Reeling Texas Democrats Get a Rare Sight: Their National Chair

1 month ago 19

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Though victory in the state feels farther away than ever, some Democrats, including their new leader, say Texas could still be a key part of their party’s future.

In a darkened arena, people in a crowd hold up glowing cellphones and a large electronic sign says “Vote.”
Vice President Kamala Harris held a campaign rally in Houston in October 2024. The Democrats’ poor showing in Texas on Election Day set back their hopes of making the state more competitive.Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

J. David Goodman

Feb. 21, 2025Updated 6:35 a.m. ET

Defeats across the once solidly blue Rio Grande Valley. Shrinking margins in big Democratic cities like Houston and Dallas. Lost seats in the State House.

The drubbing that Texas Democrats took in the 2024 election was bad enough to leave any party stalwart feeling deflated. After all, a yearslong belief that demographic shifts, population growth and rapid urbanization had Democrats on the cusp of flipping the nation’s most populous Republican state was seemingly in tatters after November.

Yet the newly elected chair of the Democratic National Committee, Ken Martin, made Texas one of the first stops this week on his first swing through the country. And the message he carried was the opposite: Texas, the second-largest state, could still be a linchpin for the national party’s revival.

“The future of the Democratic Party runs through Texas,” Mr. Martin said in an interview in Houston, pointing to national shifts in population away from Democratic coastal strongholds and toward the South. “We are here right now to start laying down the foundation.”

Image

Ken Martin, the new chair of the Democratic National Committee, made Texas one of his first stops on a national swing.Credit...Annie Mulligan for The New York Times

Mr. Martin spoke on Wednesday between meetings with local Democratic activists — hearing about the need for year-round investments in campaign infrastructure — in the same Houston hotel where Senator Ted Cruz celebrated his re-election victory over a well-funded, well-regarded Democratic challenger, Colin Allred, just a few months earlier.


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