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Republicans Have Won South Texas Latinos. Does the Democratic Party Have a Path Back?

The shift toward Donald Trump in the Rio Grande Valley in 2020 grew into a sweep for the GOP in many border counties on Tuesday. Could the path back be making voters here feel welcome again—not just as Latinos but as working people?

The oldest woman in Texas, Elizabeth Francis, died at age 115 in Houston on October 24. She was one of the final people in the state who was alive the last time Webb County, home to Laredo, voted for a Republican for president—that is, until the country voted for Donald Trump, nearly two weeks after Francis died.

On Tuesday, Trump became the first GOP presidential candidate since William Howard Taft in 1912 to win Webb. It’s perhaps the most impressive jewel Trump has collected in his stunning crusade through what was once deep blue South Texas. Webb’s population is more than 95 percent Latino, and, like other Mexican American counties across the region, it shifted hard right in the 2020 election. Trump almost quadrupled his turnout that year relative to 2016, but the Democrats’ advantage was strong enough that the party still managed to beat him handily, sending Biden 61 percent of the vote. 

This year Trump won with 51 percent, flipping Webb and almost every other heavily Latino border county in Texas. Hidalgo County, home of McAllen, which Hillary Clinton once carried with 69 percent of the vote, went to Trump with 51 percent; Cameron County, home to Brownsville, gave Clinton 65 percent of the votes in 2016 and Trump 52.5 percent this year.