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In this edition: The MAGA train rolls through Texas, a preview of today’s primaries, and a poll that͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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May 21, 2024
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David Weigel

A top Republican’s lonely stand against Donald Trump’s Texas takeover

Tamir Kalifa/Getty Images

THE SCENE

BEAUMONT, Texas – In the three years as speaker of the Texas House, Dade Phelan passed laws that banned abortion, prevented public universities from teaching “critical race theory,” let local police arrest illegal migrants, and allowed any Texan to carry a firearm without a permit.

Now he’s battling for his job, after angering Donald Trump with a failed impeachment against MAGA-aligned Attorney General Ken Paxton on corruption charges. Next week, Republican voters here will decide whether to “stand with President Trump” by ousting Phelan and electing a “real Republican,” as one campaign ad puts it.

The May 28 runoff in southeast Texas, where Phelan had won easily for a decade, is at the center of a broader campaign to remake the state Republican Party — a mass replacement of business-friendly conservatives by MAGA-branded conservatives.

One week out, it’s already the most expensive state legislative race in Texas history, with $6.9 million spent on behalf of Phelan or challenger David Covey. Millions more was spent to oust six House Republicans who opposed Gov. Greg Abbott’s school choice reforms, force four more Republicans into runoffs, and replace judges who’d crossed Attorney Gen. Ken Paxton, denying him the ability to unilaterally pursue voter fraud cases.

Trump personally endorsed Covey in January; Paxton is the challenger’s next best-known advocate. A 34-year-old energy consultant and former congressional aide, who’d donated to Republicans but never sought office before, Covey and his wife prayed about their decision, then jumped in.

“The establishment leaders told me I didn’t have a chance,” he said, “but the voters kept saying, ‘No, we actually want a conservative.’” The money came immediately — nearly half a million from a new PAC supported by oil billionaire Tim Dunn, nearly a million from the political arm of the Club for Growth. Covey and his allies blamed Phelan for every stalled conservative goal; Phelan said wealthy interlopers were lying about him, for mysterious reasons.

“You wanna talk about the Second Amendment? You wanna talk about pro-life issues? You wanna talk about border security? You wanna talk about election integrity?” Phelan asked the crowd at a Monday night rally here, wearing a camo version of his campaign T-shirt. “No one’s done more than Dade Phelan has. No one! Zero!”

David Weigel/Semafor

KNOW MORE

In an interview, Covey identified a few areas where Phelan wasn’t giving conservatives everything they might expect in a red state legislature. He let Democrats hold some committee chairmanships, a tradition in Austin; he kept a new Border Protection Unit out of border control legislation; he didn’t stop Republicans from nixing Abbott’s school voucher plan.

“Sometimes he does the right thing on local issues,” Covey said. “Well, that’s the bare minimum, but the huge failure to represent the conservative voice on the state level is just tremendous, and really, really does damage to our district.”

Those weren’t the reasons why Trump intervened — a huge moment in the race, commemorated in Covey’s ads, mail, and campaign signs. Trump was moved after Phelan presided over the impeachment of Paxton, which ended with his acquittal by the Texas Senate. The Republican Party of Texas voted to censure Phelan for his role in that, and with early voting underway, Phelan’s expected to skip the state convention this week.

According to Covey, the president cited “border security” and “election integrity” when he phoned to endorse him; Trump emphasized the latter issue in Dallas last week, when he called out Covey from the stage of the NRA’s annual convention.

“David is leading, very substantially, an absolutely terrible speaker of the House who didn’t want to go into voter fraud,” Trump said. “We have to get your speaker out of there so we can go into voter fraud.”

Covey didn’t go into detail about what election changes were needed. “I do think that we have voter fraud in Texas,” he told Semafor, before addressing supporters at a meet-and-greet held in a supporter’s Beaumont firearms store and shooting range. “I think that we’re doing some things to close that gap.”

Phelan’s been dismissive about the demands from Trump and his allies. “They got Hunter Biden doing these terrible things, well, why can’t our guy do terrible things,” he told Politico in March, explaining why Paxton’s supporters shrugged off his bribery and corruption charges.

But the rebellion is about more than Paxton and Trump. Last week, Covey campaigned with a team of conservatives who were crisscrossing Texas, in a bus sponsored by Gun Owners of America, to help other insurgents win their primaries. They’d endorsed a “Contract With Texas,” a 12-point plan to increase conservative power in Austin — replacing “the current liberal Parliamentarians,” taking the remaining chairmanships away from Democrats, ensuring that no “Democrat bills” got floor votes before Republican priorities did.

“He’s the reason we haven’t banned COVID vaccine mandates,” said state Rep. Brian Harrison, referring to Phelan, after jumping off the GOA bus. “It’s why we don’t have stronger border security; why we haven’t banned taxpayer-funded lobbying; why we haven’t passed school choice; why seven of eight [Republican Party of Texas] priorities couldn’t even get a vote or, quote, ‘debate,’ unquote.”

