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Colin Allred Running Against Ted Cruz in Texas

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Colin Allred Is Running a Novel Campaign. Looks Like It’s Working. Texas Monthly Colin may be winning . . . Colin Allred was running late, but it didn’t matter—nobody was waiting for him. Only staff and a single journalist occupied the cavernous International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Union Hall in Houston at 2:30 on a recent Tuesday afternoon, the time Allred’s campaign had provided for what it was touting as a “roundtable on Texas energy jobs.” Three conference tables were arranged in a U shape beneath the IBEW Local 716 flag, but neither the congressman nor the roundtable participants had shown up. Journalists had been informed of the event just the previous day; the invitation did not extend to the public. Nearly half an hour

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Colin Allred Is Running a Novel Campaign. Looks Like It’s Working. Texas Monthly

Colin may be winning . . .

Colin Allred was running late, but it didn’t matter—nobody was waiting for him. Only staff and a single journalist occupied the cavernous International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Union Hall in Houston at 2:30 on a recent Tuesday afternoon, the time Allred’s campaign had provided for what it was touting as a “roundtable on Texas energy jobs.” Three conference tables were arranged in a U shape beneath the IBEW Local 716 flag, but neither the congressman nor the roundtable participants had shown up. Journalists had been informed of the event just the previous day; the invitation did not extend to the public.

Nearly half an hour passed before the nine invited union representatives—mostly electrical workers and city bus drivers—finally shuffled into the hall and took their seats around the table. Allred, the Dallas-area congressman and Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, arrived a few minutes later. He sat down at the head of the table, flanked by the American and Texas flags, and introduced himself in a nearly inaudible voice. For the next forty minutes, he politely listened as the union members discussed the challenges they faced in their careers, including the transition from oil and gas to green energy. A campaign photographer circled the table, taking photos for Allred’s social media feed.

Shortly after the event ended, Allred left the hall—seemingly in a rush. But if it was to scurry off to another public appearance, that wasn’t advertised to the reporters trailing him that day. He wouldn’t host an event for the public until two days later, in Austin. Indeed, for an upstart candidate challenging one of the most high-profile incumbents in the country, Ted Cruz, Allred is running an abnormal campaign. He has rejected freewheeling town hall meetings.

He’s dismissed the strategy favored by former Cruz opponent Beto O’Rourke, and is not making road trips to red rural areas trailed by an iPhone camera that broadcasts his every move to Facebook Live. He hosts few campaign rallies that would gin up enthusiasm among Texas’s liberals. After the roundtable in Houston, Allred allowed one question from each of the three reporters in attendance. Texas Monthly used its turn to ask why the representative was holding such small events. Allred replied . . .

“I like to talk to people, and I like to hear from them how things are going. Ted Cruz does not listen to anybody. I don’t think he has much interest in hearing from people.”

When asked, Allred did not answer whether limiting public events is a deliberate campaign strategy. His team provided a brief statement about Cruz that did not address the question.

“I don’t disagree with his strategy based on who Allred is as a candidate,” said Jeff Dalton, a North Texas political consultant who led Democratic state senator Royce West’s unsuccessful 2020 campaign for U.S. Senate.

“He wants people to see that he’s an independent thinker and a candidate with his own convictions who is capable of criticizing or supporting policies on both sides.”

At a public roundtable in August in Austin, Allred tried to engage the crowd of about forty on the issues. He singled out the plight of a family of three in the audience whose teenage son required expensive insulin treatments and said he would work to cap the costs of the drug if elected. But he then pivoted away from specific policy points and back to talking up his ability to work across the aisle.

“I’m the most bipartisan Texan in Congress,”

Allred said as he wrapped his speech, referencing an award he was given in 2023 by the Common Ground Committee, which rates how effectively an elected official embodies the spirit and practice of bipartisanship. The crowd seemed to care less about Allred’s cross-aisle work than his Cruz bashing. After the event, I found the father of the family Allred had singled out. When I asked Travis Jordan, a 56-year-old retiree wearing a face mask what he liked about the candidate, he told me

“Allred is the guy who is possibly going to rid us of Ted Cruz, which is a very good thing for the state.”

“With voters’ help and God’s grace, I will be your next United States senator.”

Allred told the crowd in Austin. To those who question whether the representative’s dream for a blue Texas amounts to more magical thinking among Texas Democrats, Allred offers little counterargument—just a winning smile. 

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