Connect with us

Texas

Donald Trump expected to romp in Texas primary, but the stakes go deeper for Republicans

Published

on

Donald Trump expected to romp in Texas primary, but the stakes go deeper for Republicans


Former President Donald Trump is expected to easily win Tuesday’s Texas primary, putting him a significant step closer to sealing the GOP nomination for president.

A dominant performance in Texas could mean much more, cementing Trump’s hold on the state party, solidifying the position of his leading political supporters and reshaping the state’s political landscape for years to come.

Toward that end, Trump has delivered endorsements in races for the Texas Legislature — local and down-ballot contests that are typically below the notice of presidential candidates. He has worked to boost key allies such as Ken Paxton, lashing out at several House Republicans who voted last year to impeach the attorney general. Trump also has endorsed four House candidates who hope to defeat incumbents who opposed Gov. Greg Abbott’s school-choice agenda.

“It’s Trump’s Republican Party,” said Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, one of Trump’s earliest and most enthusiastic supporters in the state.

Advertisement

Political Points

Get the latest politics news from North Texas and beyond.

“There’s no one that comes close to matching how he’s influenced Texas politics, and that includes LBJ [Lyndon Baines Johnson] and Ronald Reagan,” Miller said.

Starting in 2023, Trump’s campaign team worked methodically and successfully to line up support from leading Texas Republicans.

Ken Paxton wants revenge on impeachment supporters, but Greg Abbott stands in his way

Trump has returned the favor, endorsing candidates against Texas House incumbents who are out of favor with his allies — most notably Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and Paxton, both of whom could gain additional clout if Trump’s influence helps reshape the Legislature.

Advertisement

If enough Trump-backed candidates win, Patrick and other Republicans can be expected to promote policies that continue moving Texas to the right, such as additional money for border security and continued efforts to limit diversity, equity and inclusion programs.

Paxton has hinted at a bid to unseat U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, in the 2026 GOP primary — a challenge that could receive a strong boost if House members who voted to impeach the attorney general are defeated Tuesday.

Miller predicted Trump’s coattails will be long enough to pull House challengers to victory.

“There’s going to be a huge fallout,” he said. “I would expect somewhere between 12 to 18 incumbents to lose or be in a runoff.”

Republicans against Trump are pondering how to shift the conversation.

Advertisement

“They’ve just got to get engaged and figure out we’ve got to have an alternative,” said Betsy Price, the Fort Worth mayor from 2011-21. “We’ve got to have somebody who can beat Joe Biden.”

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump talks with, from left, Freeman Martin, deputy director of Texas Homeland Security Operations; Michael Banks, special adviser to the governor on border matters; Texas Gov. Greg Abbott; and Brandon Judd, president of the National Border Patrol Council at Shelby Park during a visit to the U.S.-Mexico border, Thursday, Feb. 29, 2024, in Eagle Pass. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)(Eric Gay / ASSOCIATED PRESS)

The Republican primary ballot has eight names for president, but most candidates have withdrawn and the race in Texas is down to Trump and former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, who has been soundly defeated in previous contests.

Joe Biden, Donald Trump trade barbs over immigration during visits to Texas-Mexico border

Price and former U.S. Rep. Will Hurd are part of Haley’s Texas leadership team and remain committed to her candidacy despite polls showing Trump supported by 75% to 80% of the state’s Republican voters.

“For me, it’s about putting delegates on the delegate board,” said Hurd, a former presidential candidate from San Antonio.

Hurd declined to predict how Haley would fare against Trump in Texas.

Advertisement

“We’re doing our best to get a victory, and we’ll find out on Tuesday,” he said.

It’s somewhat surprising Texas has gone so strongly in Trump’s favor, analysts say. The state has a colorful history of powerful elected leaders from both major parties, but figures outside of the Texas establishment have rarely held so much sway.

“It’s amazing how rapidly Donald Trump has made the Republican Party his own,” said University of Houston political scientist Brandon Rottinghaus. “If you’ve got your allies in the right spots, then they’re going to be in a position to help you, especially if you seek renomination as president.”

Trump wasn’t always the darling of Texas Republicans.

In 2016, the state’s GOP establishment rallied behind Ted Cruz and the senator beat Trump in the Texas primary, although he couldn’t stop his rival’s march to the nomination.

Advertisement

Republican National Convention delegates booed Cruz that year when he refused to endorse Trump during a primetime speech, and the criticism continued the next morning during a breakfast appearance before Texas delegates. Months later, Cruz endorsed Trump.

By then, most of the Texas Republican elite had moved toward Trump, and through the years that support has been significant.

