Episode Transcript
Hello, and welcome to the Texas trib Cast for Tuesday, October twenty first, I am Eleanor Klibanoff, law and politics reporter at the Texas Tribune, joined as always by my co host, editor in chief Matthew Watkins.
How's it going, Matthew?
Speaker 2Pretty good?
How about yourself?
Speaker 1Pretty good?
I don't have much to talk about this week.
Speaker 2We already talked off camera with our special guest about tortillas and texts.
Texts every weekend.
Speaker 1If we run out of things to talk about, we will revisit the subject.
But something tells me we will not, because this week we have a very important conversation to sort of pick back up on that we've discussed already on this podcast once or twice, but is becoming the predominant political story for the next six months or so because we actually have a three way race for the US Senate on the Republican side of the ticket, where incumbent Senator John Cornyn will be facing off against current Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, which we knew they've been sniping at each other for months now, but we now have our third candidate, which is a US Representative Wesley Hunt, who finally, after months of speculation, declared that he would be running for the seat.
For those who, I do want to pick a bone with Renzo Downey, who is the author of our subscriber politics newsletter at the Blast who I believe his headline of the newsletter when Hunt joined was hunt is in, when so clearly right there is the hunt is on.
So the hunt is on, and we have quite the race ahead of us.
So we're going to talk about what this means for the next you know, six months of campaigning and the future of the seat.
Speaker 2He hopes it doesn't become a snipe hunt.
You will, uh do you know that?
Speaker 1Don't is a reference to So discuss that and see if anyone else can help Matthew, you know, be a better audience for his jokes than me.
We're joined by Gabby beer and Baum, the Washington correspondent for the Texas Tribune, where she covers the Texas congressional delegation and the impact of federal policy on Texas.
Gabby, thanks for joining.
Speaker 3Us, thanks for having me back.
Speaker 1And Chad Hasty, the host of The Chad Hasty Show, which airs weekdays on KFYO and Lubbock and other stations across the state.
Chad, thanks for being here.
Speaker 4Yeah, thanks for the invitation.
Speaker 2Chad.
You know what snipe hunting is.
Speaker 4Right, Yeah, I know, I don't know where you were going.
Speaker 2Okay, thanks.
Snipe hunting is when you like take a new hunter out into the woods or wherever you're going, like late at night, to tell them we're going snipe hunting, which is really just a ploy to like ditch them alone on a field or something like that.
It feels like practical joke.
Right, Yeah, you're good.
Speaker 4Yeah, that's yeah, you got here.
Speaker 1Yeah, that's a actually was a very good thank you.
That was a very good reference, very good potential metaphor.
I'm sorry for not knowing more about hunting.
Okay, So to get into this, I do think we should sort of briefly go through the candidates and where they each stand at this point.
And Gabby, maybe you can sort of kick us off before we get to Wesley Hunt.
We had this race Paxton Cornan that's been sort of foreshadowed for months now.
Can you talk a little bit just about like what each of them represent and where they stood before he entered the race?
Speaker 3Yeah, I mean I think with Cornan and Paxton.
Speaker 5You have, you know, the sort of perfect representation of the establishment versus more political outsider dynamic.
Even though right Paxton is an elected office holder statewide, is the Attorney General.
John Cornyan has been the Senator from Texas since two thousand and two, he was attorney general before that.
Paxton has been ag since the twenty fourteen elections.
Speaker 3And these are two heavy hitters right in Texas politics.
Speaker 5Paxton has definitely been attacking Cornant from the right, going after some bipartisan work he did on a gun bill, his you know, bit slow to support Trump in the twenty twenty four primary.
And Cornet is sort of relying, I think on He's been promoting his pro Trump voting records, sort of hugging Trump, his experience, and like you mentioned, now we've got a third entrant.
Speaker 1Into the race, right yeah, Chad, I mean, what were you sort of hearing about these these two contenders and like how people were sort of feeling about the race as it stood so far.
