrats have not won a gubernatorial race since Richards' victory (and they haven't won a Presidential race since Carter in 1976). Republicans have controlled both Senate seats since Lloyd Bentsen stepped down in 1993. They have had the majority in both legislative chambers since 2003. And this has all happened as the number of Hispanics in Texas has steadily, inexorably risen year after year.

I explain why that's so important, and what I think the future of Democrats in Texas looks like, in the extended entry.

Mike Lux :: The Future of Democrats in Texas
In the other big state where Hispanics have grown so dramatically and consistently as a percentage of the population, California, the state has become overwhelmingly blue in Presidential, Senate, congressional, and state legislative elections, even though it had consistently supported Republican Presidential candidates in prior decades. Only the most moderate Republican governor in the country has kept the gubernatorial chair in GOP hands. All the smaller states in the southwest with steadily growing Hispanic populations - Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada - have gone from being Republican strongholds to being purple - and all of them went for Obama last year.

Look at these Texas statistics (according to data from the Forward Texas Foundation):

  • Anglos will be down to 52% of the adult population by 2010, and 49.99% - less than half - by 2012.

  • 85% of the new adult citizens eligible to vote since 2002 are minorities, most of them Hispanics.

  • Barack Obama, who didn't spend a dime targeting Texas in the 2008 general election, lost Texas by about 950,000 votes. Between 2008 and 2012, there are projected to be 1.2 million additional eligible minority voters added to the population of the state.

With statistics like these, and the trends in other formerly Republican southwestern states, you would think Democrats would be confidently developing a Texas strategy for 2010 and 2012. With George Bush gone and discredited, the DeLay machine out of commission, and a really nasty 2010 gubernatorial primary in the works between Kay Bailey Hutchison and goofy incumbent Rick Perry, you would think Texas would be at or towards the top of Democratic target lists. But in two recent trips to Texas, one to Austin and one to Houston, my talks with Texas Democrats did not reveal anything close to that kind of optimism. Sentiments ranged from being very pessimistic about the gubernatorial race to some folks who thought it was "possible if everything went our way." And very few people I know either in Texas or in the Obama political operation are taking Texas seriously as a potential swing state in the 2012 election.

So what is going on in Texas? It's not that there aren't some smart Democratic political operatives doing good work there. For example, Matt Angle, Martin Frost's former head of the DCCC, has led an effort to revitalize the state Democratic Party, and has made significant progress in picking up competitive state legislative seats, rebuilding the party's voter file, increasing candidate fundraising, and creating a strong opposition research and rapid response capability. Another example is the great work of Burnt Orange Report in becoming the Texas blogosphere's online hub for progressive political activism.

But the fundamental problem for Texas Democrats will not be solved until the political class there and nationally finally does something about the elephant in the room: the abysmal turnout of minority voters, especially Hispanics. In 2008, Hispanics made up 32% of eligible voters in Texas, a number which will likely be about 35% by 2012, but they were only 20% of the electorate. In the 2006 off-year elections, while 45% of eligible Anglos voted, only 37% of African-Americans, 24% of Asian-Americans, and 25% of Hispanics voted.

These voter turnout problems are not inevitable. Texas is 47th in the country in turnout of eligible voters. And other states, with investment of resources to make it happen, have shown dramatic increases in Hispanic voter turnout that Texas has not seen: Colorado increased Hispanic turnout by 86% in 2008 over 2004, while New Mexico had 50% Hispanic turnout in the 2006 off-year elections compared to 25% in Texas.

It is a simple, undeniable fact: if Texas got the number in Hispanic turnout that these other states got, they would become a purple or even blue state overnight.

This hasn't happened in part because Texas is a big state and it would cost a lot of money to run the kind of voter registration and get-out-the-vote drives that have happened in other states, and national Democrats have written off Texas year after year as unwinnable, so they haven't invested the resources. But money alone is not the reason: Texas Democrats have raised and spent tens of millions of dollars per election in statewide races over the last couple of decades, but they've spent the vast majority of their money on expensive TV advertising buys. The consultants who run Texas Democratic politics don't make money on voter registration or GOTV drives, they make money on TV ads, and they have never invested in the kind of project that would pick up far more voters for Democrats than most media campaigns. And while I don't believe you can win a statewide campaign without spending money on TV, I also don't believe you can win in Texas as a Democrat if you don't devote a whole lot more to the field.

It's time to change this dynamic once and for all. Democrats already are the dominant party in California, New York, and Illinois, while Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Michigan are purple. In the next tier of states in the electoral college, Virginia, North Carolina, and Indiana became purple in 2008, joining long time blue (Massachusetts, New Jersey) and purple (Minnesota, Wisconsin, Missouri) double digit states. Imagine if the last of the big states became purple again, making Georgia the biggest solidly Republican state. It would be extremely tough for the Republicans to put together an electoral college majority if that were the case.

It's time for Texas and national Democrats to make this kind of investment in voter engagement work in Texas.


