We Have the Power to End Family Detention in Texas—and We Must 

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In February, San Antonio pastor Dianne Garcia led a multi-day, 90-mile peace walk across South Texas in solidarity with children and families detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). I had the honor of joining Pastor Dianne for the final leg of her journey, marching across San Antonio with hundreds of people who had gathered from across the country to demand freedom for families and an end to family detention. 

As we walked, we chanted, “Kids do not belong in cages!” We sang songs about liberation, and how—as James Baldwin famously wrote—”all of the children are always ours.” At times, we held silence, praying with our feet and holding detained children and families in our hearts. 

Our march was a political action, a spiritual practice, a grief ritual, a block party, and a walking love letter to our communities, all rolled into one. Along our route, members of the local community came out to the road to wave, pray, offer us water and food, and express their support. It was a powerful experience that left me feeling deeply connected to the people around me. As an advocate, I found myself thinking afterward: We need more experiences like these.

The current administration relies on a strategy of “flooding the zone” with harmful policies that inundate our nervous systems with fear and sadness to overwhelm and paralyze any resistance to its state-sponsored violence and cruelty. People of conscience empathize with those under attack, we feel grief as we watch lives and families torn apart, and the horror unfolding around us takes a toll on our emotional and even physical health. 

The more time we spend anxiously doomscrolling on our phones while separated from each other and from meaningful ways to respond, the more helpless we feel and the more likely we are to numb out or shut down instead of taking action to protect our communities. Yet to give into despair would be to fall for the administration’s bluff and willingly give up our power. 

That’s why embodied, communal practices such as singing, marching, and dancing together are so important at times like these: they reconnect us to our bodies, to each other, and to our power. They are ancient, effective tools for shaking off despair, fear, overwhelm, and paralysis. When we come together to share stories, make music, or eat a meal with others—anything that brings us into our bodies and into community—we can access courage and even joy in the face of suffering. 

These kinds of shared experiences also open the door to deep connection and belonging that build trust and motivate people to protect and support one another. As we take action alongside each other, this generates further energy and hope, fueling our ability to respond to injustice with creativity and sustain our resistance over time.

All of this is crucial, because it has never been more important for us to advocate for an end to family detention.

First, ICE is detaining families under dangerous, life-threatening conditions. Since Trump took office, ICE has detained more than 3,800 children and the daily number of children in immigration detention has exploded. At the Dilley detention center in South Texas, children are hungry and sick, imprisoned in squalid conditions without access to adequate food, clean drinking water, healthcare, or education. Hundreds have languished there for a month or longer. During a recent oversight visit, U.S. Representative Katherine Clark met a detained toddler who appears to have such a painful tooth infection that she cannot eat. This child is not receiving treatment, which places her in grave danger; a man seeking asylum who was detained in another ICE detention facility recently died from a tooth infection after being denied medical treatment.

Second, a growing number of families are at risk of detention. As ICE moves forward to drastically expand its immigration detention system and to imprison tens of thousands more people, including families and children, in repurposed warehouses, Congress is considering increasing the agency’s budget to fund its deadly violence, kidnappings, family separations, and prison camps for children. 

Even now, ICE is detaining children at hotels and in secret hold rooms in unsuspecting communities, in addition to imprisoning them in Dilley. 

(Courtesy of Trudy Taylor Smith )

Third, advocacy against family detention is having an effect, and a growing number of members of Congress are beginning to emerge as champions for this cause. After a family of three from her district was arrested in the process of seeking emergency medical care for their seven-year-old daughter, Oregon U.S. Representative Maxine Dexter’s advocacy helped secure the family’s release. Similarly, public outcry and Congressional oversight visits by Congressman Joaquin Castro, Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett, and others have contributed to the release of the Gamez-Cuellar family and five-year-old Liam Conjeo Ramos and his father. Castro has publicly stated that his “goal is to shut down Dilley,” and he notes that the number of people detained there has decreased since he first visited the facility in January.

