A Few Texas Primary Thoughts

Plus I indulge in a little political fantasizing.

Photo by SLT

So, as we know, Ken Paxton defeated John Cornyn for the right to face James Talarico in the coming general election for US Senator. The contest was not close. Via the Texas Tribune:

Via Ballotpedia, we can see that Cornyn lost ground since March.

While I am sure that Trump’s endorsement helped boost the final numbers, the reality is that he was a Donny-Come-Lately, as Paxton has been leading in the polls pretty handily the whole time. Here’s FiftyPlusOne’s polling average of the race:

Regardless of the role the endorsement played, there is little doubt that this contest has affected the evolution of the Republican Party. This is just another data point in its MAGAfication. There is an unfortunate (in my view) faction of the GOP electorate who value a certain kind of politician whose obvious ethical foibles are not deal-breakers.

I do not have a deeply thought-out theory as to why primary voters preferred Paxton. My back-of-the-envelope guess is that his relative youth played a part (Paxton is 63 and Coryn in 74). I think, too, that Paxton is perceived as a disruptive fighter (as per his lawsuits against the Biden administration). He just seems to tick a lot of the MAGA boxes.

This result has also been seen to be favorable to the Democrats. As The Hill reported: Cook Political Report shifts Texas Senate race toward Democrats after Paxton runoff victory. Note that the shift is from “likely Republican” to “leans Republican” before anyone reads too much into this. The only polling on Talarico-Paxton that I could find was The Texas Political Project: Senate Race Polling Reveals Republican Turnout Challenges – and the Trajectory of the Texas GOP.

The April 2026 University of Texas/Texas Politics Project Poll was the latest in a handful of surveys that included hypothetical two-party, head-to-head matchups between either John Cornyn or Ken Paxton as the the Republican candidate and Democrat James Talarico. In each matchup in the Texas Politics Project Poll, fielded April 10-20, Talarico led – by 7 points against Cornyn (40% to 33%) and by an indistinguishable 8 points against Paxton (42% to 34%).

The most important takeaway for me is that those numbers clearly include a lot of undecideds, and that in a deeply red state, a lot of those undecideds will revert to their default, which is Republican.

For the moment, however, I will indulge in something I try to avoid, which is a bit of wishful thinking, if not outright fantasy.

While, as a general matter, I would prefer that Democrats take the Senate in November as a bulwark against the authoritarianism and corruption that gushes from this White House, I also have a specific interest in the Talarico-Paxton contest.

Specifically, I would love to see someone as odious as Ken Paxton lose just on moral grounds (here is a list to consider). Losing would be just desserts for Paxton. Moreover, it would be just desserts for the moral cowards in the Texas State Senate who voted to acquit him during his impeachment trial. I would also like to see the voters, at least in small measure, repudiate Trump by having his endorsed candidate lose.

Having said all of that, I am not going to hold my breath. Ted Cruz, who isn’t exactly beloved, won re-election in 2024, 53.1 to 44.6 in 2024. Worse, Trump was +13.64 in 2024. Granted, turnout in a presidential contest and in a midterm are not the same.

Yes, in my fantasies, there will be a Blue wave sufficient to sweep Paxton away, but realistically, I fear that we will end up with Senator Paxton, which is worse than Senator Cornyn–perhaps not in terms of how they vote, but definitely in terms of corruption and what it means for the further devolution of the GOP.

FILED UNDER: 2026 Election, US Politics, , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Steven L. Taylor
About Steven L. Taylor
Steven L. Taylor is a Professor Emeritus of Political Science and former College of Arts and Sciences Dean. His main areas of expertise include parties, elections, and the institutional design of democracies. His most recent book is the co-authored A Different Democracy: American Government in a 31-Country Perspective. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Texas and his BA from the University of California, Irvine. He has been blogging since 2003 (originally at the now defunct Poliblog). Follow Steven on Twitter and/or BlueSky.

Comments

  1. Kylopod says:

    Beto O’Rourke never led a single poll in RCP. And he actually ended up doing more than 4 points better than their final average, in what is still the best performance to date for a Democratic Senate candidate in Texas since Lloyd Bentsen’s final reelection in ’88.

