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With Senate hopes dwindling, Democrats look, once again, to Texas

On Friday, former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are taking their campaigns not to familiar battleground states like Pennsylvania or Michigan – but to Texas.

While both presidential nominees are using the appearances to amplify base issues, they’re also hoping to boost candidates in a critical Senate race.

Why We Wrote This

Changing demographics have stirred speculation for years about Texas turning purple. But as Democrats look to this massive Southwestern state as their best chance to maintain Senate control, they may be disappointed again.

A Republican Senate candidate hasn’t lost in Texas since 1988, but Sen. Ted Cruz came close in 2018. Now, Colin Allred, a congressman and former professional football player, hopes to oust him in what would be one of the biggest upsets of the election.

As demographic changes have helped turn states like Arizona and Nevada into political battlegrounds, many analysts say Texas is heading in the same direction.

Texas is now more important to Democrats’ electoral hopes than ever. Ms. Harris’ party holds a one-seat majority in the Senate but is defending 19 seats this cycle, including several in states that Mr. Trump won by big margins in 2020. Democrats will likely need to flip a GOP seat to retain control.

“Texas has emerged as their best chance to flip a Republican-held seat,” says Jessica Taylor, an editor for the Cook Political Report. “It’s been trending Democrat recently, but is it there yet? I don’t think so.’’

Just 11 days before an election expected to hinge on just a handful of swing states, both major party nominees for America’s next president are descending on a state that, while not a presidential battleground, could be mighty important.

On Friday, former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are taking their campaigns to Texas – Mr. Trump in Austin and Ms. Harris in Houston.

While both candidates are using the appearances to amplify base issues – border security for Mr. Trump and abortion for Ms. Harris – they’re also hoping to give late boosts to candidates in what has become a critical U.S. Senate race.

Why We Wrote This

Changing demographics have stirred speculation for years about Texas turning purple. But as Democrats look to this massive Southwestern state as their best chance to maintain Senate control, they may be disappointed again.

A Republican Senate candidate hasn’t lost in Texas since 1988, but Sen. Ted Cruz, considered an abrasive conservative even by some members of his own party, came close in 2018. Now, Colin Allred, a Dallas-area congressman and former professional football player, hopes to oust him in what would be one of the biggest upsets of the election.

As demographic changes in the Southwest have helped turn states like Arizona and Nevada into political battlegrounds, many analysts say that the Lone Star State is heading in the same direction. Still, while each election has brought fresh buzz that Republican dominance here is ending, that buzz has routinely evaporated on Election Night.

There is little evidence that this year will be any different, but Texas is now more important to Democrats’ electoral hopes than ever before. Ms. Harris’ party, which currently holds a functional one-seat majority in the Senate, is defending far more seats than Republicans this cycle, including several in states Mr. Trump won by big margins in 2020. With West Virginia all but certain to elect a Republican and Montana looking increasingly likely to as well, that means Democrats will need to flip a GOP seat to retain control.

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