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Tag: Colin Allred

  • What’s Going on With Texas’s Democratic-Primary Mess?

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    Things kicked off when Morgan Thompson, a Dallas-based content creator focused on Texas politics, recounted a story to her more than 185,000 TikTok followers regarding an off-the-record meeting she had with Talarico about the Democratic primary on January 12. Thompson claimed that during their conversation, Talarico made an offensive comment comparing Crockett to Allred, a former representative whom Talarico was initially running against. (Allred, who dropped his bid after Crockett entered the race, was also Texas’s Democratic Senate nominee in 2024, losing to Ted Cruz, and is now running for Congress again.)

    “Talarico told me that he signed up to run against a mediocre Black man, not a formidable and intelligent Black woman,” Thompson said in a video posted on Sunday.

    Thompson explained that she initially supported Talarico over Allred but expressed concern after his campaign pushed out a fundraising appeal under the name of James Carville, the storied political consultant who authored a New York Times op-ed last year looking to warn Democrats against embracing what he called “performative woke politics.”

    “I’m always going to advocate for Black people ’cause I don’t care about how much you talk about affordability, housing, health care, whatever. If ‘woke politics’ is not included in that — which directly impacts Black people — then we’re left out of that conversation and policy,” Thompson said.

    Thompson said she reached out to the campaign and shared her concerns to a staffer, who offered her the chance to speak with Talarico one-on-one about the issue. In a subsequent video, Thompson said her conversation with Talarico had been going well and that the comment came as talk turned to which offices the various candidates could have run for besides the Senate. Thompson acknowledged that she doesn’t have a recording of their conversation. She has since endorsed Crockett’s campaign and said the representative was not involved in her decision to speak about her interaction with Talarico.

    Talarico-campaign spokesman J.T. Ennis confirmed to CNN that Thompson and Talarico did meet in Plano, adding that “the Talarico campaign works with lots of creators in Texas to keep them updated on the campaign.”

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    Nia Prater

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  • One Day to Go Till Election Day 2024

    One Day to Go Till Election Day 2024

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    In a presidential battle that despite all their polling, most political experts says is too close to call, voters will have a last chance on Tuesday, November 5, to cast their ballots. How long it will take for voters to know the results is anyone’s guess.

    At issue, besides the presidential race between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, is the Ted Crux vs Colin Allred contest for the U.S. Senate seat that Cruz holds right now.

    Another primary concern in Houston is whether voters will approve the $4.4 billion bond issue that Houston ISD is asking for. The sticking point there is not so much whether the campus facilities improvements are needed,) but whether voters can trust Superintendent Miles Miles, his administration and the state-appointed Board of Managers to do right by all that money.

    In Harris County, election polling sites will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.  Go to harrisvotes.com to determine where’s the nearest handy voting place for you to cast your ballot.

    Harris Votes even offers 

    a quick instructional video on how to vote with the county’s machines.


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    Houston Press

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  • Opinion: The Cruz-Allred Senate Debate Laid Out the Choice

    Opinion: The Cruz-Allred Senate Debate Laid Out the Choice

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    Going into Tuesday night’s debate between Republican Sen. Ted Cruz and his opponent Democratic U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, you’d be pardoned if you were anticipating a complete rout for Allred.

    After all, Houston’s own Cruz, who has served as the Texas junior senator since his 2012 election, has long been acclaimed for his debating prowess. Allred wasn’t bringing such bona fides to the stage.

    But Allred, the Dallas-born, former-Baylor football captain, former-NFL player and current congressman representing the 23rd District, had polls in his back pocket.

    After months of being viewed – and dismissed – as a longshot candidate by both the Republicans and his own party, Allred has surged in the polls in recent weeks. The polling data now shows the two contenders in a much closer race than expected. (A University of Houston poll published Tuesday before the debate showed Cruz leading 50 percent to Allred’s 46 percent, but a week-old internal GOP super PAC poll, obtained by Politico, only has Cruz garnering 48 percent to Allred’s 47 percent of the vote. In other words, the odds still favor Cruz but his victory is far from a lock.)

