2026-05-29T10:00:08.275Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/29/politics/james-talarico-black-voters-jasmine-crockett
在肯·帕克斯顿成为美国参议院竞选对手后,詹姆斯·塔拉里科的首场集会上,得克萨斯州最知名的黑人领袖之一罗德尼·埃利斯坦言,他曾在竞争激烈的民主党初选中支持塔拉里科的对手——众议员贾斯敏·克罗克特。
“彼时是彼时,此时是此时,”埃利斯周三说道,“风险太高,不能意气用事。”
这是来自哈里斯县专员、前休斯顿州参议员埃利斯的一次显著信任背书,但也凸显出,在黑人选民压倒性支持克罗克特近三个月后,塔拉里科仍在努力打入这个群体。如果塔拉里科想要为民主党在得州实现历史性突破,这个群体是他绝对需要争取的对象。
败选后,克罗克特呼吁民主党人团结支持所有提名候选人,但她尚未与塔拉里科共同开展竞选活动。她的团队在给美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)的最新声明中明确表示,民主党人若想终结共和党执政,仍有大量工作要做。
克罗克特的发言人卡罗尔·里马尔在声明中称,低估帕克斯顿是“愚蠢的”,“通往11月大选的道路依然漫长”。
“民主党人必须做出艰难抉择:究竟是将资金投入到得州这场胜算渺茫的竞选,还是加码在阿拉斯加、佐治亚等已拿下的州级选举?”声明写道,“得克萨斯州民主党提名的候选人中,前三名均来自奥斯汀。他们必须在奥斯汀以外的地区开展大量工作,以赢得全州各地选民的共鸣——得州是全美规模最大、最多元化的州之一。”
声明补充道,克罗克特仍认为,将得州“变成蓝色州的关键在于激活民主党基本盘”,包括有色人种选民。民主党人“可以整日拉拢心怀不满的共和党人,但他们的人数根本不足以改变选举结果”,声明称。
尽管克罗克特的团队表示其并未针对任何特定候选人进行批评,但塔拉里科一直表示,他希望争取那些对本党感到厌倦的民主党人、无党派人士和共和党人支持。周二晚间,在帕克斯顿在共和党初选中击败参议员约翰·科宁后,塔拉里科在X平台上发布帖文,明确向科宁的支持者发出呼吁,称他们“在我们的竞选活动中拥有一席之地”。
自1994年以来,没有任何民主党人在得州赢得过全州性选举。
“我为我们在得州各地凝聚联盟的工作感到自豪——因为我们的州值得一位能为得州黑人选民履职的参议员,”塔拉里科在给CNN的声明中说道,“作为党内提名的候选人,我有责任赢得黑人选民的信任与支持,他们长期以来被全国民主党当局视为理所当然。”
塔拉里科在充满争议的初选结束后清楚地意识到,他必须修复与支持克罗克特的黑人选民之间的关系。
自初选以来,塔拉里科在达拉斯的保罗·奎因学院——该州最古老的黑人历史学院——发表了毕业典礼演讲;走访了休斯顿郊外的另一所黑人历史大学普拉里维尤农工大学;并推出了一项应对孕产妇死亡率的计划,该问题对黑人女性的影响尤为严重。
他已在达拉斯、休斯顿和奥斯汀与黑人领袖团体举行会议;还单独会见了沃斯堡民权活动家奥帕尔·李,以及将接替克罗克特在众议院席位的民主党提名候选人、达拉斯牧师弗雷迪·海恩斯。本月早些时候,塔拉里科与美国最知名的黑人民主党人、前总统巴拉克·奥巴马意外造访了奥斯汀一家塔可店。
“我真的相信他已经竭尽所能,”州众议员克里斯蒂安·曼努埃尔说道。这位黑人民主党人曾是克罗克特的支持者,代表得州东南部的杰斐逊县,该县在初选中克罗克特获得了近80%的选票。
他表示,如果说存在问题的话,那就是“那些在社交媒体上占据高位的人仍然纠结于1月、2月和3月发生的事情,而我们其他人则在努力向前,并尽可能多地团结他人”,在11月的选举中投票。
曼努埃尔补充道,一些黑人民主党人一直在游说塔拉里科的竞选团队,在竞选行程中“额外增加站点”,以接触有色人种社区。“他们做出了回应,”他说。
runoff后的竞选之旅的第二站于周四将塔拉里科带到了东得州中心地带的纳科多奇斯,该地区在初选中克罗克特赢得了大部分县的支持。黑人县专员桑迪·麦考维介绍了塔拉里科,她表示塔拉里科“明白这个社区的重要性”,并将“激活民主党基本盘”作为其竞选战略的一部分。
塔拉里科在团结党内方面持续取得进展。他在初选后会见了支持克罗克特的全州进步组织得克萨斯组织项目,据一位知情人士透露,该组织将于未来几天为塔拉里科背书。