Speaker 4You know, it's been interesting because you have Ken Paxton, who Mike got me and said, is seen as the outsider even though he's been an elected office for Cornyn has been there even longer, he has seen as the more establishment and for conservatives, a lot of my more conservative listeners who will get in touch with the show, they're tired of Cornyn.
They don't like that he worked with Democrats on the gun bill, they don't like, they don't trust and really believe that he is that much of a fan of Donald Trump.
I don't think there's anyone out there that can envision Trump and Cornyn hanging out together and going and getting a cup of coffee, hanging out on the golf course.
You've never seen that.
You have seen that with Ken Paxton and Donald Trump.
So I think that for a lot of listeners, they believe that that is a real relationship in that more importantly, when Cornyn is out of excuse me, when Trump is out of office, which will be happening in a few years.
When Trump is out of office, who are they going to get to defend them?
Are they going to get Cornyn style politics or Paxton solid politics?
And most of my listeners seemingly right now straight towards the Paxton Maga style of politics that they believe they can count on.
Speaker 2Yeah, I feel like we need to come up with a new way of describing this from establishment versus outsider when the outsider is the one who like hangs out with the president at mar A Lago and like we can picture golfing with him and the other guy, you know, we can't, right, It's I guess maybe like more like old establishment new establishment or something like that.
I don't know, like traditional Republican versus Trump, Republican in.
Speaker 1The woman embrace out in the cold.
Speaker 2Yeah.
And of course Cornyan would I think, dispute any of this craising right, as he has repeatedly and vocally stressed his alignment with Trump on virtually every issue since since Trump is coming to.
Speaker 1Office, right, and he does vote very reliably with Trump's agenda.
So there's sort of the to your points, the do they get a beer together?
Or is corn And carry you know?
But is corn and carrying the mantle of his policies in Congress perhaps more?
Speaker 2Maybe interested if you agree with this, Chad, more of a style versus substance, style over substance conversation on those two things.
Speaker 4Totally.
I think it is a Cornyn has the record, and I think that if you look at Republicans in the Senate, there are a lot, if not boast, if not all of Republicans who are in the Senate, the old school Republicans, the Lindsey Grahams, the John Cornyns, the Mitch McConnell's, even though Mitch is kind of kind of moved back towards not liking Trump.
But the old school Republicans in the Senate, I don't believe that they really like Donald Trump that much.
I think they put up with them and they go with what's politically expedient.
Whereas Ken Paxton, I think it's a little bit more believable that, yeah, those two would go golfing together.
Speaker 1Well and Gabby, I mean they were sort of already the establishment necessarily as a binary group, but just sort of like the groups that fund these races, that put money into this were sort of backing Cornyn, not thrilled already to have him be challenged by Paxton, sort of kicking off this potentially very expensive primary, and sort of how were they feeling about, you know, like the money class, how were they feeling about this race, and then how were they starting.
What was the word on Hunt entering before he did.
Speaker 5I think the word on Hunt from the sort of dec establishment would be contempt they you know, as he was right signaling that he was interested in the race, exploring it, they put out a series of memos to donors and eventually publicly discouraging him from doing so.
He you know, it's been reported that he met with Tim Scott, the chair Senator Tim Scott, the chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which is Senate Republican's sort of campaign arm and they told him and know on certain terms, no, you know, we're backing John Cornyn.
And so you know, they already have been frustrated by the Paxton primary at all, and now they have the other person.
And I think for Hunt that also plays into what he's trying to do, which is say I'm not part of the establishment.
Speaker 3Yeah, they don't want me here.
Speaker 5That's for a reason, and trying to sort of claim the Paxton Es commantle among the Texas primary electorate.
Speaker 1So let's talk about Wesley Hunt.
Like you said, people were not thrilled that he was going to enter the race, but he has.
Now he is, you know, a current sitting congressman representing a district in Houston.
Gabbie.
Who is he, what does he represent and how is he positioning himself.
Speaker 5Yeah, I mean Hunt is a second term congressman, so he doesn't have a huge record right actually in Congress.
