Texas governor moves state sharply to the right ahead of 2022 election
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[October 14, 2021]
By Joseph Ax and Julia Harte
(Reuters) - Texas Governor Greg Abbott's
decision to bar private companies from enforcing COVID-19 vaccine
mandates is the latest sign he is betting the state's electorate remains
solidly Republican ahead of his re-election bid next year.
In recent months, Abbott has backed a series of measures that have
pulled Texas sharply to the right, including the country's most
restrictive abortion ban, a raft of voting limits, an effort to fund a
border wall, restrictions on transgender student athletes and expanded
gun rights.
His executive order on Monday banning private employers and other
entities from imposing COVID-19 vaccine mandates is in direct conflict
with the Biden administration's plan to require shots for workers.
Democrats have made political gains in Texas on the strength of rapidly
growing metropolitan areas such as Houston and Austin. But with the
two-term governor facing a pair of intraparty challengers in a March
primary, Abbott's moves appear aimed at energizing the Republican base
rather than appealing to swing voters and moderate Democrats.
"He's taking a more aggressive approach," said Brendan Steinhauser, a
Texas-based Republican political consultant. "These are all ways to
shore up conservative voters in the state."
There is evidence to suggest the strategy is sound. Last year, former
President Donald Trump carried Texas by more than five percentage
points, despite national unpopularity and unprecedented Democratic
fervor.
Abbott, 63, is likely to face a far friendlier environment in 2022 as he
seeks another four-year term. The party that controls the White House
typically suffers losses in its first midterm election, and President
Joe Biden, a Democrat, has already seen his approval ratings falter.
"I do strongly believe Governor Abbott is in the catbird seat for
re-election," said Ray Sullivan, who was a senior adviser to Republican
former Texas Governor Rick Perry. "History is against the Democrats this
cycle."
No Democrat has announced a run for Abbott's office next year. Most
political observers expect Beto O'Rourke, the former congressman and
presidential candidate who has proven fundraising muscle, to throw his
hat in the ring.
Abbott is facing at least two credible Republican rivals for the first
time in his tenure: Don Huffines, a former state senator, and Allen
West, chairman of the Texas Republican Party who was recently
hospitalized with COVID-19.
Both say Abbott is not conservative enough for Texas. Huffines took
credit for Abbott's vaccine mandates ban on Monday, tweeting that he was
"glad Greg Abbott is finally caving to the grassroots pressure brought
by my campaign."
Abbott's campaign did not respond to a request for comment.
CONSERVATIVE BONA FIDES
Abbott has occasionally angered his party's right wing, such as last
year when, early in the coronavirus pandemic, he issued a statewide mask
order. That stands in contrast to his decision this summer to prohibit
schools from requiring masks.
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Governor Greg Abbott meets with Texas National Guard troops and U.S.
Border Patrol personnel for a briefing regarding security along the
Mexico-U.S. border in Weslaco, Texas, U.S., April 12, 2018.
REUTERS/Loren Elliott
With Biden serving as a convenient political foil in
the White House, Abbott can focus on re-establishing his
conservative bona fides. Abbott has already made the president a
frequent target, picking fights with the administration on
everything from border security to mask mandates to abortion.
"By and large, Abbott's thinking right now first and foremost about
the March 2022 Republican primary," said Mark Jones, a political
science professor at Rice University in Houston.
Mustafa Tameez, a Texas-based Democratic strategist, said Abbott is
doing what many other Republican leaders have done: demonstrating
his fealty to Trump. Last month, Abbott defended his state's partial
review of the 2020 presidential election, a decision announced hours
after Trump called on Republicans to "audit" the results even though
he carried the state.
Tameez said he understood the argument that Texas Republicans hold
an edge in midterm elections, in part because turnout tends to be
lower among Democrats. But he noted that turnout has exploded in
recent cycles and warned that Abbott could pay a price for pursuing
far-right priorities.
"If Governor Abbott and the Republican Party continue to go to their
extreme agenda... they will lose the suburbs of Texas and therefore
will lose elections – sooner than they believe," he said.
A poll conducted by the Texas Politics Project at the University of
Texas in August showed a majority of Texans feel the state is headed
in the wrong direction, the worst assessment since the poll began in
2008. It gave Abbott his lowest approval rating since he took office
in 2015.
Some of Abbott's drop in approval can be attributed to his more
aggressive partisan stances of the past year. But it was also part
of a general decline in support for political leaders over the same
period, said James Henson, who directs the polling project.
Even if Abbott's policies have alienated some independents and
Democrats, consolidating his conservative base is a strategic way to
prepare for next year's elections, Henson said.
"He knows that Trump is not going to be on the ticket in 2022, which
would get Democratic voters more fired up," said Nate Lerner, a
Democratic consultant who helped run a grassroots effort to convince
O'Rourke to run for the White House in 2020. "The middle is so tiny
and small, it's become more about base turnout."
(Reporting by Joseph Ax and Julia Harte; Editing by Colleen Jenkins
and Bill Berkrot)
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