该组织执行主任布丽安娜·布朗本月早些时候在接受采访时表示,由于该组织不在奥斯汀开展活动,成员们对塔拉里科相对陌生。但她说,初选后她有机会更好地了解他,并向他强调,存在“一条不以白人选民为中心的胜利之路”。她表示,双方在这个话题上“进行了一些来回讨论”,但他“态度开放”,并表明他已对该组织做足了功课。
“克罗克特的竞选活动中真正令人鼓舞的一点是,涌现了一大批新选民,因为他们对她所代表的理念感到兴奋,”布朗说道,她补充道,克罗克特与黑人选民有着“直接的亲近感”,“詹姆斯必须重视、尊重这种亲近感,并加以利用”。
一场充满争议的初选
3月初选前的民调显示,克罗克特在黑人选民中以大幅领先塔拉里科。克罗克特拿下了黑人人口占比最高的10个县,以约24个百分点的优势赢得这些县的支持。在黑人人口占比约33%的杰斐逊县,克罗克特以近60个百分点的优势获胜。
初选期间,克罗克特与塔拉里科的支持者之间紧张关系尖锐,且往往围绕种族问题展开。在克罗克特参选前退出参议院竞选的前众议员科林·奥尔雷德,在一名博主声称塔拉里科私下称奥尔雷德为“平庸的黑人”后,抨击了塔拉里科;塔拉里科称这是“不实描述”。几天后,支持塔拉里科的超级政治行动委员会开始投放广告质疑克罗克特在11月大选的获胜能力,她直言这种攻击路线是种族主义的。
塔拉里科赢得参议院提名后,奥尔雷德表示将支持他。奥尔雷德在周二的联邦众议院初选跑选中击败众议员朱莉·约翰逊获胜,克罗克特为奥尔雷德助选,而塔拉里科则为约翰逊助选。
3月3日塔拉里科赢得参议院初选后,克罗克特表示她已致电祝贺他,并表示民主党“必须团结在我们的提名候选人周围,赢得选举”。她尚未与塔拉里科共同开展竞选活动,而是将政治精力集中在帮助其他得州初选跑选候选人上,包括奥尔雷德和第18国会选区的克里斯蒂安·梅尼菲。
克罗克特还前往其他州为候选人助选,包括前往加利福尼亚州为州长候选人哈维尔·贝塞拉拉票。
前众议员贝托·奥罗克曾于2018年代表民主党竞选得州参议院席位,并于四年前竞选州长。他周四在CNN的《劳拉·科茨直播》节目中表示,争取得州黑人选民对塔拉里科来说“决定整场选举的胜负”。他表示,塔拉里科迄今为止对黑人选民的外联工作“非常令人鼓舞”,但他希望看到克罗克特与塔拉里科共同竞选。
“除了詹姆斯·塔拉里科之外,我想不出得州还有谁比她更有明星影响力,”奥罗克说道,“当她利用这种影响力与这里的选民建立联系时,我认为詹姆斯在11月的大选中获胜的机会将大大增加。”
州众议员曼努埃尔表示,他相信克罗克特会支持塔拉里科,并指出,对黑人选民来说,“亲自认识他”比看到这位众议员为他助选更重要。
其他前克罗克特的支持者也持同样看法。大普拉里城市议会议员朱尼尔·埃泽奥努是初选后在达拉斯与塔拉里科会面的黑人领袖之一,他表示,他和与会的大多数人都曾是克罗克特的支持者,但他们理解为11月大选团结起来的必要性。
与此同时,他说,他们强调塔拉里科必须“围绕黑人选民关心的议题展开竞选”,并“为像我们这样的人而奋斗”。
“我们不能仅仅因为特朗普在任、我们对特朗普感到愤怒,就指望黑人选民大规模投票,”埃泽奥努说,“我们必须给他们一个投票的理由……他必须每天都阐述这一点。”
CNN记者爱德华·吴对本文亦有贡献。
How James Talarico is working to win over Black voters who strongly backed Jasmine Crockett
2026-05-29T10:00:08.275Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/29/politics/james-talarico-black-voters-jasmine-crockett
At James Talarico’s first rally after Ken Paxton became his opponent in their US Senate race, one of Texas’ most prominent Black leaders, Rodney Ellis, acknowledged he had supported Talarico’s opponent, Rep. Jasmine Crockett, in their hard-fought Democratic primary.