I think how he would describe himself as he's someone who could sort of bridge the divide between the sort of old money, old guard Republican establishment and the sort of newer Maga energy.
It's been a huge ally of President Trump's.
He was out stumping for him all through twenty twenty four on the trail.
You know, his district can take both the sort of old donor class in West Houston and Tom Ball right super Maga suburb area.
So I think his goal would be to try to replicate.
Speaker 3That coalition statewide.
Speaker 5Obviously he has, you know, does not have the record that either Paxton or Cornan has legislatively or in terms of what Paxton's done with the Astorney General's office.
And so I think for him, it's it's more about trying to position himself as an heir to the sort of mega credentials more than running on his record.
Speaker 1Ched what's the sort of name recognition there with with Wesley Hunt.
Speaker 4Not much.
He's been coming on my show starting going back to you know, late last year, he was coming on the show quite a bit raising that name.
Speaker 1I D.
Speaker 4That's when I went, Okay, this scene s he's running for some you know, you don't have a guy from you know, that part of Texas coming out to West Texas that often.
So he started coming on raising his name.
I D he doesn't have great name.
Speaker 1I T.
Speaker 4Those who you know are diehard talk show listeners, they may know who he is, or at least they've heard him.
But is he is well known as Paxton?
No, he is well known as Corynn.
Absolutely not nowhere close.
But what I have heard from folks who like Wesley Hunt, it's usually a younger Republican, a younger demographic or a Republican, and also someone who looks at Cornyn and goes, I don't think I can vote for Cornan Paxton.
I don't like the either real or perceived baggage that Paxton carries with him.
Leslie hunts Hey, he's conservative, he's uber conservative, he's uber maga.
Why not?
Speaker 2So?
The million dollar question I think that everyone is sort of asking and maybe not sure the answer now is who does Hunt's inclusion in the race hurt more?
Cornyn or Paxton?
What's your opinion on that?
Chad.
Speaker 4I believe it hurts corn And here's why.
I think that there are there's a certain segment of conservative Republicans who won't vote for Ken Paxton because of the baggage.
I think that they won't vote for Paxton and they don't want to vote for Corny.
They were looking for somebody.
Now I think he takes votes away from Cornyn and that's what gets Paxton and Cornyn into a runoff.
I think that again, I think Wesley Hunt wants to win.
But if Paxton was still up by fifteen to twenty points in the polls, I don't think Hunt would have announced it right now that he was jumping into this race.
Speaker 3Do you agree with that, Gabby, Yeah, I think that's definitely a fair point.
I think the sort of the other side of that would be.
Speaker 5And I've heard this from some academics that you know, cornyin kind of has what and it's hard to like, you know, put these on ideological spectrums, but corn has we could call the center right lane to himself.
And now you have both, even though obviously Cornyn wants support from more MAGA voters.
Now you have both Paxson and Hunt in the sort of mag Lane and that could potentially dilute that vote.
I guess that would just be the other side of that.
But I go back and forth because I feel like I see both sides, and a lot of poles show he's pulling fifty to fifty from both or close to it.
Speaker 2So I have a poll in front of me, ut Tyler Pole, which was admittedly taken in the field back in September before Hunt went into this race.
In the among the Republican primary electorate, they asked, you know who you'd vote for, Cornyn Packson.
Cornan led thirty nine thirty seven with twenty three percent undecided.
With Hunt in the race.
It was Paston thirty one, Cornin twenty nine, Hunt fourteen and twenty six percent undecided.
So actually the undecided number went up three percent with Hunt in the race, which I thought was interesting.
But would to you know, support both of y'all's theory that at least, you know, maybe not in a massive way.
But from that poll, Hunt pulling more Cornan voters than Paxton voters.
Speaker 1That is interesting because right I think, you know, you might think from the outside, well, if he and Paxton are fighting over the same voters, But I do think that the Paxton, you know, like you said, the real or perceived baggage is sort of the wild card here as much as anything, and is interesting.