    Thus, both candidates entered the debate, deftly moderated by Jason Whiteley, political reporter for WFAA, and Gromer Jeffers, political reporter for the Dallas Morning News, with something to prove.

    Could Allred hold his own against Cruz and show voters that his rep as a true moderate isn’t just for show?
    Could Cruz — reputed to be one of the most unpopular members of Congress and described by GOP former-U.S. House Speaker John Boehner as “Lucifer in the flesh” —come across as, well, likeable?

    In his opening statement, Allred, who won the coin toss and opted to go first, hit Cruz in one of the senator’s softest spots by promising right off the bat that, if elected to the U.S. Senate he’ll put Texas and Texans first. Allred pledged, in a moment that saw Cruz smiling hard, that he won’t head off to Cancun the way Cruz did in the middle of 2021’s historic winter freeze.

    For his part, Cruz took a measured stance in his introduction, noting he is the son of a Cuban immigrant father, complementing Allred having been raised by a single mother, and explaining that his plan of attack was to return repeatedly to Allred’s record.

    Over the course of the next hour, which galloped by as the debaters picked up speed, Cruz and Allred talked over all of the big-ticket issues, from abortion to the economy to the border, their respective approaches to the ongoing conflicts in Israel and Ukraine, the events of January 6, IVF regulations, transgender rights and affordable housing.

    On abortion, the issue that stands to shape how many of our elections play out on November 5, Cruz kept calm. With his signature unflappable smoothness, Cruz repeatedly avoided laying out whether he supports exemptions for rape or incest. Instead, he contended that Allred’s abortion stance—which Allred described as “support of protections and restrictions as laid out by Roe [v. Wade]”—represented a disregard for Texas state laws.

    When pressed to answer the question, Cruz again made a well-oiled swerve toward Allred, prompting a blistering response from Allred.

    “It’s not pro-life to deny women care so long they can’t have children anymore. It’s not pro-life to force a victim of rape to carry their rapist’s baby. It’s not pro-life that our maternal mortality rate has skyrocketed up to 56 percent,” Allred interjected in a moderator-approved rebuttal. “To every Texas woman at home and for every Texas family watching this, understand that when Ted Cruz says he’s pro-life, he doesn’t mean yours.”

    Pressed a third time to answer the question, Cruz still wasn’t having it—or answering.

    Cruz attempted to hammer Allred on the economy. “When it comes to inflation, inflation is caused by the policies of Kamala Harris and Congressman Allred,” Cruz stated. “Kamala Harris and Congressman Allred came in and they went on a spending binge.” (It should be noted that the Trump administration ran up the national debt by $8.4 trillion versus the Biden administration’s $4.3 trillion.)

    Allred countered that Cruz, for all of his concern for Texas senior citizens and people on a budget, actually voted against the popular measure that lowered the cost of insulin.

    “He talks tough but he never shows up,” Allred interjected in a moderator-sanctioned rebuttal. “We have a phrase for this, ‘all hat and no cattle,’ and that’s what Sen. Cruz is. Six more years of this? Come on.”

    On transgender rights, Allred said he wants to protect children, while Cruz insisted Allred wants “boys to play against girls.”

    On the question of whether January 6 rioters should be pardoned, as former-President Donald Trump has said he intends to do, Cruz stated that he believes “all people who commit a crime should be penalized,” noting that Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg has endorsed him.

    In response, Allred claimed that he was trying to block the door against rioters attempting to gain entrance to the House Floor while Cruz was “hiding in a supply closet.”

    Allred sailed into Cruz on his vote opposing the bundled foreign aid for Ukraine and Israel, noting that even Sen. John Cornyn, the senior Texas senator, voted in favor of providing aid while Cruz voted against it.

    “When I was elected 12 years ago, I resolved then to be the leading defender of Israel in the United States Senate and I’ve worked every day to do that, to stand up and fight to support Israel,” Cruz responded. He also claimed that Allred “has consistently lined up against Israel” by pointing to his support of sending U.S. aid to Gaza and the Biden administration’s 2023 sanctions waiver that allowed Iran to access $10 billion.