Meanwhile, those with power or money to lose are attempting to cover up the cruelty of family detention. After ProPublica revealed the truth about distressing conditions at Dilley by publishing children’s artwork, handwritten letters, and recorded interviews, staff at the facility reportedly began raiding children’s cells to confiscate their letters and drawings. Later that month, the Department of Homeland Security released a public statement seeking to discredit reports of medical neglect and other well-documented abuses at Dilley.

We cannot let this cruelty continue. There are so many ways to take action, and even small acts make a difference when we do them collectively. We can volunteer with local mutual aid networks that support immigrants, and we can donate to support trusted advocacy organizations and service providers. We can educate ourselves about our rights when interacting with ICE, and share this information with people we know. We can choose to learn more about family detention, make other people in our lives aware of this issue, and come together to plan an event focused on freedom for detained families. Finally, we can use an online action tool, a specialized advocacy toolkit, or a simple phone call or email to advocate against this inhumane policy by contacting members of Congress and telling them to put a stop to it. 

Congress has the power to end family detention right now by passing legislation to make it illegal, such as the Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act or the Melt ICE Act. Congress also has the power to cut off the funding for family detention by refusing to allocate further funding to ICE during the current appropriations process, and by passing the Drain ICE Act to rescind the $75 billion that was allocated to ICE under HR 1 last summer. 

As hundreds of voices sang with Pastor Dianne in the streets of San Antonio, the children are always ours, and now is the time to ensure their freedom and safety by calling for an end to family detention. Now is the time to vote, march, pray, sing, dance, grieve, and advocate alongside each other until we bring about the future our children deserve. 

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Corpus Christi Cuts Timeline to Disaster as Abbott Issues Emergency Orders

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Editor’s Note: This article originally appeared on Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, non-partisan news organization that covers climate, energy and the environment. Sign up for their newsletter here.

City officials in Corpus Christi on Tuesday released modeling that showed emergency cuts to water demand could be required as soon as May as reservoir levels continue to decline. 

That means the region’s complex of refineries and chemical plants could face disruptions of their water supply sooner than previously predicted.

At a regularly scheduled City Council meeting at City Hall, Nick Winkelmann, Corpus Christi Water’s chief operating officer, presented five scenarios depicting varying success rates for the city’s emergency water projects. They showed a “Level 1 Water Emergency” beginning in May, in October or not at all. 

Previous city modeling had forecast the emergency, which requires a 25 percent reduction in all water use, in November, equivalent to about 30 million gallons per day (MGD) of water. Officials did not offer any clarity on how water curtailment might be implemented in the region.

“We are this close to a potential curtailment and we have not all sat down as a team to look at it. That’s a problem,” Council Member Kaylynn Paxson told the meeting.

Tuesday city council meeting (Screenshot)

Instead, the council on Tuesday approved hundreds of millions of dollars of funding for a last-ditch emergency groundwater import project from the Evangeline Aquifer that still doesn’t have permits.

“It’s the only thing right now that will keep us out of a Level 1 Water Emergency,” Corpus Christi City Manager Peter Zanoni told the council. “We’re taking a calculated risk and continuing the design and we’re going to start building the project in about five weeks without the drilling permits.”

In a best-case scenario, the project will start producing 4 MGD in November, Zanoni said. In the worst case, the city could invest in building the project, only for its permits to be litigated in state administrative court for two more years. 

“I think we have to plan for the worst-case scenario,” said Corpus Christi Mayor Paulette Guajardo. “We pray to God that this comes through, but if it doesn’t, we’ve got to be able to know what’s going to come.”

The council also approved plans to schedule a March 31 workshop to discuss what a Level 1 Water Emergency would entail.

“If we get to the point where we have to declare a Level 1 Water Emergency, we need to be ready for that and we have no precedent to follow. There’s no manual, there’s no video,” Zanoni told the council. “There’s a monumental task ahead of us to develop this.”

He said his team of 30 people had recently started working on Saturdays to address this problem.

Abbott Gives Emergency Orders

In prior days, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott issued several emergency directives in a bid to prolong Corpus Christi’s timeline to water shortages. On Monday, Abbott directed the Lavaca-Navidad River Authority to change its drought policy and delay cuts to Corpus Christi’s water supply. 

