Electability and Enthusiasm: How the Texas Senate Primaries Are Testing the Direction of Both Parties
Texas Senate primaries involve $92.8 million in ad spending as Republicans test establishment versus insurgent appeal and Democrats debate electability strategies.
- Across Texas, early voting began Tuesday for the high-profile U.S. Senate primaries next month, exposing fault lines as Texas voters cast ballots.
- The GOP contest pits establishment, insurgent and generational forces against each other with John Cornyn, Ken Paxton and Wesley Hunt, while President Donald Trump has withheld an endorsement.
- AdImpact found $92.8 million total ad spending, with $58.9 million by Republican groups and $2.3 million for Crockett, according to the data.
- No candidate clearing the 50% benchmark could trigger a late-May runoff, and some Republicans warn a Paxton nomination could cost the party $200 million to defend the seat.
- Despite narrow margins, pollsters note that 'Texas is still a red state,' as Talarico's viral Late Show clip drew over 2.7 million views and a $2.5 million fundraising day, highlighting the Democratic electability debate.
34 Articles
34 Articles
Texas primaries test parties' fault lines as US midterms loom
Texas voters are choosing their US Senate nominees in primaries that have become a test of how both parties navigate Donald Trump's second presidency -- and a rehearsal of the internal clashes likely to shape November's midterm elections.
GOP Senate candidates in heated primary battle to represent Texas as Trump declines endorsement
The U.S. Senate seat for Texas is the most highly contested in this year’s Republican primary, and one of the state’s biggest showdowns in recent memory.Four-term incumbent Sen. John Cornyn is defending his seat against three-term Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and two-term U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt. Early voting began Tuesday, and all three candidates are marketing themselves as the best-equipped to defeat strong Democratic challengers, as the p…
Electability and enthusiasm: How the Texas Senate primaries are testing the direction of both parties
In Texas, a pair of US Senate primaries set for early next month have emerged as an early gauge of the direction of both political parties and sparked a sharp debate over what it will take to win the reliably Republican state in November.
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