Red state : an insider's story of how the GOP came to dominate Texas politics

Author(s)

    • Thorburn, Wayne

Bibliographic Information

Red state : an insider's story of how the GOP came to dominate Texas politics

Wayne Thorburn

(The Jack and Doris Smothers series in Texas history, life, and culture, no. 42)

University of Texas Press, 2018, c2014

  • : pbk

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Note

"First edition, 2014. First paperback edition, 2018"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. [271]-281) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In November 1960, the Democratic party dominated Texas. The newly elected vice president, Lyndon Johnson, was a Texan. Democrats held all thirty statewide elective positions. The state legislature had 181 Democrats and no Republicans or anyone else. Then fast forward fifty years to November 2010. Texas has not voted for a Democratic president since 1976. Every statewide elective office is held by Republicans. Representing Texas in Washington is a congressional delegation of twenty-five Republicans and nine Democrats. Republicans control the Texas Senate by a margin of nineteen to twelve and the Texas House of Representatives by 101 to 49. Red State explores why this transformation of Texas politics took place and what these changes imply for the future. As both a political scientist and a Republican party insider, Wayne Thorburn is especially qualified to explain how a solidly one-party Democratic state has become a Republican stronghold. He analyzes a wealth of data to show how changes in the state's demographics-including an influx of new residents, the shift from rural to urban, and the growth of the Mexican American population-have moved Texas through three stages of party competition, from two-tiered politics, to two-party competition between Democrats and Republicans, and then to the return to one-party dominance, this time by Republicans. His findings reveal that the shift from Democratic to Republican governance has been driven not by any change in Texans' ideological perspective or public policy orientation-even when Texans were voting Democrat, conservatives outnumbered liberals or moderates-but by the Republican party's increasing identification with conservatism since 1960.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments A Note on Sources 1. Understanding Texas 2. Dividing the State 3. A Century of One-Party Politics 4. Stirrings and Small Cracks 5. Toward a Two-Party Texas 6. The Two-Party Interlude 7. The Era of Republican Dominance 8. The Future of Texas Politics Bibliography Index

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