“Governor Abbott will utilize all necessary tools to ensure the Corpus Christi area has a safe, reliable water supply,” Andrew Mahaleris, Abbott’s press secretary, said in a statement on Tuesday.

The city is currently drawing most of its water from Lake Texana, 100 miles to its northeast, where rules by the Lavaca-Navidad River Authority stipulate a 10 percent reduction in Corpus Christi’s draw when the lake falls below 50 percent full, which authorities expect to happen in April

On Monday Abbott “directed the LNRA to ensure Corpus Christi water is not curtailed in the near term,” Mahaleris said in his statement on Tuesday.

Abbott directed the agency to move its curtailment threshold to the point at which Lake Texana reaches 40 percent “to further protect residents as the city forms long-term solutions,” Mahaleris said. Instead of cutting Corpus Christi’s water 10 percent when Texana hits 50 percent, the Lavaca-Navidad River Authority would cut the city’s water by 20 percent when Texana hits 40 percent, general manager Patrick Brzozowski told Inside Climate News in an interview at the agency office on Monday.  

Abbott’s order would in effect delay implementation of water curtailment, but result in twice as much water loss if the reservoir recedes to 40 percent capacity. That would buy Corpus Christi another month to bring new water supplies online before much larger forced cuts of water demand would take effect.

“The Governor is further stepping in and has waived regulations to ensure TCEQ can issue temporary permits on an expedited basis,” Mahaleris said, referring to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Such permits would allow the city to convey water down the Nueces River from new well fields it is now planning to develop. 

On Friday, Abbott’s office also ordered the suspension of some permitting requirements for Corpus Christi to send well water down the Nueces River. 

“Disaster is on the doorstep of the City of Corpus Christi,” Abbott’s chief of staff, Robert Black, wrote in an email to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality at 4:30 p.m. on Friday, five days after Inside Climate News reported the impending catastrophe. “But the normal permitting process takes several months, and Corpus Christi’s demand for water will soon exceed available supplies.”

Abbott in 2023 (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

The city’s two reservoirs on the Nueces River, Choke Canyon and Lake Corpus Christi, “may be depleted as soon as May 2026,” Black wrote in the email, which was provided by Abbott’s press office. The city’s online water dashboard previously indicated its reservoirs could dry by March 2027. 

Black’s letter said the Texas Government Code “authorizes Governor Abbott to suspend or supersede” any rule that “that would prevent, hinder, or delay necessary action in coping with a disaster.”

Abbott ordered the suspension of requirements for a “bed and bank” permit that regulates the quality and quantity of water Corpus Christi could pump from its emergency water wellfields into the Nueces River.

“The Governor is stepping forward to help the citizens and businesses of Corpus Christi avoid disaster,” Nueces County Commissioner Mike Pusley said in a statement to Inside Climate News. “But the rural communities that depend on water wells for their livelihoods will suffer as a result.”

Many of Pusley’s constituents from the incorporated county near the city’s well fields attended the City Council meeting on Tuesday to decry plummeting levels in their personal wells as a result of the city’s recent pumping. 

A spokesperson for the city of Corpus Christi, Elisa Olsen, expressed “sincere gratitude to Gov. Greg Abbott and our local legislative delegation for this decisive action” which “reflects a vital recognition of the record drought and its impact on the Coastal Bend.”

“The City is prepared to follow through immediately on this authority to further secure our community’s water future,” Zanoni, the city manager, said in a statement. 

Last week, Abbott, responding to questions from a KXAN journalist about reporting by Inside Climate News, threatened to take over Corpus Christi if the city didn’t take steps to avert a water crisis.

“We can only give them a little time more before the state of Texas has to take over and micromanage that city,” Abbott told TV cameras.

A Decade of Missteps

More than a decade of water planning missteps has led Corpus Christi to the precipice of an unprecedented economic disaster. The city and its port have tried and failed for years to build seawater desalination plants while drought deepened and reservoir levels fell.

“We’ve been in panic mode since the day we were sworn in,” Council Member Mark Scott, a title company owner who assumed his position in January 2025, told the meeting. 

