Strategists pinpoint reasons for 'hero' Dem's Texas loss: 'People will be upset'
The hotly contested Texas Democratic Senate primary concluded on Tuesday with state representative and Presbyterian minister James Talarico narrowly but firmly defeating Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett, concluding a clash between two rising Democratic stars who attracted intense national attention and heated rivalries between their supporters on social media.
It was a blow for a number of Black Democratic strategists and leaders who put a great deal of passion into Crockett's candidacy, and according to Politico, they are engaged in intense postmortem discussion about exactly where it went wrong.
"Democrats for years have praised Black women as the 'backbone of the party.' And Crockett, a former civil rights and criminal defense lawyer, rose to prominence in part by viral moments from House hearings," noted the report. "Just last month, she garnered praise from party insiders for her sharp criticism of Attorney General Pam Bondi during a House Judiciary hearing over the Justice Department’s handling of Jeffrey Epstein documents. Heading into Tuesday’s primary election — the first of the 2026 midterm cycle — there was optimism Crockett could harness her star power to beat Talarico, a seminary student and former teacher who drew national attention when Texas Democrats fled the state to try to block a major redistricting effort."
Some strategists believe the results speak to an uncomfortable tension with race in the party, with campaign strategist Maya Rupert, who worked on Julian Castro's presidential campaign, expressing frustration over “the way that we have seen people rally around new, more untested white male candidates.”
However, others think the issue is simply that Crockett did not run as effective a campaign as Talarico, who heavily outcompeted her in spending, organizing, and voter outreach.
Texas state Rep. Jolanda Jones told Politico, “People who don’t understand politics will be upset because Jasmine was their hero. But for people who understand politics, she literally had no ground game. This L is on her.” Another Black Democratic operative who wished to remain unnamed told Politico, “She ran a f------ terrible campaign that many will question if she’s running a campaign at all.”
Another complicating factor is that the day of the election, Dallas County, Crockett's home territory, was plunged into chaos by GOP policy changes and litigation that left thousands of people forced to go to unfamiliar polling places — leaving some to suspect a deliberate effort to sabotage Black voter turnout. Similar disruptions happened in Williamson County, a suburban area north of Austin that Talarico previously represented in the legislature.