Paxton brought the unsuccessful Supreme Court lawsuit to overturn Biden election victories in four battleground states in 2020. He also urged Trump supporters to continue fighting for the president during a Jan. 6, 2021, rally near the White House that preceded the Capitol riot.

Patrick has chaired Trump’s Texas campaigns and is one of his closest Lone Star advisers. In previous elections, Trump raised more money from big-dollar Texas donors than any other state, his fundraisers bragged.

Coming off his 2020 loss, the Capitol riot by supporters, and candidates opposing his bid for a return to the White House in 2024, Trump faced challenges that included the loss of key Texas financial backers.

Advertisement
Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump, left, shakes hands with...
Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump, left, shakes hands with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott after he received Abbott’s endorsement at the South Texas International Airport on Nov. 19, 2023, in Edinburg. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)(Eric Gay / ASSOCIATED PRESS)

None of it stopped his resurgence as the frontrunner for the presidential nomination.

Trump kicked off his White House campaign in March 2023 with a large rally in Waco, where he unveiled a list of Texas supporters that would eventually include Abbott and nearly all of the state’s GOP elite.

That’s what Haley is up against in Tuesday’s primary.

“If you’re an elected official in Texas today and you identify as a Republican, there is no way that you can disavow Donald Trump and expect to get enough votes to win at the polls,” said former state Rep. Jason Villalba, R-Dallas, who is now an independent. “The Republican Party in Texas for all practical purposes no longer exists. There’s only the Trump party.”

To forcefully make that point, Trump announced in January that anybody who gave a political contribution to Haley, “from this moment forth, will be permanently barred from the MAGA [Make America Great Again] camp.”

“We don’t want them, and will not accept them,” Trump said on his social media platform, Truth Social.

Advertisement

“The real power players are on his side,” Rottinghaus said. “That means he gets most of the money, most of the endorsements, and virtually all of the activist support that one needs to run a presidential campaign.”

Being the runaway favorite to win the presidential nomination is just part of Trump’s clout.

Trump has endorsed seven challengers to Republican House incumbents, including David Covey’s campaign to unseat House Speaker Dade Phelan of Beaumont. All of the incumbents voted to impeach Paxton.

Trump’s political reach has extended into Dallas as well, where he’s backing Dallas lawyer Barry Wernick’s campaign against Republican incumbent Rep. Morgan Meyer of University Park.

Trump has endorsed Brent Hagenbuch for the District 30 state Senate seat being vacated by retiring Republican Drew Springer of Muenster.

Advertisement

Adding to the Trump drama on legislative races, the primaries include endorsements by top Texas GOP officials who have their own agendas.

Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick photographs Air Force One as it takes off from Dallas Love Field...
Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick photographs Air Force One as it takes off from Dallas Love Field Airport after then-President Donald Trump participated in a conversation about race relations and policing and attended a fundraiser at a private residence on June 11, 2020, in Dallas. (Smiley N. Pool/The Dallas Morning News)(Smiley N. Pool / Staff Photographer)

Abbott is endorsing challengers against House incumbents who opposed his school choice plan last year. Paxton is targeting House members who voted to impeach him. And Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick is trying to unseat lawmakers, including Phelan, who declined to support the Senate version of an $18 billion property tax cut plan.

Trump and Abbott are backing opposing candidates in only one race: Dallas’ House District 108, where Trump supports Wernick and Abbott has endorsed Meyer.

Trump and Abbott agree on four challengers against GOP House incumbents who blocked the governor’s school choice proposal. They are Mike Olcott over Rep. Glenn Rogers in District 60, Helen Kerwin over Rep. DeWayne Burns in District 58, Alan Schoolcraft over John Kuempel in District 44 and Liz Case over Stan Lambert in District 61.

It’s unusual for a former president to make endorsements in so many down-ballot races, particularly in a state where he’s not a resident. But Trump likes his role as the GOP’s top leader — whether it’s on the national or local stage.

State Rep. Morgan Meyer, R-University Park, left, talks to Speaker Dade Phelan on the first...
State Rep. Morgan Meyer, R-University Park, left, talks to Speaker Dade Phelan on the first day of the first special session in the House at the Capitol on May 30, 2023.(Jay Janner/American-Statesman / Jay Janner / American-Statesman)

“There is a bigger game afoot in this presidential election year, and it’s about Trump demonstrating his authority in races where there’s already a lot of that going with statewide officials,” said Jim Henson, director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas.

Trump’s Wernick endorsement came late Monday night as Patrick was running digital ads against Meyer. Patrick is also backing Covey, who received Trump’s support, against Phelan.