Most of the region’s water supply goes to industrial users, including chemical plants and refineries that produce jet fuel for Texas airports as well as gasoline for the state. The region’s largest water consumer is a plastics plant operated by ExxonMobil and the Saudi state oil company, which opened in 2022. 

Now Corpus Christi is racing to develop the emergency water wellfields before its supplies run short. Those clusters of wells, which the city started in 2025, will pump groundwater into the Nueces River to boost water levels in Lake Corpus Christi. 

At current production levels of 4 MGD, those wells won’t prevent the city from entering a water emergency in May, according to city modeling presented Tuesday. 

If those wells produce 10 MGD by April, it still might not prevent the city from entering a water emergency in May. If the wells boost production and secure additional permitting by April, it could push the emergency to October. 

If, in addition to those conditions, the city receives permits for its Evangeline groundwater import project and it starts producing 4 MGD in November, the city could avoid an emergency altogether. 

The city also reported progress on its seawater desalination project and wastewater reuse project. It said containerized brackish water treatment plants could produce 4 MGD in 11 months or 21 MGD in two years. It did not present detailed plans for what to do in the case of an emergency. 

The city should be making plans to reduce its current water use, including by industrial water users, according to Todd Votteler, a veteran South Texas water manager and editor in chief of the Texas Water Journal. 

“Restricting current use is really the best short-term option,” Votteler, a former executive manager for the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority, told Inside Climate News. “While the ongoing debate over seawater desalination and other prospective water supplies is important, it is ultimately not relevant to addressing the current water crisis.”

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A Wall That’s Worth Defending

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When our nation’s Founders took the revolutionary step of creating a republic with no state religion, they likely never envisioned how religiously diverse the nation would become. Drive around my hometown of Fort Worth, or any populous Texas city, and you’ll see Muslim mosques, Hindu and Buddhist temples, Sikh gurdwaras, and Jewish synagogues, as well as Christian churches of all sizes and varieties.

Once-predominant Christians now account for less than two-thirds of Americans, and their faith has fragmented into hundreds of denominations that differ over theology, morality, and politics. One out of 15 Americans now belongs to a religion other than Christianity. Almost a third of Americans don’t identify with any particular religion, yet belief still flourishes. Over half of Americans consider religion very important in daily life; that share struggles to reach 20 percent in other economically advanced nations.

As America grows more religiously diverse, the Founders’ decision to separate church and state looks increasingly wise. Though it’s easy to spot flaws in the Founders themselves and the Constitution they crafted (the Electoral College, for instance, or the three-fifths clause), what Thomas Jefferson called the “wall of separation” was one thing they definitely got right.

Two centuries on, it’s easy to overlook just how novel that wall was in its day. Whereas both America’s adversary (Britain) and main ally (France) in the Revolutionary War officially endorsed one religion (the Church of England and the Catholic Church, respectively), the U.S. Constitution explicitly prohibited the “establishment” of such an official religion, instead guaranteeing individuals’ right to freely practice their own beliefs. The Founders also went against the grain in prohibiting any religious tests for holding public office, a requirement both in Britain and in many of the states at the time (North Carolina and Georgia, for instance, restricted public office to Protestant Christians).

As historian Steven K. Green notes, leading clergy of the day attacked the Constitution’s “irreligious” character—particularly the fact that, unlike most public documents of the time, including the Declaration of Independence and the Articles of Confederation, it neither invokes nor mentions a deity.

Scholars and jurists have long debated how church-state separation should be interpreted and applied, but it remains a cornerstone of our democracy. And it’s one worth keeping, according to most Americans. Fifty-four percent want the federal government to enforce church-state separation; 69 percent believe the United States should never declare an official religion—and with good reason: Just imagine the mess if the government tried to foist one religious group’s beliefs on so varied a people.

Yet that’s effectively what Christian nationalists are attempting to do today. This largely white evangelical movement, which holds sway in GOP politics, especially here in Texas, seeks conservative Christian domination over law and public policy.