    Now more at ease, Allred dismissed Cruz’s claims that Allred is against what Cruz described as holding Hamas responsible for using children as human shields and defended his support of sending aid to Gaza civilians. “This has to be our responsibility, this has to be Israeli responsibility,” Allred said.

    The rest of the debate played out along these same lines with Cruz and Allred dissecting their respective views on a series of issues, including the border (both accused each other of being weak on border and immigration policy) and IVF (both are in favor of protecting IVF access but Allred noted how Cruz’s pro-life stance has imperiled the practice, while Cruz brought up his failed IVF protection bill).

    A question on what to do about high food prices went mostly unanswered as Cruz’s response zigged into a claim that the high prices are due to an unfriendly policy toward Texas oil and gas. Cruz tried to paint Allred as against it, while Allred pointed toward his public call on the Biden administration to end its pause on permitting new liquified natural gas export projects. They debated about affordable housing policies and Cruz’s decision to vote against the $35 billion federal infrastructure bill in 2021. Allred touted his award for being one of the most bipartisan members of Congress, while Cruz referred to bipartisan bills he has cosponsored.

    And then, just like that, they were out of time.

    “We’re all Americans and we’re all Texans. We need a leader who will bring us together around our shared values,” Allred said. “If you don’t like how things are in Washington right now, [Cruz] is singularly responsible for it.”

    “The stakes of this election are the highest of my lifetime,” Cruz said, going on to claim that if Allred is elected, he’ll vote to “allow every illegal alien in America” and “turn Texas blue in an instant … I will fight to keep Texas Texas,” Cruz concluded.

    Coming away from this debate, a few things are clear. Yes, Cruz remains a remarkably skilled debater. He can talk his way around anything. But the fact of the matter is that his actions may finally be speaking as loudly as Cruz himself, because he was unable to talk his way around a number of decisions he’s made in the Senate.

    He also remains unable to outtalk the fact that he went to Cancun while Texans, plus his own dog, were left in freezing conditions back in 2021.

    Allred isn’t as fluid on a debate stage. He didn’t display Beto O’Rourke’s spiky charisma and was clearly nervous at the top of the hour-long debate. Over the course of the debate, he warmed up and managed to score a series of hits on his opponent, but Cruz had him on skill.

    The thing is, to beat Cruz last night, Allred didn’t have to defeat him. He just had to let Cruz himself remind Texans who the senator is and offer them a reasonable choice.

    And that’s exactly what Allred did.

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    Dianna Wray

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  • Texas Tribune Fest Welcomes Ideas of All Kinds, Speakers From Both Parties

    Texas Tribune Fest Welcomes Ideas of All Kinds, Speakers From Both Parties

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    Before the start of many of the sessions at the 2024 Texas Tribune Festival, a short video starring the impossibly handsome, and oh, so very Texan actor Glen Powell warmly warned attendees that they would likely hear ideas they didn’t agree with. After all, the annual fall festival has for years made it a point to present speakers from both major parties, and from a variety of racial, ethnic, religious and social backgrounds…

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    Kelly Dearmore

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  • North Texas Reacts to Attempted Trump Assassination

    North Texas Reacts to Attempted Trump Assassination

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    Former President Donald Trump was injured when a bullet grazed his ear during a speech at a Pennsylvania rally on Saturday afternoon. Trump was rushed off the stage and to a local medical facility where the Secret Service reported shortly after the attack the he was safe and in stable condition…

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    Kelly Dearmore

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  • It’s Allred vs. Cruz and Other Results From Super Tuesday Primaries in North Texas

    It’s Allred vs. Cruz and Other Results From Super Tuesday Primaries in North Texas

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    In a post-2016 world, every election night is at the least an interesting one. That goes double for this year’s primaries in Texas. Although the presidential nominations aren’t exactly hotly contested, Super Tuesday has had a big circle around it for many since last September, when Attorney Gen. Ken Paxton won his Senate impeachment trial, if not last May, when the state House voted overwhelmingly to impeach him.