Hunt is sort of starting himself off.
He's not saying I'm Paxton without the baggage.
He's saying, oh, I'm a younger Paxton, which is sort of, you know, certainly not an issue that's been raised around Ken Paxton.
He's younger than John Cornyan, younger than many of our elective officials.
Speaker 2But Gabby, you I think pointed out or someone pointed out in the story that you wrote this week last week last week, that maybe he doesn't have to go after Paxson for the baggage because other people are going to go after packing yourself, let the people.
Speaker 5Yeah, it kind of feels like the Spider Man meme where everyone's pointing at someone else.
Right, Like Cornan is attacking Paxton constantly in Cornon's allies, so there's no need for Hunt to necessarily do that, especially trying to win those same voters.
Hunt is attacking corn and I think to sort of try to that helps prove his uh, you know, his magat credentials.
Speaker 1Uh.
Speaker 5And then Paxton is also attacking Cornin although for the most part Pakston has that really started spending and so with everybody sort of pointing at each other, yeah, it sort of quits a scenario where there's going to be negative chatter about each person, but maybe coming from a different one.
Speaker 1I mean, Attorney General Ken Paxton has since before he even entered office, it had some had some cloud hanging over him with different scales, and you know, he has withstood an impeachment attempt, most of his legal issues have been resolved.
He has been elected three times the state wide office.
Despite that, Is there any reason to think now is different?
And is the divorce playing into that at all?
Speaker 2Chad?
Speaker 1Do you have a sense of that.
Speaker 4I don't think any of the other stuff really matters for the average Republican voter.
I don't think any of that matters.
Maybe the divorce plays in a little bit.
I this, I mean, let's let's let's be honest here.
This isn't two thousand and one.
This isn't uh, you know, the the old school Bush Republican Party where you know, if you had a divorce or you cheated on your wife, that was automatically you're you're exiled.
Uh, you know into uh, you know, into the uh, you know, out of the Republican Party that's not this Republican Party.
Uh.
So I don't think there's a huge focus there.
Again, I think it's a very small selection of Republican voters who look at Paxton and go, if you didn't have that baggage, I would vote for you, But they can't vote for Corning.
So they needed that other person.
And I think that's where Wesley Hunt comes into play here.
And you look at Cornyn and you look at the Paxton camp, the Paxton camp.
Aside from some Twitter comments, no one's really punched down at Wesley Hunt.
The Corner campaign went immediately after Wesley Hunt and went after him pretty hard on a few things that most voters don't care about right now.
Anyway, he's missed two hundred votes or whatever.
No one in the Republican primary at this point cares about that.
So I think, again, the baggage, you know, the only baggage that really matters, I think for Republican voters, Kid, I think it's a very small select number is the divorce and how some of that may or may not be playing now.
Jen.
Speaker 2It's been interesting though, because when Paxton entered the race, the conventionalism and the polling seemed to suggest that he had a very large lead over Cornyn, and that lead pulling seems to suggest has either shrunk significantly or disappeared.
You know, there has been, you know, as has been mentioned, some negative headlines.
The divorce, the you know, the impeachment trial in part was centered around you know, accusations that he was having an affair with someone, I mean, the impeachment also, you know, I mean a lot of very conservative people in his office directly accused him of a crime.
I mean, And the US Senate race is different than an attorney general race, Like, I think probably more people in Texas know who their senators are than know who the attorney general is.
I'm curious, I sort of I hear you say that, and I believe you, and I think you're probably right that some of these problems don't have an effect on you know, Paxson among the Republican primary electorate.
But then I see his le sort of evaporating, and I'm trying to figure out what accounts for that?
Is it a mirage?
Are these things starting to land with him?
Like?
What do you think about that?
Speaker 4I think that it's it's where money comes into play.
And you have the Corning campaign and money that from from the Republican I guess Republican Senate Committee that has come in and really spent a lot millions of dollars already backing John Cornyn and promoting Hey, John Corn's best friends with Donald Trump.
Those two like each other.