    RCP shows a few other polls on Talarico vs. Paxton than the U. of Texas one. Two show them tied, two others show Paxton narrowly ahead.

    Obviously it’s way too early to know who has the advantage, and polls can be wrong, of course–in either direction. But the limited data we have suggests Talarico is better-positioned to win than O’Rourke was.

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  2. @Kylopod: I do think that Talarico is better positioned than was O’Rourke, so hope springs eternal and all that. This year is likely to be even more anti-Trump than 2018, and Paxton isn’t the incumbent.

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  3. Scott F. says:

    Specifically, I would love to see someone as odious as Ken Paxton lose just on moral grounds…

    On moral grounds, you couldn’t design a greater contrast of choices than Paxton versus Talarico. If morality mattered a whit in American politics, your fantasy would come true. But, alas, it doesn’t.

    The oligarchs will invest heavily in making this race into Us versus Them and they will invent horrifying attributes for the national liberal Them to contrast with equally inventive virtues for the Texan real American Us.

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  4. Neil Hudelson says:

    Having said all of that, I am not going to hold my breath. Ted Cruz, who isn’t exactly beloved, won re-election in 2024, 53.1 to 44.6 in 2024. Worse, Trump was +13.64 in 2024. Granted, turnout in a presidential contest and in a midterm are not the same.

    @Kylopod:

    Beto O’Rourke never led a single poll in RCP. And he actually ended up doing more than 4 points better than their final average, in what is still the best performance to date for a Democratic Senate candidate in Texas since Lloyd Bentsen’s final reelection in ’88.

    Nate Cohn addresses these two points in his latest article, which I recommend.

    A Blue Texas May Be More Than a Dream for Democrats

    But beneath the state’s stable Republican voting record, extraordinary demographic shifts have put Texas Republicans in a much more vulnerable position. To an extent few would have imagined a decade ago, Texas’ status as a reliably Republican state now depends on elevated levels of support among Hispanic voters.

    In the latest national polls, Mr. Trump’s gains among Hispanic voters have vanished — and the Republican grip on Texas is in danger as a result. The latest New York Times/Siena poll is representative: It shows Democrats ahead by 30 points, 54 percent to 24 percent, among Hispanic registered voters nationwide. That’s better than Joe Biden’s margin in 2020 and getting close to Hillary Clinton’s margin in 2016.

    The signs of Democratic strength aren’t limited to the polls. Since 2024, Democrats have run well ahead of Kamala Harris’s showing in heavily Hispanic areas in special elections — including in Texas — and in the regularly scheduled elections in Virginia and New Jersey.

    Alone, major Democratic gains among Hispanic voters would be enough to make Texas a plausible battleground in November. Now consider the party’s expected gains among other demographic groups — including white voters — in this national political environment, and suddenly the conditions would seem to be in place for a Democratic breakthrough.

    To illustrate, consider this hypothetical: What would have happened in 2024 if Ms. Harris had fared as well as Mrs. Clinton did among Hispanic voters in 2016?

    If she had, Texas would have been about tied. That’s right, tied. There are more sophisticated ways to reach this conclusion, but you can see for yourself just by plugging the results by race from the 2016 exit poll into the 2024 exit poll. You get a contest within one point.
    […]

    But unlike the Democratic candidates in Ohio and Alaska, Mr. Talarico will not be facing an incumbent senator. He’ll be facing Mr. Paxton, who enters the general election campaign already damaged by tens of millions of dollars spent by Mr. Cornyn and his allies on negative advertisements. In recent months, polls have shown that more Texans have an unfavorable view of Mr. Paxton than a favorable one.

    While Texas Republicans have occasionally had a few close calls, this year’s contest is already different, at least by the measure of the polls. Back in 2018, Beto O’Rourke never led a poll collected by RealClearPolitics against Ted Cruz.

    This time, Mr. Paxton hasn’t led a general election poll against Mr. Talarico since January.

