Posted on 06/18/2015 6:46:25 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
A very interesting dynamic was present in the race for San Antonio mayor last weekend that bears watching for both parties.
Ivy Taylor, who was appointed San Antonio mayor when Julian Castro left to run HUD last year, won a full term on Saturday, defeating a long-time Democrat, former state senator Leticia Van de Putte. Taylor is the first black to get elected mayor.
San Antonio is a Democratic city, Texas’s second largest, and is majority Hispanic. The city is represented in Congress by Democratic Rep. Will Hurd, a former CIA agent and a conservative who opposes amnesty and favors increased border security.
Taylor is also a Democrat. But the catch is that she is a social conservative, opposing abortion and gay marriage. She also tried to appeal to conservatives by promising a less activist government. This led to a large turnout of Republicans that keyed her victory.
Taylor’s strength, meanwhile, was expected to come from a Republican-leaning coalition of voters looking to move the city further away from the era of her predecessor, Julián Castro, a period marked by an activist city government and bright national spotlight.
Van de Puttes campaign worked hard to undermine that coalition. The candidate zeroed in on a report that Taylor and her husband were unwilling to pursue charges after a shooting at his bail bonds business, hoping to spook law-and-order voters backing Taylor. Van de Putte trotted out endorsements from elected officials representing Taylors native East Side, looking to cut into Taylor’s most oft-cited base of Democratic support. And at one point, a mailer surfaced that cut straight to the chase, calling Van de Putte the most conservative candidate in the race.
But none of it was enough to counteract Taylors crossover appeal, anchored in the chorus that Van de Putte was a career politician simply on the hunt for her next job. Both women had initially denied interest in the race, but it was Van de Putte who did so while campaigning for lieutenant governor, just two years after running for re-election to the Senate a sequence Taylor’s campaign was happy to point out.
“She didn’t know what she wanted to be when she grew up,” Robinson said.
What does this mean for the “Turn Texas Blue” project that Democrats have been touting recently? Texas is not Maryland or Massachusetts. Even Democrats will vote conservative when the right message is pushed. And Republicans hoping to run a statewide campaign, should take note of Taylor’s telling themes of social conservatism, anti-careerism, and prudent government. Getting voters to go beyond labels to vote for the ideas being promoted by an attractive candidate gives the lie to the notion that Republicans can’t attract minority voters.
There is no such thing as a conservative democrat. They are only Democrats pretending so to be elected.
Living just North of San Antonio I watched this race with some interest. Since Van de Putte is hispanic I expected a ‘brown’ wave of votes to carry her into her next stint at the public trough. What a surprise! Helped by a relatively low turnout (<100,000 voters), Taylor took the election decisively.
I was a Taylor supporter primarily because of her ability to act and to get things done quickly. Even if she is a democrat, she is a lot more conservative than most of the RINOs in Congress.
opps Rick missed that Hurd is a black Republican.
Taylor voted against the LGBT NDO. She is no friend of Abortion Barbie, unlike Van de Putte who had tried to hitch her wagon to that disastrous star. Taylor took the mega million light rail project that was being forced on San Antonio, and said the voters should decide.
Hurd, IMHO, is a RINO. Back in March, he was one of the Rinos who voted to bring to a vote, and then to pass the immigration/dhs vote.
That is just what I was thinking.
geez, is there never a good word about folks - one darn vote. maybe he thinks this is what the folks in his district want. he is in his first year and may still be learning but he is not a democrat.
Ivy Taylor lost to Ron Nirenberg 55-45% in a runoff election on 6/10/17.
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