John corn has voted with Donald Trump ninety nine percent of the time.
Not wrong, by the way, but they're promoting all the good things.
And as Gabby mentioned, the Paxton camp, they've done a lot of online stuff.
They've done, you know, some tweets, but they haven't gone full throated after John Cornyn yet in TV ads.
So that's that's where the money war comes in the play here.
And who's going to be best, uh, you know, the best in the best area with money, and right now that's John Cornyn.
He's able to get his message out there.
And and you know, I still go back to there are so many voters they don't pay attention unfortunately, Uh, they don't pay attention to what happens in down in Austin.
They're not always paying attention to what's happening in the legislative process, and when it gets to some of the politics and all that, they really don't pay attention.
They care about the votes, and they care about what they see on TV.
And uh that that right now has I think that's what's brought up John Corn's numbers and lowered Ken Paxton's numbers.
Speaker 1Yeah, Gaby, can you talk us through a little bit more like where the money stands and what that says about their prospects.
Speaker 5Yeah, so the corn in camp, and I would say, you know, more of the super pack that's backing him, and that's you know, being managed by Chris los Avita, right, Who's Who's Trump's guy.
They've you know, the constellation of pro enforces have spent I think close to thirty million dollars on this race.
And I think if you turned on the TV right in any of the media markets in Texas, you know you're seeing pictures of Corn in with Trump and that that you know, ninety nine percent pro Trump voting record, stuff like that.
The backs and campaign, like Tad mentioned, really has.
Speaker 3Not spent money at scale, and so I think.
Speaker 5You know, there they feel like they can wait, they can afford to wait until later in the race.
Speaker 3They also have a lot.
Speaker 5Less money than the corn In campaign, and so I think we'll have to see once they start spending how that changes things.
But I think a Cornin optimist would say, yeah, he's closed the gap.
All this polling shows that it's really close, and a pessimist might say, well, you know, even in these races, he's an even in these polls, he's a sitting incumban, and he's not really getting over forty percent.
And as you mentioned, there's still you know, about a quarter of the elector and most of these polls that haven't decided.
Uh, And you know that's one factor.
The other factor is, I think this will be interesting too, more independent leaning voters, which primary do they end up voting in if at all, you know, do they end up voting in their Republican primary, credit primary or sitting out?
And so I think these are some of the things that we still don't know yet and are going to develop.
Speaker 2Yeah, I mean, I think the conventional wisdom, as we the thing we haven't talked about with Hunt is that three candidates increases the likelihood of a runoff.
And if you are the establishment candidate, if you are the incumbent, a runoff is not a place you want to be, and so that alone could could could hurt Cornan in that way.
I want to circle back really quickly to something that I find incredibly fascinating.
Gabby.
You mentioned the NRSC right, the UH, the the Republican kind of arm campaign, arm for for for the Senate, and they're strong support of Cornan.
I'm going to read a handful of quotes from n r SC communications director Joanna Rodriguez that have come out in recent months.
What Ken Paxon has put his family through is truly repulsive and disgusting.
No one should have to endure what Angela Paxson has, and we pray that she chooses to stand up for herself and family during this time.
That's one quote.
A lot of people who trust Kim Paxton get lied to, so it isn't shocking to learn he's also cheating on his taxes in personal finances.
Texans deserve a senator who protects children, not one like Paxton, who signed off on your tax dollars funding the woke left.
And Kim Paxton's incompetence is chief law enforcement officer has allowed crime to run rampant across the lone Star state.
They also try to Wesley Hunt for personal ambition for running to this race instead of you know, thinking through.
It's wild to me to hear the NRSC, which is devoted to electing Republicans to the US Senate, be blasting perhaps the front runner in the Republican primary in that kind of language, you know, a year before election day.
It tell me a little bit about like, what what's going on here?
And are they not worried that all these quotes are going to come back and bite them when if we get to a position where Ken Paxon is the nominee.
Speaker 5Yeah, I mean Joanna is not shy.
That's certainly part of it.