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Comprehensive and exciting report that should drive action soon. (0.00 / 0)
Thanks Mike, as always a very good report. I find that almost always detailed analysis is encouraging and more importantly an incentive to action. While rumours are discouraging, and cynicism most often comes from generalizations and sweeping misstatements.

I look forward to reports of action on the ground, and indications of party attention from this.

I can't wait for more "Jim Hightower"s or possibly "Diego Torresdealta"s!
 

Change
"We must break up the banks and never again let them get so big that they distort our politics and take down the economy.


Small correction (0.00 / 0)
While Arizona trended strong to Obama, and might well have gone to him but for being McCain's home state, that is one he did not win in '08.  Here's to winning it (and Texas!) in '12!

Tim Wolfe

Thanks (0.00 / 0)
I missed that.

[ Parent ]
Demographics may equual destiny. (4.00 / 1)
Mike,

Great analysis - I am an educational researcher that has focused on demographic changes within the educational landscape and broader U.S. populations with a focus on dropouts, math and science education, professional development, and teacher attrition.  Murdock, a demographer and considered by many the foremost authority on Texas demographics, confirms your analysis.  We won the major urban centers by a point or two in 2008 Presidential Elections - we consider the main population centers in Texas to be: (Dallas/Fort Worth, Austin, Houston, The Valley, San Antonio, and some place El Paso in the list).  A interesting note about 'The Valley' - it has a huge Hispanic Population and most don't realize this but over 50% of the adults have a college degree.  

I say all of the above to lay the ground work that if the Progressive Community would make a 'real effort' we could turn Texas 'Purple' in 2012 and it would gain deeper shades of Blue in 2016 and beyond.  

Another interesting note is MoveOn has over a 130,000 registered members in Texas (I think my memory serves me correct).  Therefore, we have the potential man-power to build on.  


If only it were just a matter of demographics (4.00 / 1)
As a native Texan, I welcome your enthusiasm about the prospects for Democratic progress in that state. But increasing voter turnout of minority populations may not be enough so long as there are imposing structural problems that have to be overcome through very contentious and time consuming legislative processes. Not to mention the stranglehold that, to quote the late Molly Ivins, "bidness" has on politics in Texas.  

Well I'm glad the problem has gotten your attention (0.00 / 0)
but the solution you prescribe perpetuates the problem.

Although I've lived in WA state for most of the time since 1992, I was born and raised in Texas, have family there, and did move back briefly in 02 and 03. My family's story is actually a very Texas story: my mother's side were Germans who settled the Hill Country and South Texas in the late 1840s, while my stepfather's side immigrated from Mexico during WWII.

You're absolutely right that Texas had a strong progressive streak from the time of its formation until recently. It was never the dominant philosophy by any means, but it certainly had periods of great influence, and managed to endure from Muesenbach to Maury Maverick and beyond. Michael Lind has written about this history, as well as the dynamics that produced two presidents from the state that in some ways were polar opposites.

In any case, the story of Texas' progressives over the last 30 years is similar to that of much of the Midwest & parts of the South: an historic but troubled coalition of progressive populists and conservative Dems began to melt down with cultural tensions of the '70s, and the fading away of the New Deal generation. At the same time, Sunbelt growth flooded the state with a lot of new residents, and the neighborhood organizations that historically were the bloodline of grassroots politics went into decline or evaporated outright. The Democratic party was so pervasive that the decline took awhile-besides, Texans seem to need permission from the community for their personal voting behavior-in the late '80s, you still had Richards, Jim Wright, and Jim Hightower in positions of leadership at the state and federal level. But by that time what they had was not a well-functioning party with a coherent, universal message, but a series of personal fiefdoms. Once those candidates began to falter, the whole organization and network seemed to completely collapse, and vanish without a trace. 1994 was the ending exclamation point on a generational and philospical transition that had started long before.

Ever since that time, analysts have eyed Hispanics and/or Blacks as the key to the future. Apparently having completely given up on building a message that appeals to white descendants of Johnson and Yarborough, Texas Dems and the national party keep trying to run Hispanic candidates with a rural or conservative background. The thinking seems to be that if we can exacerbate racial divides with sleights real & imagined in order to appeal to Hispanics, but keep the candidate conservative enough to appeal to a few rural whites and city business leaders, then maybe a victory can be cobbled together for an election or two.

That has obviously not gotten the party anywhere, because those candidates never win. Rural candidates lose some appeal in Austin, Dallas, and Houston, and Hispanic pride is not something that endears whites, or even Hispanics over the long haul.

What Texas Dems should do is get back to their roots and build a Johnson-style party that offers Texans community, opportunity, and inclusiveness (has a French ring to it, doesn't it?).

That's going to be tough, because it means winning based on values and beliefs, not salesmanship by a charismatic figure, or ginning up and sustaining racial suspicions. But the case has to be made on idealogical grounds...really for the first time in 20 or 30 years...there just is no liberal worldview offered almost anywhere anymore. In personal discussions I've given lefty viewpoints on the economy or the distribution of power that my uneducated great-grandparents would have instinctively understood, and I swear its like the first time people have ever heard of it...the first time the concpetualization has been offered and described.