Advertisement
Republican grudge match could unsettle Dallas-area politics

“The lieutenant governor and the attorney general have all been very strategic in calibrating their relationships with Donald Trump,” Henson said. “We shouldn’t be very surprised that Trump is getting involved.”

Even with Trump’s support, some insurgents will have a tough time beating entrenched incumbents. Phelan, for example, is focusing on his longstanding ties to his district — a message helped by a distinct fundraising advantage, with the House speaker raising $5.3 million compared with Covey’s almost $861,000 from July 1 through March 1.

The former president does not have a perfect endorsement record. He backed Susan Wright in a 2021 special election to replace U.S. Rep. Ron Wright, R-Arlington, who died in office after battling lung cancer and COVID-19.

Susan Wright lost to then-state Rep. Jake Ellzey, R-Waxahachie.

Haley has failed to win a primary or caucus, including huge losses in her home state of South Carolina and, most recently, in Michigan.

Advertisement

Despite the defeats, Haley has vowed to fight Trump in Texas and 15 other Super Tuesday contests. She’s planning to be in Texas on Monday for an evening rally at Tannahill’s Tavern & Music Hall in Fort Worth. That appearance comes weeks after her Feb. 15 rally at Gilley’s in Dallas.

In contrast to a Trump Texas leadership team that is heavy with state GOP heavyweights, Haley’s 41-member team is filled with former Republican elected officials, moderates and anti-Trump conservatives. Current elected officials backing Haley include Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker and state Rep. Kyle Kacal, R-College Station.

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley waves to the crowd as she takes the stage...
Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley waves to the crowd as she takes the stage during a rally at Gilley’s Dallas South Side Music Hall, Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024, in Dallas.(Elías Valverde II / Staff Photographer)

Others include former U.S. Reps. Lamar Smith, R-San Antonio, and Mac Thornberry, R-Clarendon; former House Speaker Joe Straus, R-San Antonio; former state Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano; former state Rep. Linda Koop, R-Dallas; and Dallas billionaires Harlan Crow and Ray L. Hunt.

During her previous Texas swing this month, Haley told The News she looked forward to campaigning in the Lone Star State. She called South Carolina, where she served two terms as governor, a “mini-Texas.”

“I’m not going anywhere,” she said. “We have a country to save.”

Her chances of doing well in Texas are bleak.

Advertisement

“She is going out of her way to tap into a desire among the dwindling number of former Republicans and some moderates that we think of as last-generation Republicans,” Henson said. “They are trying to demonstrate that they are still around and that there is still an alternative vision of the Republican Party out there.”

Hurd echoed a talking point frequently cited by Haley: “The biggest issue is making the case to people that we can’t replace Democratic chaos with Republican chaos.”

Haley has to convince Republicans who don’t typically vote in primary elections to participate on Tuesday. Texas primaries feature low voter turnout compared to general elections.

“It’s making sure those people recognize the importance of getting out to vote in the primary so that we don’t have the rematch from hell,” Hurd said of a Trump-Biden general election.

A February poll by the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas had Trump leading Haley with 80% of the vote. A late February poll by the University of Texas at Tyler showed Trump with 75% support among Republicans.

Advertisement

Haley dismissed the results.

“Everybody loves to talk about those polls, but let’s talk about the polls on what happens in the general election,” she told The News. “Donald Trump does not defeat Joe Biden. He’s down by five, he’s down by seven, on his best day it’s margin of error. I defeat Joe Biden by up to 17 points. If we want to turn this country around. We have to win.”

General elections don’t matter if you can’t win the primary.

“Nikki Haley bringing an endorsement list full of moderate Republicans in a Texas Republican primary that’s so conservative is like bringing a knife to a gunfight,” Rottinghaus said. “It’s not going to get the job done.”

Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley (left) poses for a photo with former Fort...
Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley (left) poses for a photo with former Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price (center) after a rally at Gilley’s Dallas South Side Music Hall, Thursday, Feb. 15, 2024, in Dallas.(Elías Valverde II / Staff Photographer)

Rottinghaus said anti-Trump Republicans may have to settle in and wait.

“The best strategy for moderates is to hunker down,” Rottinghaus said. “There will be several election cycles where the very conservative ideology will be dominant,” he said. “A lot of moderates are biding their time for a moment when Trump is not as influential.”

Advertisement

The fight isn’t over, said Price, the former Fort Worth mayor who in 2022 lost a primary contest for Tarrant County judge to Trump-backed Republican Tim O’Hare.

“We’re going to have to get out there, really hustle, and rebuild this party,” Price said.



