Texas
Related: About this forumCancel Culture Comes for Beto O'Rourke
When Democratic candidates for statewide office tour Texas, an atmosphere of doom and despair typically haunts their campaigns, like a pack of wolves shadowing a wounded elk. In 2014, I rode on state senator Leticia Van de Puttes campaign bus as she embarked on a multiday expedition to South Texas toward the end of her race for lieutenant governor. The bus, which departed from San Antonio, ran for two hours before breaking down around Falfurrias. A few weeks later, she lost by nearly twenty points.
Beto ORourkes first statewide campaign, when he challenged Ted Cruz for a U.S. Senate seat, by contrast, felt enchantedthe political equivalent of a Disney-animated romp with singing woodland creatures. For a year and a half, ORourke roamed the state, putting thousands of miles on a truck and a minivan that did not break down, visiting towns other statewide politicians of both parties wouldnt waste time in. He played with dogs, livestreamed even the smallest events, and had (sometimes awkward) meetings with local elected officials in conservative parts of Texas, trying to find areas of agreement. He spoke often, and in a pretty idealistic manner, about his hope that Democrats he fired up in small red towns would be empowered to create lasting change in their communities.
It felt wrong, somehow. I chatted with ORourke about how smoothly things seemed to be going after a picture-perfect event at the hip tent-hotel El Cosmico in 2017, in the decidedly not red town of Marfa, on one of those summer nights in West Texas when the sun sets in a peach-colored sky a little after nine. When I asked him what he would do if protestersanti-abortion, pro-gun, whateverstarted actively disrupting his events, denying him space in the public square and threatening the premise of his campaign, he said he would engage them in dialogue. That struck me as naive, but to my surprise those protests never materialized in the 2018 election. He seemed, in all things, charmed. Of course, he still lost, but by an unexpectedly small margin, all the while boosting down-ballot candidates in suburban districts he helped to flip.
Since then, ORourke has had an eventful few years, as has the nation, and his second campaign for statewide office has been more difficult. Gun-rights protesters and open carriers have been showing up at his events since well before he launched his bid for governor, drawn by ORourkes rash proclamation, during his brief 2020 presidential campaign, that he favored confiscation of semiautomatic weapons. His campaign is still hitting the road, talking to conservatives in rural places in Texas where no other Democrat, or even Republican, would visit. But this past weekend, in a small community an hour north of San Antonio, the ORourke campaign, hoping to hold a town hall, tried and failed to secure the use of four different event venues and was effectively run out of town.
Read more: https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-politics/beto-orourke-events-canceled/
SYFROYH
(34,204 posts)Beto went to far with gun confiscstion.