A.
I think the things to understand are one, like, these organizations like the NRSC exist to protect their own right.
I mean, their number one job is protecting their incumbents.
Number two is growing the map, right is adding seats and the incumbent.
You know, the incumbents will give them hell if they feel like, you know, they're not getting they're not getting properly helped there.
Speaker 2A B.
Speaker 5They feel like they've a finite amount of resources.
This is a big map.
They're trying to pick up a seat, in Georgia, they've got to defend a seat in Maine, they've got to defend a seed in North Carolina, maybe Alaska comes into play.
You know, they don't want to be spending money in Texas, and so they feel like if they're going to spend, they'd rather spend in the primary to help Corny then have to you know, keep spending through the general because they do feel that Paxon is vulnerable in a general election, you know, and people can.
Speaker 3Argue about whether that's true or not.
Speaker 5If I've heard some people say, you know, maybe Cornon wins by eight and Paxson wins by four, you know, and some people say, no, this really does feel like it's a liability.
Speaker 3Given what happened in eighteen with Senator Cruz.
Speaker 5Right, But I think the nrsc's mission right now is to a protect the incumbent and be properly adjudicate their resources.
And you know, they'll say, they'll say, any dollar we spend in Texas is a dollar that could have been spent in Maine, or in North Carolina, or in Georgia, and we don't want to have to worry about this red state.
Speaker 4Right.
Speaker 5But yeah, I mean I think there's obviously a real chance that Ken Paxton becomes the nominee.
Speaker 3And then they are going to have to support him and perhaps eat their.
Speaker 1Words a little bit and listen.
It doesn't This is not the most important part what we should say in Texas the attorney general is not the top law enforcement officer.
They are the top lawyer.
They have no criminal independent criminal jurisdiction.
It doesn't matter anyway.
The other piece of this that we don't yet have is the much desired Trump endorsements that could sway this a lot.
JAHI, where do you see that going and how much of an impact do you think that makes?
When we do hear from the president.
Speaker 4I think Trump stays out of it unless something insane happens.
I just I think that Trump he want one.
He wants the vote of John Cornyn while John Cornyn is there, so he doesn't want to upset that.
And John Cornyn has for the most part, been very loyal to Trump while Trump's been elected and in office.
Has Cornyn made other comments while Trump's not in office, Absolutely he has.
But while in office, Trump or excuse me, Cornyn has been a loyal soldier.
Trump appreciates loyalty we all know that we've seen that before that Trump appreciates loyalty.
I think he stays out of it.
I don't think that he endorses in a primary.
If it goes to a runoff, maybe maybe he would, but I don't think the politics of it right now for the White House, I think they look at it and go where, we don't want to touch this because we don't want to anger either side because we're going to need their vote at some point.
Speaker 1Yeah, certainly, right, It's like it could sort of bring all of this to an end pretty quickly if he did intervene.
But you're right that there's sort of not a huge strategic benefit to there to the Trump camp to do that.
Speaker 2Yeah, should we talk about the Democrats.
Speaker 1The other side of the ticket.
I was just going to say, yeah, there is another race particular.
Speaker 2Yeah, you know James Talerico, Colin Allred, so far, so far, tall Rico of course.
You know a lot of like early Beto vibes, you know, in terms of ability to raise money, getting some.
Speaker 1Attention, Barack Obama shout out.
Speaker 2Barack Obama's shout out, you know, excited people on social media, all those types of things.
I'm looking at this ut Tyler pole, which you know pulls the hypothetical matchups, has Cornan beating tall Rico by six, has Paxton beating tall Rico by one.
If you look at Colin Allred and also has uh Tallerco actually beating Hunt by one, although there's a lot of undecideds in all those numbers.
If you look at all Red, h Cornan beating all Read by six, beating Paxton by three.
Speaker 1Already beats Paxton by three.
Tall Rico loses to Paxson by one.
Speaker 2Is that what you said first?
And before we go into that, go ahead, Chad, give us the uh, give us tell us what we should be thinking about these polls, you know, more than a year ahead of the election season.
