Kamala Harris Intercedes At The 11th Hour In Heated Texas Democrat Primary
Give former Vice President Kamala Harris this much: she is not afraid to buck her own party’s strategic instincts.
In a Texas Democratic Senate primary that has quietly become a test of electability versus activism, Harris stepped in at the eleventh hour to endorse Rep. Jasmine Crockett—an outspoken House member known as much for viral confrontations as for legislative accomplishments. The move cuts directly against the grain of much of the Democratic establishment, which has been coalescing around state Rep. James Talarico as the candidate perceived to have broader general election appeal.
🚨 BREAKING: Jasmine ‘Wig’ Crockett’s Senate announcement video is just a compilation of President Trump calling her a low IQ person.
I can’t wait to see her campaign go down in flames. pic.twitter.com/G2w9wtFQ3z
— CJ Pearson (@Cjpearson) December 8, 2025
In a robocall reported by The Texas Tribune, Harris urged voters to back Crockett, declaring, “Texas has the chance to send a fighter like Jasmine Crockett to the United States Senate.” She framed Crockett as a figure capable of holding “Donald Trump and his billionaire cronies accountable,” concluding with the familiar rallying cry: “It’s time to turn Texas blue.”
The endorsement is not entirely surprising on a personal level. Crockett served as national co-chair of Harris’ 2024 presidential campaign, forging a political alliance that has continued beyond the White House race. Yet timing is everything in politics, and Harris’ decision to weigh in just as early voting concluded adds a new layer of intrigue to a race already loaded with implications.
NEW: Rep. Jasmine Crockett suggests the United States needs illegal immigrants because “we done picking cotton.”
Crockett made the argument that the U.S. needs immigrants for farming while speaking at Grace Baptist Church in Connecticut.
“So I had to go around the country and… pic.twitter.com/DUEZ4PskEg
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) April 7, 2025
The broader electoral math makes the endorsement especially consequential. On the Republican side, Sen. John Cornyn faces a turbulent primary challenge from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt. With polling suggesting no candidate is likely to clear 50 percent, a runoff appears probable. Paxton, often positioned as the populist favorite, carries both fervent support and significant controversy—factors that could complicate a general election matchup.
From a strategic standpoint, Democrats face a fundamental question: nominate a candidate who can blend progressive credentials with broader appeal, or embrace a more combative figure who energizes the base but risks alienating swing voters. Talarico’s profile offers relative anonymity and a more measured public persona. Crockett, by contrast, has cultivated a national reputation for sharp-edged rhetoric and unapologetic confrontation.
JUST IN: Rep. Jasmine Crockett is upset that Trump didn’t “holla” at her before striking Iran
“You could’ve hollered at us…”
“I am a black woman in America who just happens to be educated enough to know what the law is.”
“If you Google war and authority and Constitution,… pic.twitter.com/52jVdlWV5e
— Unlimited L’s (@unlimited_ls) June 22, 2025
Harris’ endorsement signals a clear preference for confrontation over calibration. Whether that choice strengthens Democratic enthusiasm or complicates the party’s path in a state that has repeatedly resisted statewide Democratic victories remains to be seen.
What is certain is that the Texas Senate race now carries more national weight than it did a week ago. With Republican primary turbulence on one side and a Democratic identity test on the other, Harris’ late intervention ensures that this contest is no longer just about Texas—it is about the direction and tone of a party still defining its post-2024 future.