    Since being reinstated to his office, Paxton has followed through on his promised batch of revenge endorsements of challengers taking on incumbent House members who voted to impeach him. Collin County, Paxton’s home, had several races including GOP incumbents Paxton wanted out. For his part of the GOP civil war, Gov. Greg Abbott has taken aim at those incumbents who opposed his efforts to push a school voucher program through in 2023.

    Well before polls closed locally at 7 p.m. CNN listed the Texas Senate race as one of the top few their analysts were closely monitoring last night. The notion of Democratic U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, a former NFL player, squaring off against GOP Sen. Ted Cruz, who has proven to be relatively bulletproof, has political implications well beyond the Red River.

    Technical issues in Irving and logistical difficulties in Denton County were reported by NBC 5 during its 6 p.m. broadcast. A few minutes prior to polls closing, WFAA reported that lengthy lines of people were still waiting to cast their votes in Collin County. Since “election integrity” has improbably become almost as hot of an issue as immigration and abortion, such inconveniences have risen to the top of the newscast.

    Here’s how Super Tuesday unfolded in North Texas.

    Who will face Ted Cruz?

    Allred, a Dallas Democrat, duked it out Tuesday night with state Sen. Roland Gutierrez for a chance to unseat Cruz. With 50% of the votes counted around 9 p.m. Tuesday, Allred was projected as the winner with his total of the votes hovering around 60%. It was an anti-climactic result to a race many predicted would go to a runoff because of the nine of candidates on the ballot.

    Mark Hand, assistant professor of political science at the University of Texas at Arlington, said he was surprised by Allred’s showing even though he had out-raised Gutierrez by a wide margin in campaign donations.

    “I thought that he would lead. I didn’t know that he would win so commandingly,” he told the Observer Tuesday night. However, the most recent poll Hand had seen showed Cruz up some 12 points over Allred and Gutierrez. “So, he’s [Allred] got an uphill battle,” Hand added.

    Another poll Hand saw showed Cruz at 45% with Allred in the low-30s. “For someone with the name ID that Ted Cruz has – everyone knows who Ted Cruz is, everyone has an opinion about Ted Cruz – that 45% could turn out to be a ceiling for him,” Hand said. This should give Democrats some confidence.

    Wendy Davis, the former state Senator and gubernatorial candidate, was at Allred’s watch party at Rodeo Goat in Dallas. Speaking to the Observer, she explained why Allred is a good matchup against Cruz in November.

    “I think Colin is obviously the type of person not afraid of a challenge,” Davis said before adding that Allred managed to defeat Pete Sessions in 2018, a longtime Republican who lost to Allred after District 32 was redrawn in favor of Democrats. “He’s demonstrated deeply held Democratic values while working across the aisle. … There are a lot of Republican voters looking for an alternative.”

    “There’s too many ‘me guys’ in D.C.” Allred said during his victory speech, taking aim at his Republican opponent. “But none as big as Ted Cruz. In our democracy, ‘we’ has always been more powerful than ‘me’. We the people. We hold these truths to be self-evident. We shall overcome. Yes, we can. And we don’t have to be embarrassed by our Senator. We can get a new one.”

    Dallas Races of Note

    The race for the Democratic nomination for Dallas County sheriff was an eye-catching one thanks to former office holder and one-time Texas gubernatorial candidate Lupe Valdez throwing her hat in the ring. Votes for Valdez started the night slow and stayed slower than those for incumbent Marian Brown, but the race appeared headed for a runoff.

    Incumbent Sen. Nathan Johnson faced off with state Rep. Victoria Neave Criado for the Texas Senate District 16 seat, declaring victory around 8:30 p.m. “I’m eager to get back to work,” Johnson told WFAA. He said if the results send any message, it’s that Texans want things to get done. Johnson, a Democrat, will not face a Republican opponent in November.