Speaker 4They're fun to talk about.
They're fun.
It gives us something to talk about.
But it doesn't matter I prove it.
You know, it's one of those I've seen how many times have we seen this from the Democrats and the the the early race that that's out there, whether it was Beto or even calling all Red.
Hey, we're excited, this person has momentum.
We're so far away and they're beating Republicans.
Have the numbers in Texas Republicans are going to turn up the vote.
We know that they're They're going to show up for their guy.
I think, no matter who it is, I'm not that part honestly does not worry me.
Who gets the nomination and if tall Rico or all Red is going to be able to beat them if I were the Democrats, and they will not listen to me, I know this, But if I were to give advice to the Democrats, go all in with tallar Rico.
You lost with all Rid already, go all in now with Tall Rico, save your money in the primary, and just get ready for an all out war in the general election.
And I mean Tall Rico I think is the Democrats' best bet as of right now.
Colin Alred has shown that he can't win.
He can't beat John Cornyn, He's not going to beat Ken Baxton.
Democrats kind of want that outsider, that younger voice.
To me, that's Tall Rico.
He presents a different argument that's out there.
Again.
I don't think that he can win.
But if I were the Democrats, I'd put all the money, all my cards on Tall Rico and tell Colin Alred it's time to bow out.
Speaker 2Geby.
Do you think the Republican establishment, the people working for the campaigns agree, would they rather face already over tall Rico.
Speaker 3I think they'd rather face Jasmine Crockett.
Speaker 5Because they are definitely trying to push polls that show her head and promoting that narrative, which she's well aware of.
Speaker 3But yeah, I mean I kind of yeah.
Speaker 5I think from what I can tell, they feel like they could win either way, and I certainly all the history would back that up.
Speaker 4Right.
Speaker 3It helps that they've already beat all Red, and.
Speaker 5You know, the attacks on all Read particularly, I think the attacks around trans women and men's sports right were really effective last cycle.
You know, those ads ran at scale last cycle.
That's probably already in people's minds.
Tallerco is newer, right, you have to go to the business of defining him, which they've already done for all Red.
Speaker 3So yeah, I think maybe that's that's probably part of it.
But you know, Taller Reco, that's what the primers be about.
Speaker 5Can he get his sort of name idea up enough to beat someone who like Colonel Read, who most people already know because he did run statewide.
Speaker 2So jed your confidence in the Republicans suggests to me that you don't think that the Republican primary voters should be making a what's our best chance in November calculation?
Here?
Is that?
Right?
Speaker 4No?
I think that the Republican primary voters should vote for who represents them and who they want to fight for them moving forward, because and again, until we see something that's different from the Democrats, they haven't shown that they can come out and win statewide office.
And so you know, taking down a US senator, taking a US Senate seat would be a huge monumental shift in Texas, and I don't see that with I don't think that with either of these candidates.
And I think with Ken Paxton and with John Cornyn, eventually the Republicans are just going to turn out and they're going to vote in this.
So I would know, I would just tell Republican primary voters, whoever you like the best, go and vote for that person.
Speaker 1Yeah, that's you know.
I do think a lot of the speculation about who can win, you know, at the at the general feel so far away right now from you know, what the average voter is thinking about.
To your point, Chad of like, how much does anyone follow any of this?
Like I don't you know.
I think the average voter is listening to the ads and going with what they know versus some like strategic three D chess game, probably a.
Speaker 2Game that the Democrats would tell you often doesn't work out very well.
Right, Like, it's harder than maybe we think to predict who actually fair will fare better in a general election.
Speaker 1Yeah, three D chess sometimes gets on top of you a little bit.
Yeah, you know, this is like a completely separate piece of this, But Gabby, I did want to just briefly touch on your story this week about a much sooner congressional race that is coming up just right around the corner.
Early voting has started for Texas eight Texas's eighteenth congressional district, which is, to put it lightly, a mess of a race.
