With less than a week to go before the Democratic primary, all eyes are on Texas. Voters have a real chance to make history.
The Texas Senate race is capturing national attention, and momentum is shifting. Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett is now leading in multiple public polls as she seeks the Democratic nomination. A new University of Texas Politics Project poll shows her with a double-digit advantage, 56 percent to 44 percent, over her opponent James Talarico. Earlier polling from the University of Houston showed her leading by eight points. In January, the race was neck and neck. The numbers show movement
But this final week will determine whether that momentum carries across the finish line.
The stakes are evident in how Republicans are responding. Governor Greg Abbott has spent more than three million dollars on attack ads featuring Representative Crockett, attempting to galvanize Republican turnout and frame her as a general election target. His top strategist summed up the message plainly: vote Republican or get Crockett.
When the governor of Texas spends millions to elevate and attack a Democratic primary candidate, it tells you something. They see her strength. They see her potential. They are preparing for November.
Meanwhile, her opponent holds a financial advantage and has outspent her on advertising. We have seen this before. Black women candidates are often told that the math will not work in their favor, that resources will determine the outcome. Yet time and again, when communities mobilize and voters engage, Black women push through.
Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett’s decision to run for the United States Senate is rooted in a powerful Texas tradition of Black women’s leadership. If elected, she would become
Texas’s first Black woman U.S. Senator and the first Black woman elected
to the U. S. Senate from a Southern state. That milestone reflects both
the legacy she carries forward and the urgency of this moment. As the
saying goes,
everything is bigger in Texas, including the stakes for democracy
Texas
has long produced Black women leaders who shaped national debates and
expanded what was possible in public life. Barbara Jordan’s moral
clarity and constitutional command during the Watergate era set a
national standard for principled leadership. Eddie Bernice Johnson, the
predecessor to the seat Representative Crockett now holds, spent decades
advancing science, education, and equity while opening doors for
generations. Sheila Jackson Lee’s nearly three decades in Congress were
defined by relentless advocacy for civil rights, criminal justice
reform, and disaster relief, ensuring Houston and communities across
Texas were never ignored on the national stage. Their leadership was
substantive, disciplined, and transformative. Jasmine Crockett stands
firmly in that lineage.
Her
candidacy arrives during a defining election cycle. In 2026, as many as
five Black women are running for the U.S. Senate, an unprecedented
moment in American politics. Only five Black women have ever served in
the Senate. Today, Senators Angela Alsobrooks and Lisa Blunt Rochester
serve concurrently for the first time in history. Even one additional
victory would set a new record.
Representation shapes out comes. Diverse
decision-making tables lead to stronger, more inclusive policies. When
Black women lead, economic security, access to health care, quality
education, reproductive freedom, and accountable governance rise to the
forefront. These are not niche concerns. They are the foundation of
thriving communities and a resilient democracy.
Jasmine
Crockett’s record reflects that understanding. In Congress, she has
built a reputation as a relentless advocate for working families,
seniors, labor, and communities too often pushed to the margins. She has
served at both the state and federal levels, and as an attorney, she
brings discipline and clarity to the work of governing. Her leadership
reflects the seriousness that defined Barbara Jordan, the persistence
that characterized Eddie Bernice Johnson’s decades of service, and the
tenacity that marked Sheila Jackson Lee’s fearless advocacy.
Jasmine
Crockett’s Senate run represents more than a campaign. It represents
continuity and change. It carries forward the legacy of Barbara Jordan,
Eddie Bernice Johnson, and Sheila Jackson Lee, and it signals that Black
women’s leadership in Texas is not an exception but a defining force.
With less than a week to go, the momentum is real. The path is clear. And Texas has the chance to make history.
Glynda C. Carr is
President & CEO of Higher Heights for America PAC, that endorses and
provides strategic support to Black women candidates who advance public
policy to improve the lives of Black people and strengthen American
democracy.