Source link

Texas

ERCOT Warns Texas AI Power Boom May Not Materialize

Published

on

ERCOT Warns Texas AI Power Boom May Not Materialize


Texas is planning its grid around an unprecedented wave of AI-driven power demand that the state’s energy regulator says may not fully materialize on projected timelines.

In a recent filing to the Public Utility Commission of Texas, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) projected statewide power demand could surge to nearly 368 GW by 2032 – more than four times the state’s current peak demand record of 85.5 GW. But the filing also contains an unusual warning from the grid operator itself.

“ERCOT has concerns with using the preliminary load forecast values for the Reliability Assessment and any other transmission and resource adequacy analysis,” the organization wrote in its April 2026 long-term load forecast filing

The organization added that it may seek adjustments to the forecast based on “actual historical realization rates or other objective, credible, independent information.” 

Advertisement

Interconnection Delays Push Texas Data Center Behind the Meter

ERCOT has already begun adjusting for realization risk internally. In its 2025 long-term load forecast report, the grid operator said the “average peak consumption per site was 49.8% of the requested MW” and applied that factor to projected non-crypto data center load additions in some planning models.

ERCOT President and CEO Pablo Vegas said the forecast reflects “higher-than-expected future load growth” tied to changing large-load planning dynamics.

Texas Developers Race Ahead of Grid Capacity

Texas has emerged as a key data center market, driven by its abundant land, competitive energy prices, and favorable regulatory environment. This combination has positioned the state as a magnet for hyperscale operators and AI infrastructure investments. The state is estimated to account for around 15% of all data center connectivity in the US.

Advertisement

Recent and proposed AI data center campuses tied to OpenAI, Oracle, Meta, Crusoe, CoreWeave, Soluna, and other hyperscale operators are reshaping Texas grid planning. Developers have proposed large campuses across North Texas, Abilene, West Texas, and the Houston corridor, many requiring hundreds of megawatts of capacity and, in some cases, dedicated onsite generation to bypass interconnection delays. That buildout pushed ERCOT’s non-crypto data center forecast above 228 GW by 2032.

Developers are continuing to pursue Texas aggressively because ERCOT still offers faster timelines and more flexible market structures than many competing regions. Several proposed campuses pair AI infrastructure with onsite gas generation, colocated power assets, or flexible-load arrangements to navigate mounting transmission constraints.

Texas Gets Tough on Data Center Power – Who’s Next?

Utilities across the US are grappling with AI-driven electricity growth, but ERCOT’s projections stand apart for both scale and uncertainty. PJM Interconnection, the nation’s largest grid operator, expects summer peak demand to climb above 241 GW over the next 15 years as data centers and electrification expand. ERCOT, by contrast, projects demand potentially reaching nearly 368 GW by 2032, driven largely by proposed non-crypto data center loads. At the same time, the grid operator openly questions how much of that demand will materialize on schedule.

Bigger Than Texas

Similar pressures are emerging elsewhere. In California, CAISO’s latest transmission plan cited “data center load growth” as a driver of major grid upgrades and described interconnection volumes as “unmanageable” before recent queue reforms. 

Advertisement

A recent Grid Strategies report reached a similar conclusion nationally, warning that the “data center portion of utility load forecasts is likely overstated by roughly 25 GW” compared with market-based deployment estimates. 

Ihab Osman, an independent strategist specializing in data center and other mission-critical infrastructure, said the distinction is less about “real” versus “fake” AI demand and more about “announced versus deliverable demand.”

Soluna Expands Texas Campus With 100 MW AI-Ready Data Center

“A large share of the current AI/data center planned load should be treated as paper megawatts until it is validated through physical gates,” Osman said, citing factors including site control, transmission deliverability, generation availability, turbine and transformer supply, permitting, financing, and credible energization schedules.

Osman said ERCOT’s forecast is best understood as “a stress-test map, not as a fait accompli build map.”

Advertisement

Separating ’Paper Megawatts’ From Real Demand

The filing shows Texas regulators and grid planners struggling to distinguish operating AI infrastructure from a rapidly expanding pipeline of proposed projects.

“The vast majority” of ERCOT’s projected load growth comes from submissions provided by transmission and distribution utilities, according to the filing. Those requests include hyperscale AI campuses, GPU clusters, and other large industrial loads seeking future grid capacity reservations.

Alison Silverstein, a former senior adviser to the chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, said “a large proportion” of projects in ERCOT’s large-load interconnection queue have already been canceled, particularly among smaller developers facing long interconnection delays and high turbine and transformer costs.

Forecasts Collide With Physical Infrastructure Limits

ERCOT has also signaled that many projects may not materialize on the timelines shaping transmission planning.