    (Emphases mine)

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  5. Michael Cain says:

    One of my long-time electioneering mantras is “Win the suburbs, win the state.” Colorado turned blue because the urban corridor suburban voters turned blue. Is there any evidence that Texas suburban voters are getting fed up with Texas Republicans?

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  6. Daryl says:

    Texas is another planet so logic need not apply.
    But the base (8% of voters?) voted in this primary and Cornyn still got over 30% of even those nutjobs.
    Paxton is Trump with absolutely no charisma. A corrupt liar with a bunch of sexual baggage. He even supported aquitting a pedo.
    Still I wouldn’t bet against Paxton.
    It’s planet Texas.

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  7. Kathy says:

    Don’t count your chickens before the hen lays the eggs.

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  8. CSK says:

    Trump has renamed Talarico as “Alfred E. Neuman.”

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  9. Kylopod says:

    @Steven L. Taylor:

    This year is likely to be even more anti-Trump than 2018, and Paxton isn’t the incumbent.

    One thing that helped Republicans in 2018 (besides the absurdly lopsided GOP-friendly Senate map) was that the party base seemed to “come home” in the end, in what has sometimes been attributed to the Kavanagh hearings. What has appeared in the last year that we really have never seen before is a faction of the far right that has turned against Trump. Ann Coulter tried to forge that kind of niche during his first term, and all it did was push her into further irrelevance. Now, it seems to have fire in it.

    The reasons why are complicated. You have the Epstein files, you have the increasingly vocal anti-Israel segment on the right taking advantage of the overall turn of the public against Israel since Oct. 7, you have the death of Charlie Kirk and the conspiracy theories it inspired, you have the terrible economic numbers; even Trump’s age is probably part of it, as they’ve become increasingly aware Trump won’t be around forever and they’re looking ahead to the party after Trump.

    It’s still not clear how widespread this new phenomenon is. But we didn’t see anything like it during Trump’s first term. Indeed, a lot of these people back then (if they were around) were at the forefront of complaining about the Russiagate hoax and cancel culture, themes that easily coalesced with defenses of Trump against his enemies. These weren’t Never-Trumpers, they weren’t even Liz Cheney types who turned against him after Jan. 6. It’s a very conspiracy theory-loving crowd, which used to be very in line with Trump when it came to stuff like the “stolen” 2020 election or the Covid “hoax.” Now, they’ve started to drift away from him. And I think it is part of what we’re seeing in the lack of enthusiasm among Republican voters this year, something that really wasn’t happening during his entire first term, where his base largely stayed with him in 2018 and 2020, it’s just that it was overwhelmed by massive turnout on the other side.

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  10. Gustopher says:

    Congress doesn’t seem to do anything — so why not vote for the craziest motherfucker around?

    Between gridlock, the filibuster and congress deferring to the executive, there’s not much happening that voters will feel in realtime. The feedback loops are pretty broken unless you are following very closely.

    Supreme Court confirmations are pretty major but the results take years to show up, if not decades. And even then… there were a not insignificant number of voters upset that Biden and the Democrats had overturned Roe v. Wade because of the timing.

    If you were designing a democracy to be as unresponsive to voters as possible, the US constitution would be a pretty good starting point. The founding fathers weren’t really fans of democracy, they just wanted local entrenched elites (themselves) in power rather than the king and English parliament.

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  11. Pylonius says:

    @CSK:

    That reference is way too obscure for the typical Trump supporter.

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  12. Kylopod says:

    @CSK:

    Trump has renamed Talarico as “Alfred E. Neuman.”

    He said that about Pete Buttigieg some years ago.

    @Pylonius:

    That reference is way too obscure for the typical Trump supporter.

    I disagree. That might be true about the youngest parts of his base, but they still skew older overall.

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  13. Pylonius says:

    @Kylopod:

    Yeah, but they still have to read, and even Mad Magazine might be too much.

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  14. Mr. Prosser says:

    @Kylopod: Trump better be careful how he treats Talarico who is a sincere evangelical. Any off-the-cuff disparagement trump spews could really alienate other evangelicals.
    In your opinion would religious conservatives prefer a fellow evangelical over Paxton and would they vote that way?

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