My message to President Trump: Don’t mess with Texas politics



Texas just had a primary election, and the message from voters could not have been clearer: A large share of Republicans are done with incumbent Senator John Cornyn.

After years of frustration with the longtime senator, voters forced a runoff between Cornyn and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Cornyn may have finished with the largest vote total, but the numbers behind that result tell a more revealing story.

Cornyn will now have to defend his record directly to Republican voters who have grown skeptical of his leadership.

Cornyn received roughly 907,000 votes out of more than 2 million total votes cast in the Republican primary. That means over a million Texans showed up to vote for someone other than the incumbent senator. The difference between Cornyn and Paxton was only about 26,000 votes — a razor-thin margin in a state as big as Texas.

Then there is Wesley Hunt, who drew nearly 293,000 votes. Combine the Paxton and Hunt totals, and more than 1.1 million voters cast ballots against John Cornyn.

After all the money Cornyn poured into the race, that should have been the headline.

Cornyn and his allies reportedly spent close to $100 million between campaign spending and super PAC support. Nearly $100 million to hold on to a Senate seat — and the result was a runoff. Paxton spent a fraction of that amount, about $4 million, and still came within striking distance. Put another way, Cornyn spent $129 per vote against Paxton’s $3.79 per vote.

That is not the performance of a senator who commands overwhelming support in his own party. It looks like a political establishment trying to prop up a candidate who has worn out his welcome with grassroots voters.

Yet despite the message voters sent, Washington may be preparing to rescue Cornyn anyway.

President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social that he would soon make an endorsement in the runoff and would ask the candidate he does not choose to drop out of the race immediately.

You would struggle to find many people who have been as outspoken in support of President Trump as I have. I have defended him when the media attacked him and stood by him through years of political backlash. But I still take offense at anyone in the federal government trying to manipulate a Texas election.

Texas has a runoff system for a reason. When no candidate receives a majority, the top two candidates go back to the voters. It forces candidates to earn a true majority rather than slide through a divided field.

Cutting that process short to protect an incumbent senator who just failed to win an outright majority defeats the entire purpose.

It also ignores a political reality that has fueled so much frustration: Cornyn has spent years drifting away from the conservative voters he is supposed to represent.

Cornyn has cultivated a reputation as a Washington dealmaker, working across the aisle and negotiating major legislation with Democrats. That may earn praise from Senate leadership and the political class in Washington, but it has increasingly alienated conservatives back home.

Cornyn’s relationship with Trump has also been anything but consistent. During the lead-up to the 2024 election, Cornyn questioned Trump’s ability to win a general election and suggested Republicans might need a different nominee. He said Trump’s “time has passed him by” and argued the party needed someone who could appeal beyond Trump’s base.

RELATED: America should eliminate the H-1B and replace it with THIS

eldadcarin via iStock/Getty Images

Statements like that do not disappear just because campaign season arrives.

Ken Paxton’s record with Trump tells a different story. When the political establishment turned on the former president after the 2020 election, Paxton stood with him. He challenged election procedures in court and took enormous political heat for doing so. Paxton absorbed the backlash anyway.

That loyalty is one reason grassroots conservatives rallied behind him in the primary.

And it brings the conversation back to the runoff itself.

Primary night showed that a majority of Republican voters were willing to vote for someone other than John Cornyn. Even after nearly $100 million in support, the incumbent could not clear the threshold needed to avoid a second round.

That fact should make Washington pause before rushing in to protect him.

The runoff exists so voters can finish the conversation they started on primary night. Cornyn will now have to defend his record directly to Republican voters who have grown skeptical of his leadership. Paxton will argue, and rightly so, that Texas deserves a senator who fights the establishment rather than manages it.

Those arguments belong in Texas, in front of Texas voters.

Cornyn has had decades in Washington to prove himself. The primary results suggest a growing number of Texans think that time has passed him by.

Far-left Democrat spent thousands on luxury travel, including limousines and posh hotels, filings show



A new campaign spending report filed with the Federal Election Commission revealed that far-left Democrat Rep. Jasmine Crockett of Texas has spent tens of thousands of dollars living the high life in 2025.

Crockett has emerged as one of the louder foul-mouths on the left to criticize the policies of President Donald Trump and gained prominence on social media for her outbursts.

She is weighing whether to run for US Senate as a way of dealing 'karma' for the redistricting passed by Republicans.

The filing documents more than $25K in luxury services that included high-end hotels and ritzy limousine rides while Crockett was visiting locations outside of her district, the 30th district in Texas.

The expenses were made in the period since January at locations that included Martha’s Vineyard, Chicago, New York City, Las Vegas, San Francisco, as well as Los Angeles.

Among the hotel expenses were the following:

  • $4,175.01 at the Ritz-Carlton
  • $2,304.79 at the Luxury Collection
  • $5,326.52 to the West Hollywood Edition in Los Angeles
  • $1,173.92 to the Times Square Edition in New York City
  • Over $2,000 to the Cosmopolitan and Aria resort in Las Vegas
  • $2,703.14 to the Edgartown Inn in Martha’s Vineyard
  • $3,160.93 at the Coco, also in Martha’s Vineyard

The congresswoman also reported paying $50K for security services.

Crockett has indicated that she is weighing whether to run for U.S. Senate as a way of dealing "karma" for the redistricting passed by Republicans.

"Because if you want to take my seat of 766,000 away, I feel like there has to be some karma in that to where I take your seat that is for 30 million away," she said in October. "So we are, you know, the primary is the primary. That's cool, but you got to win the general. So we are doing some testing here shortly to see if I can expand the electorate."

RELATED: Progressive radio show host posts photo of herself kissing Jasmine Crockett's sneakers

A Blaze News request for comment from Crockett's office was not immediately returned.

She also made headlines recently when progressive radio show host Stephanie Miller posted photographs of herself kissing Crockett's sneakers. Many thought the joke exemplified how the media favors the left.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Dark Money Group Founded To Boost Biden’s Agenda Is Scaling Back Operations

'Even today, a lot of Americans don’t know what we’ve done'

Leftist Dark Money Funds ‘Conservatives’ To Stab Trump Voters In The Back

The Bulwark’s publisher was the biggest outside political spender in the 2020 election, dropping a stunning $15.6 million in independent expenditures savaging Donald Trump.