Despite contrary evidence offered by mainstream historians, many leading Texas lawmakers and politicos apparently agree with Aledo-based David Barton that church-state separation is a “myth” liberals and secularists concocted to conceal the Founders’ alleged intent to create an explicitly Christian nation. The Texas GOP has pledged to work “toward dispelling” this purported myth. Both Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick and state Senator Mayes Middleton, a Galveston Republican, have declared there is “no such thing” as church-state separation.

At the Capitol, Texas lawmakers have sought to weaken Jefferson’s wall, especially in public education. In 2021, they required “In God We Trust” be posted in public schools. In 2023, lawmakers authorized school districts to hire chaplains as counselors, with no prohibition on proselytizing. In 2024, the State Board of Education gave its blessing to a “Bible-infused” K-5 curriculum featuring instructional materials more appropriate for Sunday school than public schools. And last year, lawmakers mandated that all public schools display one religious tradition’s sacred text—the Ten Commandments—and provide a daily period for prayer and Scripture reading.

These measures arguably promote one religion over others, and religion over non-religion, threatening to turn students, families, and teachers who don’t subscribe to Christian-nationalist religiosity into outsiders in their own public schools and communities.

As a recent book, Randall Balmer’s America’s Best Idea: Separation of Church and State, makes clear, what the author calls our “best idea” was no deus ex machina; it emerged from a particular history and particular coalitional forces. America’s “grand experiment of constructing a government without … an established religion,” Balmer writes, grew from an alliance of “two unlikely camps,” secular rationalists and—ironically—evangelicals. 

The latter group had their own history of persecution under state religion. In colonial Virginia, where the Church of England was the established religion, “a sheriff brutally horsewhipped a Baptist minister,” Balmer recounts as an example. Quaker William Penn, persecuted in Britain by the Church of England, and Baptist Roger Williams, who suffered at the hands of Puritan colonial officials, worked to free people from the yoke of official religion; they established colonies (Pennsylvania and Rhode Island, respectively) that offered religious freedom, setting a precedent for the later First Amendment.

Secular, Enlightenment-minded Founders like James Madison had their own reasons for rejecting state religion. They needed to accommodate the religious diversity already present in the new nation, where religious groups “rang[ed] from Catholics and Moravians to Jews, Quakers, and Dutch Reformed—and perhaps hundreds more.” Moreover, Madison linked religious establishment with political tyranny and violence; he wrote that “torrents of blood” had been spilled in official religion’s “vain attempt” to proscribe religious differences.

In rejecting official religion, the Founders created what Balmer calls a “free marketplace of religion”: Since no religious group holds a state-sanctioned monopoly over religious life, “religious groups … compete for adherents on an equal footing.”

Pushback to the Founders’ free-market approach, though, does have a long history. In the 19th century, for instance, the elaborately named National Association to Secure the Religious Amendment of the Constitution pushed for explicit acknowledgment of Christ’s will as the law of the land. Though this group’s efforts failed, it foreshadowed today’s Christian nationalism.

Then and now, Christian nationalists threaten a system that has actually benefited both government and religion. Though Americans haven’t always lived up to the promise of religious tolerance, we have been spared widespread sectarian bloodshed. Meanwhile, “religion has flourished in America,” Balmer writes, “precisely because the government (for the most part, at least) has stayed out of the religion business.” 

Separation has perhaps benefited no group more than evangelicals themselves. They have proved far more adept than other groups at adjusting to social and technological changes (think of their adroit use of digital media or their move to megachurches featuring multisensory worship experiences). And, of course, there’s the unprecedented political power evangelicals wield, especially here in Texas.

So why the eagerness of many evangelicals to kill the golden goose of separation? Balmer blames evangelical leaders’ (and President Donald Trump’s) “rhetoric of victimization.” However, he leaves unanswered the question of why they find such rhetoric so compelling. Other scholars offer possible answers. For instance, Glenn Bracey and my Baker Institute colleague Michael Emerson contend that Christian nationalists are defending a “religion of whiteness” against religious and racial diversity. Alternatively, Andrew Whitehead and Samuel Perry argue that Christian nationalism is less about religion than the pursuit of power.

