| Less than a week after the election, the LA Times has a story that will make us all excited: "Democrats set sights on Texas." In each swing state, the Latino share of the vote rose and the Democrats' share of the Latino vote rose right along with it. In Texas, along with the rest of the southwest, this bodes very well for the future. "The Democrats have built what looks like a coalition they can ride for 20 or 30 years," said Simon Rosenberg, head of the pro-Democratic group NDN, which has spent millions of dollars targeting Latino voters.
And Texas could soon be a part of that enduring Democratic coalition. One top Obama strategist said the campaign had already sought to build the Texas state party, handing over a database with hundreds of thousands of voter names and phone numbers gathered when Obama and New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton competed in the state's Democratic primary. Much of the campaign's attention in that effort focused on Latinos in the Rio Grande Valley.
The strategist, Cuauhtemoc "Temo" Figueroa, Obama's top Latino outreach official, said the state could be taken seriously as a presidential battleground if Democrats could win statewide races there in 2010. "I don't know if it's four years or eight years off, but down the road, Texas will be a presidential battleground," Figueroa said. It is a great time to be a Texas Democrat and it is just going to get better. Please vote for me to win a $10,000 Blogging Scholarship. |