The grid operator said summer 2026 peak demand is likely to land between roughly 90.5 GW and 98 GW – far below the preliminary 112 GW figure embedded in the long-term forecast. ERCOT said it appears “unlikely” that new large-load projects and existing site expansions will ramp quickly enough to push demand that high this year. 

Advertisement

The filing suggests uncertainty around AI-related load growth is beginning to influence broader infrastructure planning assumptions. By 2032, ERCOT projects non-crypto data centers reaching 228 GW of demand, compared with just 9 GW from cryptocurrency mining and roughly 3 GW each from hydrogen/e-fuels and oil-and-gas-related industrial growth. 

The move also suggests the regulator is no longer simply forecasting AI-driven growth, but also working to determine how much of the proposed boom can actually be financed, supplied, interconnected, and energized before utilities commit billions to long-lived infrastructure.





Source link

Continue Reading

Texas

Bravo developing new reality series set in Boerne: “Secrets, Lies, Texas Wives”

Published

on

Bravo developing new reality series set in Boerne: “Secrets, Lies, Texas Wives”


Bravo is developing a new reality series set in the Texas Hill Country, the network announced on Instagram Monday.

“Secrets, Lies, Texas Wives” would follow a group of women in Boerne.

According to the network’s description, the series centers on “a tight-knit circle of glamorous women” navigating family life, ranching, and social obligations in a community rooted in rodeo and tradition. They promise drama with “forbidden romances” and relationship angst.

No premiere date or cast have been announced.

Advertisement

If picked up, the series would join Bravo’s long-running portfolio of region-specific reality franchises, which includes the “Real Housewives” lineup.





Source link

Continue Reading

Texas

Gas tops $4 in Texas as bipartisan group of lawmakers back tax pause to cut prices

Published

on

Gas tops  in Texas as bipartisan group of lawmakers back tax pause to cut prices


With the average price of a gallon of gas in Texas topping $4, some leaders from Austin to Washington, D.C., are backing a temporary pause on gas taxes as a way to deliver relief.

Veronica Valdez Rodriguez was pumping gas at a southeast Austin station on Tuesday. She said the rising costs are becoming unmanageable.

“They’re sky high,” Rodriguez said. “I can barely get by, you know? It’s too expensive.”

She said she is spending $40 more every week on gas.

Advertisement

According to AAA Texas, the average cost of a regular gallon of fuel stood at over $4.01 in the Austin area on Tuesday, $1.24 higher than the average one year ago.

President Donald Trump said he is working to pause the federal gas tax, which is 18 cents per gallon.

A reporter asked the president on Monday how long the tax would be suspended.

“Until it’s appropriate. It’s a small percentage, but it’s, you know, it’s still money,” Trump said.

ALSO| Austin reaches $35 million settlement with men exonerated in 1991 Yogurt Shop Murders

Advertisement

KEYE

In Texas, an 18-cent-per-gallon pause could add up to savings of about $2 to $3 on an average tank of gas.

Support for a federal pause is coming from both parties. State Rep. and U.S. Senate nominee James Talarico (D-Austin) backed the idea last month.

Advertisement

“Lowering prices at the pump should be a bipartisan commitment,” Talarico said in a statement Monday.

Republican U.S. Sen. John Cornyn said he didn’t know the details of the president’s plan.

“There’s a difference between a temporary suspension and a permanent suspension,” Cornyn said Monday. “I don’t know exactly what the President has in mind. I think a temporary suspension getting through this sort of bumpy time because of uncertainty about energy prices, I can live with that.”

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Gina Hinojosa is calling for a state gas tax pause as well. The state tax currently sits at 20 cents per gallon, according to the Texas Department of Transportation.

The state pause is also being urged by Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller, who has called on Governor Greg Abbott to act.

Advertisement

“Governors in Indiana, Georgia, and Utah have already stepped up to provide relief for their citizens, and I once again renew my call for Governor Abbott to follow the lead of President Trump and act decisively for Texas families,” Miller wrote on Monday.

The governor’s office, however, said a state gas tax pause is not an option under his executive authority.

In a statement, the governor’s press secretary, Andrew Mahaleris, wrote in response to Miller:

There’s a reason Sid Miller lost his election, it’s because he doesn’t shoot straight with Texans. Any suggestion that the Texas governor is authorized by law to suspend a gas tax is entirely uninformed or purposefully misleading. If the Texas governor could suspend taxes, he would have suspended the property tax years ago.

At the federal level, the Bipartisan Policy Center said a gas tax holiday would require an act of Congress. The group also estimated that a five-month pause could cost as much as $17 billion.

Some drivers, like Rodriguez, said any break would help.

Advertisement

“Pause the taxes!” she said.



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending