Blue Horizons: Charting the Path Forward for Texas Democrats cover art

Blue Horizons: Charting the Path Forward for Texas Democrats

Blue Horizons: Charting the Path Forward for Texas Democrats

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This week on Party Politics, co-hosts Brandon Rottinghaus and Jeronimo Cortina take a tour through a Texas political landscape that’s shifting from the Rio Grande Valley to the suburbs of Fort Worth — and everywhere in between. Democrats across the state are trying to chart a path forward, and a wave of new candidates is giving us a clearer picture of what 2026 might look like.

We start in South Texas, where Democrats are still wrestling with the Latino vote. After several cycles of GOP gains, the big question is whether the party can reconnect with voters who once formed the backbone of its statewide coalition. Messaging, turnout, and trust are all on the table.

Up the ballot, the governor’s race is taking shape with Democrats:

Gina Hinojosa, the Austin state representative with a policy-heavy platform; Chris Bell, former congressman returning to a familiar statewide stage; and Mark White, Houston attorney hoping to turn legal credibility into electoral momentum. Additional candidates include Patricia Abrego, Bobby Cole, Angela Villescaz and Jose Navarro Balbuena. Each offers a different vision of how Democrats claw back statewide competitiveness — or whether that’s even realistic in 2026.

Over in the Attorney General’s race, Democrats are leaning hard into an accountability message. Candidates Joe Jaworski and Nathan Johnson also jump into the Attorney General's race.

Congressional politics aren’t quiet either. In TX-18, the Democratic runoff features Christian Menefee and Amanda Edwards, two well-known Houston figures vying to carry the district’s civil-rights legacy forward — but the race has become even more complicated. Because the special election and the next regular election overlap, both candidates also had to file for the 2026 primary at the same time, and longtime congressman Al Green has now jumped into that 2026 race as well, setting up a crowded and unusually tangled contest for one of the state’s most recognizable Democratic seats. Meanwhile, after Jasmine Crockett surprised many by entering the Texas Senate race, Colin Allred shifted gears and moved his campaign to the newly re-drawn TX-33, where he joins Julie Johnson in a district reshaped by redistricting and quickly becoming one of the cycle’s most closely watched battlegrounds.

Back home in Harris County, the open county judge seat is drawing heavyweight attention. Former mayor Annise Parker, Council member Letitia Plummer, and nonprofit leader Matthew Salazar are all pitching themselves as the next steward of the state’s largest county. The outcome could reshuffle Democratic politics in Houston for years.

And in Tarrant County, Democrats see an opening — Commissioner Alisa Simmons and Democratic Rep. Marc Veasey run for County Judge Tim O'Hare's seat which will test just how “purple” Fort Worth really is.

TOPICS:The landscape for Texas Democrats.How can democrats pursue the south Latino Texas swing vote?What power do progressives democrats have in the lone star state?Democratic candidates joining the Texas governor's race.Role of Texas Attorney General Reimagined.Candidates for Texas Attorney General race.Texas congressional district 18 race gets complicated.Texas congressional district 33 democratic candidates.Harris County Judge race.Tarrant County might be turning purple.In addition to YouTube, Party Politics airs every Friday night at 8:00 p.m. CT on Houston Public Media TV-8 (PBS), or listen every Friday at 7:30 p.m. CT on News 88.7. The audio podcast is also available on Apple Podcasts (or wherever you get your podcasts).
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