    “I’ve learned a great deal over the past five years and built key relationships with advocates, subject matter experts, agencies and, of course, with legislators,” Johnson told the Observer recently. “As a result, I am more effective now than I was when first elected. I aim to use that experience to continue effectively fighting right-wing destructiveness, winning policy advances and changes for SD 16 residents and building strength and trust in the Democratic Party.”

    The race for U.S. House District 32, Allred’s district, was packed with 14 candidates, including 10 Democrats. The Democrats included Dallas trauma surgeon Dr. Brian Williams, state Rep. Julie Johnson, Callie Butcher, Raja Chaudhry, Alex Cornwallis, Kevin Felder, Zachariah Manning, Jan McDowell, Justin Moore and Christopher Panayiotou.

    By 10 p.m. Tuesday, over half of the votes were going to Johnson, while Williams trailed behind at about 21%. To avoid a runoff in such a crowded field, similar to how Allred avoided one in his race, was perhaps both unexpected and impressive.

    Her supporters argued she was more than ready for the job. “We need effective members of Congress,” Johnson told the Observer last month. “I’m the only one in this field that has actually won a competitive general election, that knows what it’s like to beat Republicans significantly, and that has any legislative experience at all.”

    The Speaker vs. The AG

    With 99% of the votes counted, Paxton-backed David Covey and Texas House Speaker Dade Phelan appeared headed toward a runoff. This result was surprising to Hand. Phelan, who led the charge to impeach Paxton, has been as big of an enemy to Paxton as anyone else in Austin.

    “It looks like if the numbers hold that he [Phelan] might lose his seat and if he does, that’s one of the three most powerful state officials and, I think, the first ever speaker of the House to lose a re-election race,” Hand said. “It’ll change the relationship that’s historically existed between the House and the Senate for the last few years.”

    He said it also looks like Paxton is going three-for-three on ousting judges from the Texas Criminal Court of Appeals who ruled in a way that he didn’t like a few years ago. According to The Texas Tribune, judges Sharon Keller, Barbara Hervey and Michelle Slaughter all voted against allowing Paxton to have unilateral ability to prosecute voter fraud. “It looks like all three of them are going to lose their seats,” Hand said.

    Even though many of the challengers the AG endorsed were losing or headed for runoffs late into the evening, Hand thinks the judicial wins will mean a lot to Paxton.

    “In terms of the checks and balances in the state, I think that’s surprising and probably also a bit worrying in terms of the independence of the three branches,” he said. “I think Paxton goes to bed tonight with a smile on his face.”

    What Happened in Collin County

    In Collin County, dozens of voters at the Allen Municipal Court building waited outside for an hour and a half, shuffling past posters and placards promoting warring endorsements by Gov. Abbott and Attorney Gen. Paxton. As the sun went down and the clock inched closer to closing time, the line only continued to grow.

    According to elections administrators, more than 54,000 people voted in Collin County on Election Day, on top of 8,000 early voters — roughly 19% of registered voters. Wade Emmert, the former Dallas County GOP chair, wasn’t surprised by the solid turnout or the long lines.

    “Collin County is the epicenter of the proxy war between Governor Abbott and Ken Paxton and the impeachment versus school vouchers vote,” Emmert said during WFAA’s live election broadcast.

    Just a few days earlier, at the Allen City Hall building that sits a short walk from the municipal court, two candidates on either side of that “proxy war” shared a tense moment. Jeff Leach, the incumbent in House District 67, is a former Paxton protege who voted to impeach the attorney general. In the primary, he was challenged by the Paxton-endorsed Daren Meis, a former Allen City Council member.

    “I’m asking you to step away from me,” Leach told Meis while the two were greeting voters on the last day of early voting. “Your face is red, your eyes are bloodshot, and you said ‘Fuck you’ to me.”

    Meis, who appeared to be asking Leach to share details about his donors, laughed at Leach and called him “dishonest.”

    Election night was less dramatic. Roughly 30 minutes after the polls closed, with dozens of voters still in line and facing long waits, reports indicated that Leach had earned two-thirds of the early vote.

    Emmert said he thought the lawmaker’s “impassioned” speech before the impeachment vote would have rallied more support for Meis.