Phelan has defended his record, stood by the Paxton impeachment, and asked southeast Texas Republicans to think about it: How much clout would they lose if he did? On Monday, he stood by as former Gov. Rick Perry asked why local Republicans would ever want to eject “the only speaker you’ve ever had,” counting off the projects he’d brought to the district, speculating that the billionaires funding negative ads against him wanted the region’s water rights.

“If this was the most conservative session in Texas history, why are we going through this process to get rid of one of the three legs of that most conservative session?” Perry asked. “Something else is going on here.”

DAVID’S VIEW

A victory for Covey next week — not assured, though his supporters talk like it is — would be a triumph for a GOP faction that’s moved from the fringe to real power in a couple of years. The Paxton impeachment will have sped that up, with no consequences for the attorney general’s allies. Tim Dunn’s millions had gone to Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick while he presided over the impeachment trial; the same millions were going to elect Dunn-aligned Republicans this year, as Patrick talked about “the expiration date on Dade Phelan’s speakership.”

Voters I’d talked to were not motivated by a particular bill, or particular Phelan decision in Austin. The Paxton impeachment came up occasionally; the Trump endorsement came up far more often. While not everyone was aware of the disputes over what could and could make it into the GOP’s border bill, they were open to the idea that Republicans, perhaps to make nice with Democrats, had weakened it and put them at risk.

“How many of you know what happened on Oct. 7 in Israel?” state Rep. Steve Toth asked Covey’s supporters in Beaumont. “Are we so foolish as to believe that they’re not planning the same thing for us?”

In March, with Super Tuesday turnout helping bring out more voters, Phelan won just 43% of the vote here, to 46% for Covey; the rest went to another conservative activist, who immediately got behind the challenger. Phelan could turn this around. If he does, he’ll enter the 2025 session with fewer allies, in a party whose state and local leadership vocally want him gone, with conservative media outlets and wealthy donors who’ve learned how to win.

On Tuesday, ahead of the state convention, the RPT’s rules committee voted to keep candidates off the ballot if the party had censured them within two years of the election they sought to run in. Had that rule been in place this year, Phelan couldn’t have run at all.

THE VIEW FROM DEMOCRATS

Deep in the minority in Austin, Democrats are watching the GOP primaries unfold uneasily. Some of the Republicans who’d already lost to conservative challengers represented seats that Democrats might win. But most of the victors would slide into safe red districts.

“It’s not right versus left,” said state Rep. James Talarico, who represents a Democratic-trending seat in Austin’s exurbs. “It’s about these West Texas billionaires trying to take over, and their takeover will be complete if they’re able to oust this very conservative speaker. They’ve bought our LG, they’ve bought our governor, and they want to buy the House.”

NOTABLE

  • In the Texas Tribune, Jasper Scherer and Zach Despart profiled the longtime GOP mega-donors working to rescue Phelan, making his race a “last stand for the Republican Party’s business-minded old guard against an insurgency, primarily motivated by social and cultural issues, that aims to reshape the House.”
  • In the Dallas Morning News, Philip Jankowski looks at how Patrick is “seizing an opportunity against a speaker weakened by an unsuccessful attempt to remove Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton from office.”
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State of Play

It’s primary day in four states, and runoff day in southern California, where Assemblyman Vince Fong is expected to finally take the seat vacated by Kevin McCarthy last year. Here’s what else to watch.

Kentucky. There’s not much competition in today’s congressional primaries, but the United Democracy Project, the AIPAC PAC, is spending $300,000 on ads attacking Rep. Tom Massie, who’s heavily favored over two fringe candidates. “Who knows what the future holds?” said Patrick Dorton, UDP’s spokesman, nodding at the speculation that the northern Kentucky conservative might run for Senate when Mitch McConnell retires. “We want to make sure that every voter in Kentucky knows how atrocious Tom Massie is on Israel.”

Most conservative infighting is happening lower down the ballot, in 10 races where a PAC funded by education unions and gambling lobbyists is trying to protect GOP incumbents. Polls close at 6 p.m. in both time zones; Massie’s district observes Eastern Time.

Georgia. Republicans west of Atlanta will nominate a successor to retiring Rep. Drew Ferguson; Trump has endorsed Brian Jack, a former White House political director, to replace him. In southwest Georgia, Capitol rioter Chuck Hand is seeking the GOP nomination to challenge Rep. Sanford Bishop, a Democrat in a fairly safe seat. And in the Atlanta region, six Democrats are running against Rep. David Scott, capitalizing on frustration that the 78-year-old is seeking a 12th term, despite obvious signs of decline. Former Rep. John Barrow, who almost won a statewide race six years ago, is running for a state supreme court seat, and has gotten some attention for talking about how the office could affect abortion policy after a state commission told him not to. Polls close at 7 p.m. Eastern Time.

