发布于 2026 年 2 月 23 日,美国东部时间上午 6:00 / 来源:CNN
休斯顿—
得克萨斯州众议员贾斯敏·克罗基特(Jasmine Crockett)直言不讳地承认,她没有进行一场传统的参议院竞选,而这种策略将在下个月的民主党初选中接受考验。
“我并不真正认同以传统方式做所有事情的想法,”克罗基特周五上午在休斯顿一家餐厅与一群宗教领袖共进早餐时表示。
当天晚些时候,这位 44 岁的国会议员将她的竞选理念带到了休斯顿的夜生活场所。社交媒体上捕捉到她在一家酒吧向选民自我介绍的场景:“我是贾斯敏·克罗基特议员。现在,我已准备好大干一场,成为你们的下一任美国参议员。”
在民主党全国范围内就如何在关键的中期选举年及以后获胜展开辩论之际,克罗基特时而不加过滤、大体上非传统的做法正在挑战选举政治的传统规则。
作为一名前公设辩护人和民权律师,克罗基特驳斥了那些质疑她当选可能性的人,称此类言论是“狗哨子”和“贬低黑人女性”。她指出,支持她在民主党初选中的对手——州众议员詹姆斯·塔拉利科(James Talarico)的一个超级政治行动委员会(Super PAC)对她发动了攻击。她认为,得克萨斯州民主党获胜的途径是重新激发党内基础力量,包括有色人种选民——而不是说服那些对唐纳德·特朗普总统感到不满的温和派和共和党人。
“过去 30 年,我们一直采用传统方式,但这种方式行不通。而‘疯狂’的定义就是一遍又一遍地做同样的事情,”克罗基特在得克萨斯州康罗的一场活动结束后告诉 CNN。“在当下,我们的政府运作方式毫无传统可言,因此我认为人们在寻求不同的选择。”
在国会山与共和党人进行直率交锋后,克罗基特声名鹊起。她带着较高的知名度进入了得克萨斯州参议院竞选,这一因素在竞选初期对她有利。但根据一些传统指标,克罗基特在民主党初选中落后于塔拉利科。
塔拉利科在筹款方面占据绝对优势,自去年 9 月宣布参选以来已筹集超过 2000 万美元,而克罗基特自去年 12 月宣布参选以来仅筹集了 370 万美元。克罗基特还从她的众议院竞选账户中转出了另外 480 万美元。塔拉利科及其支持团体的电视广告投放量远超克罗基特。
她在报名截止日前才决定参加参议院竞选,这也使得克罗基特在 3 月的初选前比塔拉利科的准备时间短得多。她尚未组建一支强大的竞选团队,还必须在竞选日程与华盛顿的国会职责之间进行平衡。
这场竞选的公开民调有限,但 1 月份休斯顿大学 Hobby 公共事务学院进行的一项民调显示,在可能参加民主党初选的选民中,克罗基特以 8 个百分点的优势领先塔拉利科。
塔拉利科最近与《深夜秀》主持人斯蒂芬·科尔伯特(Stephen Colbert)的走红时刻帮助提升了他的知名度,为关键的早期投票阶段注入了新的活力。他的竞选团队表示,在这场深夜秀风波后的 24 小时内,他筹集了 250 万美元。
“这场竞选的关键在于:詹姆斯是否有足够的资金和时间向全州的民主党初选选民介绍自己,并试图赶上贾斯敏·克罗基特早已领先的位置?”一位正在追踪这场竞选的得克萨斯州民主党策略师表示。“她以斗士形象闻名,在民主党人和该州许多地区都深受喜爱。”
关于当选可能性的辩论
克罗基特能否在得克萨斯州这样的州在大选中击败共和党对手,已成为她竞选活动中的一个潜在问题。
1 月份,民主党内部最明显的分歧之一出现:两名喜剧演员在热门播客“Las Culturistas”中告诉听众不要向克罗基特的竞选活动捐款,称她无法赢得大选。
这两人后来道了歉,但这一事件将关于当选可能性的辩论推到了初选的前沿。
这位得克萨斯州民主党策略师驳斥了过多讨论当选可能性的说法,称“如果得克萨斯州民主党政治中存在一种当选可能性的秘诀,我们可能早就解决这个问题了。”
克罗基特的支持者、州众议员妮可·科利尔(Nicole Collier)与这位国会议员相识已有十年。她告诉 CNN,一些此类担忧“源于对未知的恐惧”,这将取决于个人对当选可能性的看法。