So I hope Texas Dems make that case, and let's all get away from the silliness that Hispanic attitudes across regions are uniform, or even starkly more liberal than the rest of the US.


A Counter-Argument (0.00 / 0)
     You don't say how much of an investment is necessary, but since we're talking millions of voters I'm guessing it would be tens of millions of dollars. And the two questions I would ask are: 1) What would we get for it? and 2) What could we get if we spent the money elsewhere?
    What would we get if Texas became a purple state? We might get a shot at a senate seat or two. But we've already got 60 senate seats. Would another one or two Texans make much of a difference? We might get another 4 or 5 House seats. But we've already got 257 House seats. Would another 4 or 5 Texans make much of a difference? Would the senators and representatives we would gain be progressives, or would it just add more Blue Dogs like those from Arkansas and Tennessee? We might get another 37 or 38 electoral votes. That would be the difference between getting 365 or 400, but all that's necessary is 270, and there are other states far more likely than Texas to provide the 270th vote.
    So, on to the second question. What could we get if we spent the money elsewhere? Some of it could be spent in Nevada, Colorado, and Arizona, to strengthen Democratic and Hispanic turnout there. Some could go to Florida, which also has a strong mix of minorities, and where national Democrats are far more competitive than in Texas. And some could go to Ohio and Missouri, where the parties are almost evenly matched and any increase in resources could prove decisive.
    I love the Texas liberals. I don't know where this country would be if it weren't for LBJ. And I've been a fan of Jim Hightower since I met him in the Fred Harris for President campaign in 1975. I'd love to see Texas swing blue. And maybe one day it will, twenty years from now. But we've been waiting for that to happen since Sissy Farenthold ran for Governor in 1972, and we're farther away than ever. Let's put our limited resources where they'll do the most good.

The Problem with Texas (0.00 / 0)
The problem with Texas is that the state Party leadership is centrist and shuts out Progressives when non-Republicans in Texas are largely Progressive.  I have seen it over and over again. They would rather be a defunct Party than hand it over to Progressives and win.

Dixiecrats (0.00 / 0)
That is why, PWalton, we get such twits as John Corny and such bimbos as Kay B. Hutchison.  (At least the latter is likely to step down and run for governator against Mr. Hair in the Repub primaries.)  Corny was part of the insurance and healthcare industries' PAC money push to get friendly people up to the national level.  Ever read his opinions from when he sat on the Texas Supreme Court?  He's a little right of Antonin Scalia.

Worse, while McShame was campaigning for the White House, who stood on the dais next to the Rever-end John ("Katrina-is-God's-punishment-on-New-Orleans-for-sponsoring-a-gay- pride-event") Hagee but Corny, heralding the King of Evangelical Bigots as their "spiritual advisor." One supposes McShame and Corny also buy into Hagee's dominionist theology, which works toward bringing about the Apocalypse just as fanatically as bin Laden and the Muslim jihadists.

"Against stupidity even the angels fight in vain" --Schiller
"Respect for the rights of others is peace" -- Juarez


[ Parent ]
Corpus Christi Dem-ographics (0.00 / 0)
I live in Corpus Christi.  During the last local elections (for city council mostly) Bob Bezdek, a political science professor at the local branch of Texas A&M, did a voter survey.  The inquiry was into why a popular Hispanic real estate agent (he looks Anglo and speaks better English than some Caucasians) beat an Anglo mayor of long standing, and why the newly elected city councilmen are mostly Anglo lawyers and people in the real estate industry.  Hispanic city council candidates lost big time.

Bezdek's survey showed that many if not most local Hispanics, who make up about 55 to 60% of our population, did not vote.  (They live mostly in the west and northwest sides of town and their poll tallies told the tale.) On the other hand, the predominantly Republican, predominantly Anglo south side voted in droves.  What this suggests, I think, is that it takes an Obama to get many Hispanics to the polls; they just don't seem to care when it comes to local races.  This works a disadvantage to the Democratic Party, which used to draw all of the Hispanic voters. In the old days Hispanic Democrats voted as a block: when we had "lever" type voting machines, they were known to "pull the planca" (lever for a straight Democratic ticket).

No more, at least in national races.  Many formerly Democratic Hispanics (and/or independents) voted for George W. Bush -- twice.  When the Democratic primaries came about last spring, I went to the caucus and saw another pattern: the Dems were split not by race but by perceived differences in the candidates.  A slight majority of Hispanic Dems stood in line to caucus for Hillary, the Barack line being made up predominantly of southside "Starbucks liberals," mostly Anglo but with a few Hispanics. It was feared that this divide would cost Obama votes, but it made no difference: in the Republican enclaves north of here enough votes were cast to allow McCain to carry Texas.


"Against stupidity even the angels fight in vain" --Schiller
"Respect for the rights of others is peace" -- Juarez


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