AUSTIN, Texas — Republican Sen. Ted Cruz will face Rep. Colin Allred come in the November election. 


What You Need To Know

  • Republican Sen. Ted Cruz will face Rep. Colin Allred come in the November election. 

  • Cruz faced no major primary opponent and officially locked up the GOP nomination for a third term Tuesday

  • Allred, who would become Texas' first Black senator if elected, has raised more than $21 million since getting in the race. That's significantly more than his primary challengers, whom the civil rights lawyer has largely ignored during the primary while keeping his attacks focused on Cruz

  • No Democrat has won a statewide office in Texas in 30 years, the longest losing streak of its kind in the U.S.

U.S. Rep. Colin Allred, a former NFL player and three-term congressman from Dallas, beat his closest competitor state Sen. Roland Gutierrez Tuesday night. No Democrat has won a statewide office in Texas in 30 years, the longest losing streak of its kind in the U.S.

Despite that, Democrats believe Texas and Florida are their best shot for upsets in November as they try to preserve a slim 51-49 advantage in the Senate. That majority includes West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who is not seeking reelection and whose seat is likely to flip Republican.

Cruz faced no major primary opponent and officially locked up the GOP nomination for a third term Tuesday.

After Cruz’s win, he issued a statement saying, “I am proud to be the GOP’s decisive nominee for U.S. Senate. This race is about our law enforcement officers, our parents, farmers, ranchers, students, oil and gas workers, neighbors and pastors, who are proud to call the Lone Star State home. This is about Texas, about building bridges, fighting for our cadets, expanding highways, creating jobs, and protecting the state that we cherish so deeply. Never before has it been more important to unify and fight against the radical left who threaten to change what makes this state great. I look forward to continuing to meet Texans in every corner of the state as we work together to ensure that we keep Texas, Texas.”

Allred, who would become Texas’ first Black senator if elected, has raised more than $21 million since getting into the race. That’s significantly more than his primary challengers, whom the civil rights lawyer has largely ignored during the primary while keeping his attacks focused on Cruz.

It is Cruz’s first time on the ballot since his 2021 trip to Mexico during a deadly winter storm that knocked out power to hundreds of thousands of Texans and wreaked havoc on the state’s power grid and utilities. Cruz later said the family vacation was “obviously a mistake.” Democrats, including Allred, have attacked Cruz relentlessly for it.

Cruz has raised more than $46 million in his bid to secure another six-year term.

Allred, 40, made headlines in January when he was among 14 House Democrats who backed a Republican resolution in Congress that criticized President Joe Biden’s handling of the border. Gutierrez criticized Allred for the vote, accusing him of siding “with GOP extremists,” and Cruz spokesperson Macarena Martinez called the vote a “disingenuous attempt to posture on the border.”

Allred said he did not agree with all the language in the resolution but said he wanted to see more urgency at the federal level when it comes to the border.

“For me, it was about sending a signal that, you know, what we have been doing is not working,” Allred said in an interview last week during early voting in Texas. “We have to change something.”

Cruz only narrowly beat Beto O’Rourke for reelection in 2018 by less than 3 percentage points. It was the closest Democrats have come in decades to winning a statewide seat and happened during a midterm election that wound up being a strong year for Democrats nationally.

Texas Democrats have struggled to recapture that momentum since then. O’Rourke lost by double digits when he challenged Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in 2022.

“Things are shifting in the state. It takes a long time,” said Jared Hockeman, the chairman of the Democratic Party in Cameron County along the U.S.-Mexico border. “We recognize that.”

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