Idaho. Most of the competition here, where Democrats hold no statewide or federal offices, is between Republicans. A PAC with ties to Gov. Brian Little is spending six figures in four senate primaries, all with conservative incumbents and more moderate challengers — though the ads accuse the conservatives of voting against police. Polls close at 8 p.m. local time; 10 p.m. Eastern in most of the state, and 11 p.m. Eastern in the northern panhandle.

Oregon. Battles between Democratic Party factions dominate the ballot here, especially around Portland and Bend. In Portland’s Multnomah County, county attorney Mike Schmidt is facing a challenge from his right after winning by a landslide in 2020, when he ran as a criminal justice reformer. He’s facing Nathan Vasquez, a former deputy DA, who blames Schmidt’s policies for the post-2020 rise in crime, homelessness, and drug abuse that have shaped every election here since that summer.

Portland Democrats will nominate a successor to retiring 3rd Congressional District Rep. Earl Blumenaur, too — a seven-way race, with most money behind either Multnomah County Commissioner Susheela Jayapal or state Rep. Maxine Dexter. Jayapal’s called for a Gaza ceasefire; Dexter’s late financial support came from pro-Israel and centrist Democrats. In the 5th Congressional District, which Democrat Jamie McLeod-Skinner narrowly lost in 2022, local Democratic leaders have swung behind state Rep. Janelle Bynum, rating her as more electable in November; she’d defeated now-Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer, and has deeper ties to the state than McLeod-Skinner.

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Ads
Club for Growth Action/YouTube

David Covey Campaign, “Finish.” Covey’s ad campaign has linked Phelan to every left-wing cause in Texas, urging conservative voters to ask who the speaker really works for. “Let’s stand with President Trump to defeat Dade Phelan and the Democrats,” Covey says in his closing spot, dramatizing how Phelan attacked his “Christian faith” by showing a Bible slamming onto the dirty ground.

Texans for Dade, “Reject Covey’s Lies.” Phelan’s been running two kinds of TV spots — defenses of his record, and questions about who exactly he’s running against. Here, three women in their kitchen, disgusted by the negative ads in their mailbox, dish on how Covey called himself an attorney on FEC paperwork (after taking online classes but failing to pass the Bar) “If he’ll lie about his job and he’ll lie about being married, what won’t he lie about?”

Club for Growth Action, “Lesson.” Third-party ads against Phelan have echoed all of Covey’s themes — the speaker works too much with Democrats, and Trump wants him to lose. The Club for Growth’s spots, in this and other conservative target races, focuses on the fact that Phelan hasn’t removed Democrats from their remaining committee chairmanships and rolls tape of him telling an interview he’s “unwavering” on that. In the Club’s hands, it’s proof that Phelan is “unwaveringly liberal.”

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Polls

The Biden campaign has run multiple abortion-focused ads, borrowing tactics that worked for state and federal Democrats in 2022, to warn of new abortion limits if Trump wins. Mentioned in most of those ads: Trump appointed the pivotal Supreme Court justices who struck down Roe. It’s a simple message that hasn’t completely connected with voters yet. Just 39% of Arizonans say they were “enthusiastic” or “satisfied” when Roe was overturned, and 64% say they’re inclined to add abortion rights to the state Constitution. But half of voters don’t credit Trump at all for Roe’s fall.

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On the Trail
Justin Lane/Pool via REUTERS

White House. The defense rested in Donald Trump’s New York campaign finance trial on Tuesday, ending any chance that the former president would testify. After one more pilgrimage to Manhattan by Trump supporters — including Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick – Trump headed home, and the jury was dismissed until May 28, when closing arguments will begin.

The Biden campaign, which has largely ignored the trial, ignored the end of this phase as well. On Saturday, the president delivered a commencement address at Morehouse College in Atlanta, with pro-Gaza protests outside and a valedictorian speech endorsing a ceasefire, but no disruption inside. Biden’s remarks, which didn’t touch on the war, focused more on racial equity and decency.

“This is what we’re up against: extremist forces aligned against the meaning and message of Morehouse,” Biden said. “And they peddle a fiction, a caricature of what being a man is about — tough talk, abusing power, bigotry.”

On Thursday, Trump will hold a rally in the Bronx, where he’s lost by landslide margins twice, though Trump rallies in the northeast tend to bring in voters and fans from miles away. Biden went to New Hampshire and Massachusetts on Tuesday, to promote the impacts of the PACT Act on veterans’ health care, and for two campaign events.

For the first time since the end of the primaries, the Trump campaign out raised the Biden campaign — $76 million for Trump operations and the RNC in April, and $51 million for Biden operations and the DNC.

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Next
  • seven days until runoffs in Texas
  • 14 days until primaries in Iowa, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, and South Dakota
  • 27 days until the first presidential debate
  • 55 days until the Republican National Convention
  • 86 days until the Democratic National Convention
  • 168 days until the 2024 presidential election
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