Republicans plot to keep Texas red in redistricting

“We’ve got a united map we’ve all agreed to,” Rep. Roger Williams (R-Texas) said of the state’s Republican delegation. “It makes it easier when we’re united — it doesn’t happen too often.”

The redistricting comes at a crucial moment. Texas has been at the center of two of the biggest trends in American politics: Democrats’ increasing appeal in affluent suburbia, and the rightward shift among certain segments of Latino voters. The remap offers Republicans a much-needed reset, after they watched a chunk of once-safe seats turn into battlegrounds in the last few years.

The new map will allow the GOP to slice up the rapidly diversifying suburbs while also leveraging its new strength in the Rio Grande Valley to create potential new pickup opportunities and boost the GOP’s chances of flipping the House next year. Sources stressed that though the congressional delegation in Washington is all on the same page, Republicans in both chambers of the state legislature could tweak the map before and after it’s officially introduced as early as this week.

But the nature of Texas’ population eruption over the past decade creates limits — both demographic and geographic — on how far Republicans can go in pressing their partisan advantage. Texas is gaining two districts in reapportionment, more than any other state. Yet virtually all of Texas’ population growth came from nonwhite residents, and the exploding areas of the state are generally around major metro areas, which have been racing toward Democrats.

“If they get greedy, they’re going to hurt their own people,” said Rep. Vicente Gonzalez (D-Texas). “There’s nine seats that need shoring up and two new ones. If they go beyond that, they’re going to be losing seats over the next decade.”

In fact, the incumbent in the greatest redistricting peril is probably Gonzalez, whose South Texas seat is likely to become much more competitive — and perhaps even Republican-leaning.

“Clearly I am,” Gonzalez said when asked if he was a Republican target in redistricting. His GOP friends in the legislature have warned him, he said.

Republicans began the last decade with 24 of the state’s three dozen congressional seats. For the first few cycles, the only truly competitive seat was a sprawling West Texas district that encompassed 800 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border. But by 2018, Democrats were able to wrest control of two suburban seats in Houston and Dallas that were longtime GOP strongholds. And by 2020, both parties were spending in over a half-dozen others.

Democrats failed to oust any Texas Republicans last year, but seats that had never been seriously contested got uncomfortably competitive. Then-President Donald Trump’s vote share dipped under 51 percent in seats held by GOP Reps. Dan Crenshaw, Van Taylor, Michael McCaul, Chip Roy, Troy Nehls, John Carter and Beth Van Duyne — a major warning sign.

To protect those members, GOP mapmakers are expected to effectively cede the two districts they lost in 2018, packing the Dallas seat of Democratic Rep. Colin Allred and the Houston seat of Rep. Lizzie Pannill Fletcher with Democratic voters from surrounding areas. And Texas legislators are expected to place a new heavily blue district in the Austin area for the same purpose.

A second new seat will likely be added in the Houston region, and it will favor the GOP. Republican Wesley Hunt, who narrowly lost to Fletcher in 2020, is likely to run there.

And for additional cushioning, they can pull from ruby-red seats in the Texas Panhandle, the Hill Country and along the state’s eastern border.

“Everybody knows you’re gonna have to give stuff up, and some people are gonna get things,” said GOP Rep. Ronny Jackson, who represents the most Republican-leaning seat in the state, where Trump beat President Joe Biden by 60 points. “In particular I’m an R+33,” he added, referencing the district’s Partisan Voter Index. “So I just walked into this knowing like I’m giving up a lot, you know? I mean, I’m not gonna be an R+33 anymore — there’s just no way.”

Republican strategists feel confident they won’t lose any incumbents in 2022, but it’s hard to predict with certainty how any district will perform in 2024, or all the way through the 2030 midterms.

They’re making a bet that three new deep blue seats can siphon enough Democrats away from the surrounding areas to protect a dozen or so GOP incumbents — and that Democrats’ gains in the suburbs have plateaued. And there’s some reason to think that’s the case.

Though Trump’s vote share in Texas lagged badly behind other recent GOP presidential candidates — including his less-than-6-point victory last year — the rest of the party’s ticket out-ran him, giving Republicans confidence that Texas isn’t turning purple any time soon.

And Republicans in the state are also banking that their Trump-fueled surge in the Rio Grande Valley will continue without the former president on the ballot. The three districts in the region saw the biggest shift to the right in 2020, and Biden carried them by only a few points.

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