    “I’m not surprised to see Jeff winning, but I thought Meis would’ve done a little better than that,” Emmert said.

    Elsewhere in Collin County, incumbents Matt Shaheen and Candy Noble — who, like Leach, voted in favor of impeachment — appeared to win their races with 99% of the votes counted. Both received Abbott’s endorsement.

    Of the Collin County contests that pitted the governor’s candidates of choice versus Paxton’s picks, only one appeared to be trending in the attorney general’s direction. Keresa Richardson led fellow challenger Chuck Branch and the incumbent Frederick Frazier in the race for House District 61, which covers parts of Frisco, Anna and Celina. The race was unique in that Paxton endorsed both of Frazier’s challengers. With 99% of the vote counted before midnight, Richardson led Frazier with 39% of the vote to Frazier’s 33%, meaning the pair will face off in a runoff May 28.

    Katrina Pierson, a spokesperson for Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, was in one of the closest races of the night: House District 33, which includes Rockwall County. Incumbent Justin Holland has been under fire by members of his own party ever since he voted to advance a House bill that, if passed, would have raised the legal age for purchasing certain semiautomatic weapons. His party’s criticism only intensified after Holland voted to impeach Paxton.

    In a late 2023 statement shared on social media, the Rockwall County GOP said Holland has “grown increasingly unresponsive to voters and the Republican Party.”

    “In doing so,” it continued, “he has insulted and belittled local Republican voters and your Rockwall County Republican Party.”

    With 99% of the vote counted, The Associated Press reported that Pierson and Holland would also square off in a runoff in May.

    Brandon Rottinghaus, a political science professor at the University of Houston, was surprised by Collin County’s overall allegiance to incumbents and their effective rebuff of Paxton.

    “They say revenge is best served cold,” Rottinghaus told the Observer, “and Ken Paxton’s revenge tour is ice cold in North Texas.”

    That allegiance appears to have extended from Collin County and into neighboring House District 65 in Denton County where Republican incumbent Kronda Thimesch had a slight lead over Mitch Little, one of Paxton’s defense attorneys during the AG’s impeachment trial. At midnight, with 95% of the vote counted, Thimesch led by more than 400 votes, or 51.6% to Little’s 48.4%, and The AP had not called the race. But the night wasn’t completely sour for the attorney general. His candidates of choice fared far better in rural areas like the deeply conservative district covering Hunt, Hopkins, and Van Zandt counties.

    Overall, though, the night was a much bigger success story for Greg Abbott. Lawmakers like Glenn Rogers, Hugh Shine, Steve Allison and Travis Clardy — all opposed to Abbott’s school voucher push — lost their seats to challengers backed by the governor.

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    Kelly Dearmore

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  • Hey Dallas: Are You Registered To Vote in the Primary? Here’s What You Should Know.

    Hey Dallas: Are You Registered To Vote in the Primary? Here’s What You Should Know.

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    Voting in the general election is important: That’s been well established. But do you know what else is crucial? Hitting the polling place in the primaries.

    Primary elections are coming up fast in Texas, when voters will pick their party’s nominees in races for the state Legislature, Congress and the White House. Early voting doesn’t start until later this month, and Election Day is on March 5, but there’s another majorly important date that you’ll want to mark down in your calendars.

    Monday — yes, this coming Monday — is the last day to register to vote if you want to cast a ballot in the upcoming primaries.

    It’s also the final day for those who are already registered to update their name or address online if either has changed.

    But if heading to the polling place is a challenge, don’t worry: There’s an organization that can help get you there. Rideshare2Vote will deploy someone to pick you up, take you to the polling place and then drop you off back home. For free.

    Founder Sarah Kovich explained that there are three ways that folks can schedule their rides: They can download the app, fill out a web form or call 888-977-2250.

    “Once they are registered, our job is to schedule and get them a roundtrip ride to vote,” Kovich said.

    Here’s the skinny on registering to vote in the upcoming primary.

    How Do I Register to Vote?