“That was then, this is now,” Ellis said on Wednesday. “There’s too much at stake to be petty.”
It was a notable vote of confidence from Ellis, a Harris County commissioner and former state senator from Houston. Yet it also showed how Talarico is still building inroads with Black voters nearly three months after they overwhelmingly favored Crockett, a bloc that the state representative desperately needs if he wants to have any chance at a historic breakthrough for his party in Texas.
After losing to Talarico, Crockett called on Democrats to unite behind all their nominees. But she has not campaigned with Talarico yet, and her team made clear in a new statement to CNN that she believes Texas Democrats have considerable progress to make if they want to end Republican rule.
The statement, from Crockett spokesperson Karrol Rimal, said it would be “foolish to underestimate” Paxton and that there is “still a long road ahead to November.”
“Tough decisions will need to be made about where Democrats are prioritizing their spending – do they invest in a Texas longshot or double down in states where they’ve won statewide such as Alaska and Georgia?” the statement said. “Texas Democrats have nominated a slate of candidates where the top three spots are filled with lawmakers from Austin. They’ll have to do a lot of work outside of Central Texas and to resonate with constituencies across our state which is one of the largest and diverse in the world.”
The statement added that Crockett still believes turning Texas blue “lies in energizing the Democratic base,” including voters of color. Democrats “can chase disaffected Republicans all day but there simply is not enough of them to change the outcome,” the statement said.
While Crockett’s spokesperson said her team isn’t directing criticism at any specific candidate, Talarico has long said he wants to win over Democrats, independents and Republicans fed up with their party. On Tuesday night, after Paxton defeated Sen. John Cornyn in their party’s runoff, Talarico made an explicit appeal to Cornyn supporters, telling them in an X post that they “have a place in our campaign.”
No Democrat has won statewide in Texas since 1994.
“I’m proud of the work we’ve been doing all across Texas to bring our coalition together — because our state deserves a Senator that will deliver for Black Texans,” Talarico said in a statement to CNN. “As the candidate at the top of the ticket, it’s on me to earn the trust and support of Black voters that have been taken for granted by the national Democratic party for far too long.”
Talarico emerged from his contentious primary well aware that he needed to mend fences with Black voters who backed Crockett.
Since the primary, Talarico has given the commencement address at Paul Quinn College in Dallas, the oldest historically Black college in the state; visited another HBCU, Prairie View A&M University outside Houston; and rolled out a plan to combat maternal mortality, which disproportionately impacts Black women.
He’s held meetings with groups of Black leaders in the Dallas area, Houston and Austin; and he’s met individually Fort Worth civil rights activist Opal Lee and Dallas pastor Freddie Haynes, the Democratic nominee to succeed Crockett in the House. And earlier this month, Talarico made a surprise visit to an Austin taco shop with the best-known Black Democrat in the country: former President Barack Obama.
“I really believe he is doing everything that he can do,” said state Rep. Christian Manuel, a Black Democrat and former Crockett supporter who represents Jefferson County in southeast Texas, where Crockett won nearly 80% of the primary vote.