Like other bedrock principles of our democracy—say, the separation of powers or freedom of the press, both also under threat today—church-state separation was born of mixed motives, has not always lived up to its own promise, and remains subject to shifting interpretations. At times, it has functioned more as a hedge than an impermeable wall (as when a Cold War Congress made “In God We Trust” the national motto). Yet, it’s no myth. It has prevented any one religion from gaining a state-sanctioned monopoly in the religious marketplace, and that has served us well, fostering a pluralism that makes us stronger and freer. As Jefferson’s wall faces perhaps its most severe tests to date, it is up to all of us, religious and nonreligious alike, to speak out in its defense.

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In Texas Senate Primary, the Influencer Class Was (and Is) the Problem 

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The Democratic U.S. Senate primary between state Representative James Talarico and Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett was marked by subtle, if unremarkable, policy differences and questions around whose fighting style better reflected the desires of Texans. 

Then, on February 2, former U.S. Senate candidate Colin Allred posted a video amplifying the claims of Morgan Thompson, a popular political content creator on TikTok, who alleged in a viral video that in a private conversation with Talarico on January 12, the state legislator referred to Allred as a “mediocre Black man.” 

As a Black man in Texas, I am required to know how white men, particularly white men like Talarico, talk about Black men. That particular combination of words seemed off, particularly for a politician who is as circumspect as Talarico. Arguably, Talarico’s greatest strength is that he is an effective communicator, in particular when he flips the arguments of the religious right on its head by reminding them that the Christian dogma they desire to use as a weight is actually a liberating force. So, for someone who is so effective as a communicator to label Allred, himself, as mediocre, did not pass the smell test. 

Soon after, Talarico’s campaign issued a statement denying the claim, saying that he was referring to Allred’s 2024 Senate campaign as mediocre—not the man himself. The allegation, however, had by that point turned the somewhat quiet primary into a firestorm—with influencers, from within Texas and outside, on both sides and on neither side, fanning the flames. 

By the end, the race became almost entirely consumed by the political influencer wars. But in the early days of the primary, Talarico and Crockett had mostly elected to keep their focus squarely on the issues facing Texans, largely because in many material aspects of their platforms they were nearly identical. Even their public polling numbers against potential GOP opponents were nearly identical. 

In this new age of online politics, it’s become undeniable that political influencers and content creators have a significant place in the ecosystem. But it becomes a problem when their arguing, infighting, and, yes, mudslinging, obscures a compelling, close race between two quality candidates. 

Take, for instance, Keith Edwards, a self-described “Democratic strategist, digital creator, and political commentator” with more than 1 million subscribers on YouTube, who was among the countless political influencers commenting on the race. Appearing on a January 23 episode of The Ringer’s popular Higher Learning podcast, Edwards earned himself an education in the racial dynamics of American politics from the podcast’s hosts, Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay.  In the episode, Lathan took umbrage at Edwards’ repeated use of the term “polarizing” during the course of their conversation for how Crockett could come across to some voters. Lathan chided Edwards, a white man, for his air of nonchalance as it relates to critiques of the way he discusses politics—in particular, political discussions he partakes in that involve and are about Black women. “Do you get why we want you to be nice and civil and partly protective of Black women? Do you understand where that comes from?” Lathan asked Edwards. 

To his credit, Edwards admitted that he hadn’t fully thought out why Black people would be reflexively defensive of Crockett, but he still noted that “I do think it’s just the partisan quality of her brand that is challenging in Texas.” 

This particular dynamic-—one wherein white leftists do not adequately reckon with the effects of their so-called colorblindness—is not one unique to Edwards. It is reflective of the current ideological row capturing the political left about how class and race intersect to render Black folks as invisible members of the working-class voting bloc. The specific concerns and problems affecting Black voters are simply lumped in with the economic anxieties of white voters and are never seriously addressed by candidates running on economic populism.

On this point, Talarico too—whose central message is that it’s about not left versus right, but top versus bottom—is going to have to meaningfully engage with and accept the critiques of Black voters and politicos and give those voters substantive policy that renders them as seen, full humans with separate, unique concerns that white voters do not have.