    To register to vote in Dallas County, you can download and print an application in English, Spanish or Vietnamese before mailing it in. You can also do it in person by visiting the Dallas County Elections Department at 1520 Round Table Drive in Big D.

    If neither of those options work, call 469-627-8683 (VOTE) to request an application by phone or send an email to [email protected]. Another choice: Pick up an application from your local library, tax or other government office.

    If you mail in your application, by the way, it will need to have been postmarked by the Monday deadline.

    “It is a very powerful experience to go and vote, even if your vote loses.” – Sarah Kovich, Rideshare2Vote

    tweet this

    Check to see if you’re already registered to vote by visiting the Texas Secretary of State’s website. Sadly, unlike 42 other states, you can’t sign up from the comfort of your computer.

    “What we would really like is for there to be online voter registration in Texas so that we can make it as easy as possible for every eligible citizen to be able to register and be able to vote,” Kovich said.

    Folks who are renewing their driver’s licenses online may register to vote at the same time; it’s Texas’ only exception to online registration. Kovich pointed out that those signing up for a license at the DMV can check a voter registration box during the process.

    Why Should I Vote in the Primaries?

    Primary elections allow voters to choose who they want to see represent their party in the general election. For instance, liberals can cast a ballot picking a Democratic challenger to U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, such as U.S. Rep. Colin Allred of Dallas, state Sen. Roland Gutierrez of San Antonio or state Rep. Carl Sherman of DeSoto.

    The way Kovich sees it, voting in the primaries demonstrates the strength of one’s conviction. It also gets people used to casting a ballot, just like they’ve (ostensibly) built the habit of going to the barber or dentist.

    “Research shows that once you show up, you kind of keep showing up,” Kovich said. “And I believe that that’s because it is a very powerful experience to go and vote, even if your vote loses.”

    Unfortunately, few would use the adjective “sexy” to describe voting, Kovich said, but it is the way that you can make your voice heard. And that’s empowering in and of itself. Those who want to experience the gratification of helping others participate in democracy can volunteer with Rideshare2Vote.

    Not every seat will have challengers in the primary, but there are plenty such races this time around. For example, U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett will be tasked with defeating two other Democrats, and state Rep. Angie Chen Button, a Richardson Republican, will need to beat a conservative opponent.

    Oh, yeah, and then there’s the GOP primary for president. NBD.

    Kovich urges Texans to get out the vote this election: “People need to make sure that the person that they want on the ballot in November, that they vote for them in the primary.”



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    Simone Carter

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  • Democrat Colin Allred Aims To Tackle Ted Cruz In 2024 Senate Race

    Democrat Colin Allred Aims To Tackle Ted Cruz In 2024 Senate Race

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    Democratic Rep. Colin Allred, an NFL player-turned-voting rights attorney, is launching a challenge to Republican Sen. Ted Cruz in Texas, instantly becoming the frontrunner in one of the few Senate pickup opportunities for Democrats in 2024.

    Allred, who is in his third term in the U.S. House, will face an uphill battle against Cruz. No Democrat has won statewide in Texas for nearly three decades. However, the broad Senate map is so tilted against Democrats in 2024 ― they are defending seats in 23 states ― that Texas is seen as the party’s best opportunity to gain a seat.

    Cruz is deeply unpopular on a personal level. He has faced intense scrutiny for his role in helping former President Donald Trump’s attempts to reverse the 2020 election results and for traveling to Cancun as ice storms battered Texas in February 2021.

    Both events incidents feature heavily in Allred’s launch video, which opens by knocking Cruz’s conduct during the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection before delving into Allred’s life story. He was raised by a single mother, made it to the NFL and then law school and became the first member of Congress to take paternity leave in 2019.

    “We don’t have to be embarrassed by our senator,” Allred says in the three-minute video. “We can get a new one.”

    With 20 different media markets, Texas is a notoriously expensive state to campaign in. National Democrats may not be able to afford to aid Allred with television ads, and he’ll be expected to replicate past Cruz challenger Beto O’Rourke’s record-breaking fundraising from 2018, when the former congressman brought in more than $80 million.