We've got like a very confusing situation on our hands.
Could you just briefly sort of summarize what's going on there and what you're watching out for.
Speaker 5Yeah, I was trying to explain this to my grandma the other day, which was a very difficult task.
Speaker 3Yeah.
Speaker 5So people recall Texas eighteen has been without a long term solution for a while.
It's in Houston, it's had a history of having sort of really storied black Democratic politicians.
Speaker 3It had been Sheila Jackson Lee for years.
Speaker 5She died in the summer of twenty twenty four, you know, after the primary.
So the Harris County Democratic Party got together and picked the former mayor, Sylvester Turner to be on the ballot in November.
Speaker 3He won, he took.
Speaker 5Office in January, and then he passed away in March.
So the seat has been open ever since.
Governor Abbott set the special election date for this November, right, so early voting just started.
And what's even more confusing is that this election is taking place under the old lines rights to fill out a term that was elected under the old map, but seventy five percent of the voters in the current eighteen are being moved to other districts under the new map, So there's a lot of confusion about who can even vote.
A lot of neighborhoods, you know, in the northern end of Harris County that are right now in Texas eighteen that are going to be moved to twenty nine.
And candidates are really trying to make sure that voters know, hey, you can still vote in this special and it's going to get even messier, right, because there's like sixteen candidates, it's you know, almost certainly going to go to a runoff.
That runoff will happen in January or February, and that's going to run right into early voting for the March primary under the new lines, where Congressman Al Green, who right now is in the neighboring ninth got moved into the eighteenth under the new map, has heavily hinted he's going to end up running in that primary.
So this could end up being someone describes to me as a hell of a door prize where somebody you know has been running for months takes office and let's say February, and then immediately have to decide if they want to run in a primary against one of the most well known Democrats in Houston or sort of bow out, and then that seed could end up having another, you know, pretty old representative.
So there's just a lot of dynamics at play here age redistricting.
Speaker 3That's that's going to be a storyline for months in Houston.
Speaker 1I will say I was sort of cheered by your the detail in your story about how like the candidates were saying like they keep confronting people or like meeting voters who are having to confront the issue of Like the voters are like, well, didn't the lines get redrawn?
Am I even in this district?
How do I vote?
Speaker 2All this?
Speaker 1And it's like, well, people really know about redistricting, they have really been paying attention.
Doesn't help in this race.
I feel sorry for those candidates, but man, the word is out about for all.
Speaker 5I think a ton of awareness about redistricting from what I can tell from the candidates, and.
Speaker 3Like people very much know, Like, oh, but I don't.
Speaker 5Live in eighteen anymore, And the candid's like, no, but you still do for the purposes of this election and probably a runoff, you know, It's Yeah, it's really confusing for people there, especially because you know, for many of them, they haven't had right a representative for months.
They might have been kind of tuned out of this entirely.
A lot of people don't even know that the special is going on.
Speaker 1Yeah, for all of our you know, perhaps not for all of our I think correctly estimating how much voters pay attention to any of this, it appears that at least in the eighteenth Congressional District, where they are getting sort of pulled around by the powers that be.
They at least are very very attentive to what's going on.
Speaker 2We should just have like a we should record ourselves saying like, but most voters actually don't know or care, and we can just like have a soundboard in the podcast and.
Speaker 1Yeah, right, yeah, we should start and end everything.
That's a ceremonial.
Yeah exactly, well right, I mean, that is like such a complicated little corner of politics right now.
But obviously we'll be watching to see what happens with that, and then the real race is on the you know, for the the main primaries in twenty twenty six, which will be March third, the day in between my birthday and Alejandra Serrano's birthday.
So a big week for the politics team.
Speaker 2Press of the voters don't care about.
Speaker 1Voters don't care, that is for sure.
Well, thank you guys so much for joining us.
Chad, thanks for calling in from Lubbock, and Gabby from DC.
That is it for this week's episode of the trib Cast.
You can find us on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts.
Our producers are Rob and Chris, and we will see you next week.
