四虎影院

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Republicans have historically embraced small-town Texas. Now, Democrats are catching up

a red vote here sign points to the right, surrounded by other campaign signs
Mitch Borden
/
Marfa Public Radio
Outside a polling place in rural West Texas. Early voting for the November 8 election began on October 24 and runs through Friday, November 4.

About 3 million people live in rural parts of the state, and this year they鈥檝e gotten more visits from Democratic candidates.

A park in Snyder, Texas, was abuzz on a recent fall day. Kids were playing in a little league game, and a disc golf tournament was underway in the town about an hour and a half southeast of Lubbock, population 11,000.

Jeremy Levitt watched the activities unfold while he discussed his priorities heading into the November election.

鈥淔reedom,鈥 Levitt said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 basically it. Democrats want to take it, Republicans want to give it.鈥

Republicans have long courted voters like Levitt and the other 3 million people who live in rural parts of the state. But Democrats are starting to catch up. This year, Democratic candidates including gubernatorial hopeful Beto O鈥橰ourke have visited towns like Snyder, attempting to court the so-called rural vote.

Whether their efforts to convince Republican strongholds like Snyder to vote blue remains to be seen. Despite an active local Democratic party, about 85% of voters in Snyder cast a ballot for Donald Trump in the 2020 election.

A sign in Snyder, Texas supporting Governor Greg Abbott's reelection.
Sarah Self-Walbrick
/
Texas Tech Public Media
A sign in Snyder, Texas supporting Governor Greg Abbott's reelection.

Levitt said he was voting for incumbent Republican Gov. Greg Abbott because of his stance on issues like immigration and the economy.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want Texas to turn blue at all,鈥 Levitt said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e red for a reason.鈥
Tom and Jane Gibbins moved to Snyder over the summer. They said they鈥檙e voting red again this year because they鈥檙e unhappy with the way Democrats have controlled the nation.

鈥淚 want to take care of America, and it鈥檚 really fallen down this last time,鈥 Jane Gibbins said. 鈥淏ig time.鈥

The couple agreed that immigration and crime were their top concerns.

Drew Landry, a political scientist at South Plains College, said that鈥檚 why Republicans are focusing on those issues.

鈥淚f you want to put a stop to those things, you have to vote for us,鈥 is the message Republicans are sending, Landry said. 鈥淎nd so they're going into Snyder, they're going into Big Spring, and they're making that particular case.鈥

During a recent campaign stop in Fredericksburg, a city of about 11,000 people in central Texas, O鈥橰ourke avoided disparaging the Abbott supporters who were heckling him outside.

鈥淟est we be annoyed or judge these Abbott people鈥.let鈥檚 have a little bit of sympathy,鈥 he told his crowd of supporters. 鈥淭heir candidate never shows up to talk to them.鈥

The crowd at a Beto O'Rourke rally in Fredericksburg, Texas
Joey Palacios
/
Texas Public Radio
Voters gathered in Fredericksburg for a campaign stop by Democratic gubernatorial hopeful Beto O'Rourke back in August.

Almost 80 percent of the voters in Gillespie County, where Fredericksburg is located, voted for Trump in the 2020 election.

Scott Braddock is a political analyst and editor of the Quorum Report. He said O鈥橰ourke has taken the GOP to task in rural areas over several issues, including school vouchers

鈥淎nd so even in places where folks might not be willing to even consider voting for a Democrat, it means that the governor, the lieutenant governor and others have to have some answer on that issue to make people in rural Texas feel at ease about it,鈥 Braddock said.

Democratic congressional candidate John Lira is running against Republican Tony Gonzales in Congressional District 23, which stretches from just outside San Antonio and along the border all the way to just east of El Paso. Uvalde lies smack day in the middle of TX-23.

鈥淲e started knocking on doors,鈥 Lira said. 鈥淲e started engaging in a community that has not been engaged with for so long. And I think the work we do there could turn Uvalde blue for a generation.鈥

Lira said in rural areas like Uvalde where residents, especially Hispanics, are not voting, there鈥檚 only one thing he can do.

鈥淵ou have to show up to their county,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou've got to have to be present for them. You know, I have a district that is perfectly split between red and blue counties. And I have to go to the reddest of red to extend a handshake and to extend honest conversations to those communities.鈥