    Allred is the most prominent Democrat to enter the race, though four lesser-known candidates have also announced bids. Former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro was also considering a run, and some Democrats have looked at astronaut Scott Kelly ― the twin brother of Arizona Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly ― as a potential candidate.

    Allred is a member of the New Democrat Coalition in the House, which advocates for moderate stances on fiscal and economic issues and is generally seen as pro-business.

    In a statement, the National Republican Senatorial Committee said Allred was “too liberal” for Texas.

    “Just like Beto O’Rourke before him, Colin Allred is going to quickly regret giving up his safe House seat to run yet another doomed, Democrat vanity campaign in Texas,” NRSC spokesman Philip Letsou said.

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  • Ted Cruz awaits winner of Democratic primary after clinching GOP nomination

    Ted Cruz awaits winner of Democratic primary after clinching GOP nomination

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    FILE – Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, speaks to the media during a press conference on the border, Sept. 27, 2023, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democrats in search of flipping a U.S. Senate seat are watching Texas closely on Super Tuesday to see who voters nominate against Sen. Cruz.Mariam Zuhaib/AP

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas has officially locked up the GOP nomination for a third term and awaits the winner of a wide field of Democratic challengers.

    Cruz had no major primary opponent. Nine Democrats are running for the chance to unseat him in November, including U.S. Rep. Colin Allred and state Sen. Roland Gutierrez.

    Democrats see Cruz’s seat as one of their best chances to flip a Senate seat this year even though a Democrat hasn’t won a statewide race in Texas in 30 years.

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    Cruz’s last reelection campaign in 2018 ended in a narrow victory over Democrat Beto O’Rourke.

    THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Democrats in search of flipping a U.S. Senate seat were watching Texas closely on Super Tuesday to see who voters nominate against Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, whose underdog challengers have cast as vulnerable after a narrow margin of victory in 2018.

    U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, a former NFL player and three-term congressman from Dallas, and state Sen. Roland Gutierrez have drawn most of the attention in a primary that again finds Texas Democrats in pursuit of a breakthrough candidate. No Democrat has won a statewide office in Texas in 30 years, the longest losing streak of its kind in the U.S.

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    Despite that, Democrats believe Texas and Florida are their best shot for upsets in November as they try to preserve a slim 51-49 advantage in the Senate. That majority includes West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who is not seeking reelection and whose seat is likely to flip Republican.

    Seven other Democrats are also running in the Senate primary in Texas, including state Rep. Carl Sherman. The race heads to a May 28 runoff if no candidate wins a vote majority.

    Allred, who would become Texas’ first Black senator if elected, has raised more than $21 million since getting in the race. That’s significantly more than his primary challengers, whom the civil rights lawyer has largely ignored during the primary while keeping his attacks focused on Cruz.

    Allred, 40, made headlines in January when he was among 14 House Democrats who backed a Republican resolution in Congress that criticized President Joe Biden’s handling of the border. Gutierrez criticized Allred for the vote, accusing him of siding “with GOP extremists,” and Cruz spokesperson Macarena Martinez called the vote a “disingenuous attempt to posture on the border.”

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    Allred said he did not agree with all the language in the resolution but said he wanted to see more urgency at the federal level when it comes to the border.

    “For me, it was about sending a signal that, you know, what we have been doing is not working,” Allred said in an interview last week during early voting in Texas. “We have to change something.”

    Cruz only narrowly beat Beto O’Rourke for reelection in 2018 by less than 3 percentage points. It was the closest Democrats have come in decades to winning a statewide seat and happened during a midterm election that wound up being a strong year for Democrats nationally.

    Texas Democrats have struggled to recapture that momentum since then. O’Rourke lost by double digits when he challenged Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in 2022.

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    “Things are shifting in the state. It takes a long time,” said Jared Hockeman, the chairman of the Democratic Party in Cameron County along the U.S.-Mexico border. “We recognize that.”

    Murphy reported from Oklahoma City.

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    By PAUL J. WEBER and SEAN MURPHY, Associated Press

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