If there is a problem, he said, it is “people who are in the social media stratosphere [who] are still stuck in what happened in January, in February, in March, and the rest of us are trying to move on and drag as many people as possible” to turn out in November.
Manuel added that some Black Democrats have been lobbying Talarico’s campaign to “throw in an extra place” on his campaign swings to reach communities of color. “They’ve been responsive,” he said.
The second stop of Talarico’s post-runoff tour took him on Thursday to Nacogdoches, in the heart of East Texas, where Crockett carried most counties in the primary. He was introduced by a Black county commissioner, Sandy McCorvey, who said Talarico “understands this community matters,” and that he is “energizing a Democratic base” as part of his campaign strategy.
Talarico continues to make progress in uniting the party. He met after the primary with the Texas Organizing Project, a statewide progressive organizing group that backed Crockett, and is set to receive the group’s endorsement in the coming days, according to a source familiar with its plans.
Brianna Brown, the group’s executive director, said in an interview earlier this month that members were relatively unfamiliar with Talarico because the group does not operate in Austin. But she had a chance to get to know him better after the primary, she said, and emphasized to him that there is a “path to victory that is not about centering White swing voters.” She said they had “some back and forth” on the topic, but he was “receptive” and demonstrated he had done his homework about the group.
“The thing about Jasmine’s race that is really encouraging is there was a whole new wave of voters who came out because they were excited about what she represents,” Brown said, adding that Crockett had an “immediate kinship” with Black voters and that “needs to be valued and respected and poured into by James.”
A contentious primary
Polls conducted ahead of the March primary had Crockett leading Talarico by a substantial margin among Black voters. Crockett swept the 10 counties with the highest share of Black residents, winning those counties by a margin of about 24 points. In Jefferson County, which has the largest share of Black residents in the state at about 33%, Crockett won by nearly 60 points.
There were sharp tensions between Crockett and Talarico supporters during the primary, and they often centered on race. Former Rep. Colin Allred, who dropped out of the Senate race as Crockett entered, slammed Talarico after an influencer alleged that Talarico had privately referred to Allred as a “mediocre Black man”; Talarico said it was a “mischaracterization.” And days later, after a pro-Talarico super PAC started running ads questioning Crockett’s ability to win in November, she bluntly called the line of attack racist.
After Talarico won the Senate nomination, Allred said he would support him. Allred went on to win a US House primary runoff on Tuesday against Rep. Julie Johnson where Crockett campaigned for Allred and Talarico for Johnson.
After Talarico won the Senate primary on March 3, Crockett said she called him to congratulate him and said Democrats “must rally around our nominees and win.” She has not yet campaigned alongside him, instead focusing her political efforts on helping other Texas runoff candidates, including Allred and Christian Menefee in the 18th Congressional District.
Crockett has also been traveling to other states to stump for candidates, including California for Xavier Becerra for governor.
Former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, whom Democrats nominated for Senate in Texas in 2018 and governor four years later, said Thursday on CNN’s “Laura Coates Live” that winning over Black voters in the state is “the ball game” for Talarico. He said Talarico’s outreach to Black voters so far is “very encouraging” but noted he would like to see Crockett campaign with him.
“She has more star power than anyone I can think of in Texas, apart from James Talarico,” O’Rourke said. “When she uses that to connect with the electorate here, I think James is going to have more than an even shot of winning this in November.”
Manuel, the Texas state representative, said he felt confident Crockett was supportive of Talarico and suggested it was more important for Black voters to “meet and know him” than to see the congresswoman stump for him.
The feeling is mutual among other former Crockett supporters. Grand Prairie City Councilman Junior Ezeonu, one of the Black leaders who met with Talarico in Dallas after the primary, said he and most others in their meeting had been Crockett supporters, but they understood the need to unify for the November election.
At the same time, he said, they emphasized Talarico has to “run on issues” important to Black voters “and fight for people like us.”
“We just can’t assume that Black voters will turn out en masse because Trump is in office because we’re mad at Trump,” Ezeonu said. “We’ve got to give them a reason to vote. … He has to make that case every single day.”
CNN’s Edward Wu contributed to this report.
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