Black voters in Texas have, for decades, been asking for the political system to deliver a candidate that speaks with them in mind and showcases that the Black communities of Texas are not afterthoughts. As one 19-year-old college student, Natalie Greene, told American Community Media, it is important to her that Talarico speak to the concerns of her daily life. “As a young Black woman, I want to hear how he plans to advocate for us,” Greene told the outlet. “That means education, reproductive rights and the issues college students are facing right now. I want to see him looking young women in the eye and explaining what he’s willing to fight for on our behalf.” 

Similarly, other older Black women voters whom the outlet interviewed wanted Talarico to address the economic concerns of Black women, who have been adversely affected by a depressed job market; to show up in the communities where they live and work; and to craft specific policies that benefit those Black communities. It is these concerns, the so-called kitchen table platform, that will ultimately resonate with most rank-and-file Texans, those who are not so chronically online as to assign proof to allegations made by content creators and influencers because they are fans of the person making the allegations. 

Perhaps even more than a fighter, what Texans need in a United States senator representing the Lone Star State is the ability to articulate a vision and make it a political reality in the face of fierce opposition. This is a hostile and captive political environment, and the battle that’s now staring Talarico in the face is against that of a state apparatus that is entirely too willing to do the bidding of President Donald Trump and his cabal of white nationalist sympathizers in exchange for continued political power. 

For Democrats, these are grave concerns that a viral video or a podcast appearance from a political content creator or influencer will not solve, will not address, and will not fix. What has to happen more broadly, is that, like the new Texas Democratic Party Chair, Kendall Scudder, puts it, the state party recommit itself to being the party of the working class. It needs to become—arguably for the first time—the party of the Black working class, the Latinx working class, and the immigrant working class, and build out real solidarity and a unified message regarding not only the tyranny of the Trump administration, but the tyranny of Governor Greg Abbott and the tyranny of the billionaire class.

With the Democratic primary now behind us, questions of who’s more electable, who can create party unity, and who will be able to marshal both voters and other leaders in the Democratic Party to gather around them, will now be answered in the leadup to the general election. During the primary, questions of electability turned into referendums on race—because let’s be honest, folks know a dogwhistle when they hear it. 

That is not to say that there were not things that emerged from Crockett’s campaign that were concerning, like the lack of a campaign manager or the report from Semafor, later corroborated by The Atlantic‘s Elaine Godfrey in her own report, that someone in Crockett’s campaign ejected her from a rally because the campaign was frustrated by Godfrey’s reporting.

While Talarico’s margin of victory over Crockett didn’t exactly deliver a mandate, it did provide a semblance of closure—something that has not been afforded in the much more chaotic, dramatic, and vindictive Republican Senate primary. 

Despite this closure, there remain very real rifts that the Democratic Party and Talarico himself must repair. As Vox noted, Talarico did not fare well with Black voters, only gathering a scant 10 percent of the voters in that bloc, according to crosstab polling. He was, however, able to offset those losses by winning white and Hispanic voters, including in the major border counties that saw a shift toward Trump in 2024. 

For her part, Crockett vowed to support Talarico in much the same way he vowed to support her if she had won. Given the racial dynamics of the votes during the primary contest, Crockett’s support will be vital to ensuring that a significant number of Black Texans will vote for Talarico. 

Now that Texans have chosen their fighter in Talarico, the question naturally turns to whether or not he can galvanize the support that may have been eroded by the behavior of some of his loudest online supporters, who, like Edwards, have knowingly or unknowingly trafficked in misogynoir and anti-Blackness to make their case for why Talarico is the right fighter for the moment. 

The wounds of Black Texans are many, amplified by the nature of our internet lives and the tendency of white leftists to dismiss our concerns and our chosen candidates in the interest of unity. If we are to move forward and leave the messy, sometimes divisive conversations of the Texas Democratic Party primary behind us, it is going to require Talarico to do the work of meaningfully, substantially, and materially engaging Black voters; otherwise the fever dream of turning Texas blue will have to be deferred at least one more cycle. 

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