The last time a Democratic presidential nominee won Texas was in 1976, when Jimmy Carter, a Southerner, took 51 percent of the vote. Since then, Democratic candidates have been stuck in the high 30s and low 40s. Republicans, meanwhile, have racked up the votes; George W. Bush’s 61 percent in 2004 was a high-water mark in recent years. Will Donald Trump, a very un-Texas sort of Republican, continue that streak? Can Hillary Clinton, whose favorability ratings in Texas are in the basement, avoid a catastrophic showing? Will Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson or Green Party candidate Jill Stein make a difference? We asked Texas political insiders from the left and right (and points in between) to predict what sort of numbers we might wake up to on November 9.
BRUCE BUCHANAN
Professor of government at UT-Austin and presidential scholar
Trump 41%
Clinton 40%
Johnson 14%
Stein 5%
“Trump is farther ahead than that now in Texas, but I think it will grow closer by Election Day because he doesn’t match up well against Clinton on the debate stage.”
PAUL BURKA
Former senior executive editor of Texas Monthly
Trump 48%
Clinton 40%
Johnson 8%
Stein 2%*
“It will be relatively close; many right-wing Texas Republicans aren’t enamored of Trump. He isn’t their kind of Republican—that is, not a hard-boiled, anti–Planned Parenthood right-winger.”
HENRY CISNEROS
Former mayor of San Antonio and former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under President Bill Clinton
Trump 47%
Clinton 44%
Johnson 7%
Stein 2%
“Clinton will do better than Democrats have done recently because it’s a presidential election and turnout will be large. Women will have a historic opportunity, and many of them will recognize that.”
BRYAN EPSTEIN
Republican political consultant, pollster, and founder of the Fort Worth–based firm the Eppstein Group
Trump 55%
Clinton 43%
Johnson 1.7%
Stein .3%
“I believe turnout will be 7.5 million voters, less than the 8 million high-turnout marks of 2008 and 2012.”
CAL JILLSON
Professor of political science at Southern Methodist University
Trump 51%
Clinton 43%
Johnson 5%
Stein 1%
“Trump’s limitations will lead him to underperform recent top-of-the-ticket Republican candidates, but that doesn’t mean that the Democrats’ path to competitiveness has gotten any shorter.”
MARK P. JONES
Fellow in political science at the Baker Institute for Public Policy, at Rice University
Trump 52%
Clinton 43%
Johnson 4%
Stein 1%
“While Trump’s candidacy forced down-ballot Republicans throughout Texas to sail into strong head winds this year, in 2018 they can expect to have the wind at their backs with Greg Abbott as their marquee candidate.”
MARY BETH ROGERS
Former chief of staff to Governor Ann Richards and author of Turning Texas Blue
Trump 51%
Clinton 43%
Johnson 5%
Stein 1%
“I think Clinton will do better than Obama’s 41 percent in 2012; if Democrats trail Republicans by only single digits in the presidential election, they should be encouraged about their prospects for 2018.”
BROOKE ROLLINS
President and CEO of the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a conservative think tank
Trump 55%
Clinton 45%
Johnson ~0%
Stein ~0%
“In terms of demography and dynamism, the election outcomes in Texas matter almost uniquely among all the states, because they both reflect and shape what’s coming next—not just for us but for the country.”
WAYNE THORBURN
Former executive director of the Republican Party of Texas and author of Red State
Trump 49%
Clinton 43%
Johnson 6%
Stein 2%
“Texas Democrats will be encouraged by the Clinton showing, only to face serious pushback and defeat in the state elections of 2018. Temporary euphoria with no long-term impact.”
Average
Trump 50%, Clinton 43%, Johnson 6%, Stein 2% | * Burka’s final 2% goes to write-in candidate Evan McMullin (I)
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