“有足够多的民主党人或自称为民主党的人存在。关键是要让他们前往投票站,让他们投票,找到能够激励他们这样做的候选人。这个人就是有当选可能的,”她说。“当我投票支持你时,你就有了当选的可能。”
科利尔指出,克罗基特在 2020 年竞选得克萨斯州众议院席位时,在民主党初选中击败了洛林·比拉比尔(Lorraine Birabil),后者最近刚刚在一次特别选举中赢得了达拉斯地区的席位。
“她打破了常规,”科利尔说。“看看她的州议员竞选……她赢了。她走出去并付诸行动。他们当时并不认为她有当选的可能。”
在康罗的一次活动中见到克罗基特后,尚未决定投票给谁的选民理查德·特莱勒(Richard Traylor)表示,他在做决定时很纠结。他表示自己更喜欢克罗基特,但担心她在大选中可能无法赢得拉丁裔选民的支持。
“我反复考虑,反复权衡。我最喜欢她,”住在得克萨斯州新韦弗利的特莱勒说。“但我更看重获胜。”
“很难投票反对我最喜欢的人。真的很难。也许我会掷硬币决定,”特莱勒说。
克罗基特曾因 2024 年的评论受到审视:她暗示一些拉丁裔选民支持特朗普(包括在移民政策上)是出于“奴隶心态”。在去年接受 CNN 采访被追问该评论时,克罗基特表示:“不,那根本不是我想说的。我从未说过每个拉丁裔都有这种心态。”
“首先,我不相信那些投票给特朗普的人真正了解自己得到了什么,”她补充道。“特朗普说他要‘赶走坏人’。我当时谈论的就是这个。”
来自休斯顿的民主党选民索尼娅·伯恩哈特(Sonya Bernhardt)告诉 CNN,她喜欢克罗基特的强硬风格以及她在国会听证会上敢于挑战共和党人的勇气。但当她分享为何选择支持塔拉利科而非这位国会议员时,情绪激动。
“我们需要一位斗士。我原本非常想投票给贾斯敏·克罗基特,因为我喜欢她,但我投票给了塔拉利科,因为我们需要一个能赢的人,”伯恩哈特在周五投票后表示。“这是我一生中最难做出的投票之一。”
在接受 CNN 采访时,克罗基特列举了其他面临“能否获胜”质疑的民主党政治家,包括巴拉克·奥巴马、卡玛拉·哈里斯(Kamala Harris,她曾是乔·拜登的竞选搭档)以及得克萨斯州上一任民主党州长、也是第二位担任该职务的女性安·理查兹(Ann Richards)。
“这不是关于‘不能做什么’,而是关于‘我们想做什么’。坦率地说,现在得克萨斯人需要一位斗士,”克罗基特说。
激发基础选民
共和党内部激烈的初选给民主党带来了一些希望——这个长期保守的州在今年 11 月可能会成为一个战场。但民主党在得克萨斯州面临着艰难的政治环境,该州已有 30 多年没有民主党人赢得过全州范围的职位。
“我不同意我们是一个保守的州。我们是一个不投票的州,”克罗基特告诉 CNN。
克罗基特的强硬风格在社交媒体上积累了大量关注,她押注自己更具对抗性的风格将有助于动员选民参加 11 月的选举。她的策略核心是重新激发曾经可靠的民主党基础力量,包括年轻人和有色人种选民。
上周末,克罗基特参加了得克萨斯州组织项目(Texas Organizing Project)的多项活动。该政治行动委员会专注于在该州一些最大的县份组织黑人与拉丁裔社区。
克罗基特还试图吸引投票意愿较低的选民。她表示,她的团队努力在酒吧、音乐会和跳蚤市场等非政治场所保持存在感。
“我们是一个少数族裔占多数的州,”克罗基特周五对宗教领袖们说。“有些人想采取的这种怯懦策略,我们没时间理会。我们必须大胆行事,确保人们知道有人在关注他们。”
塔拉利科是一名长老会神学院毕业生和前教师,他也培养了自己的在线粉丝群体。他讨论了不仅要动员基础选民,还要吸引那些对本党领导人不满的独立人士和共和党人的必要性。
这些不同的选民动员策略出现之际,民主党正试图从 2024 年大选中复苏。当时许多年轻、黑人和拉丁裔选民要么转向支持特朗普,要么选择了弃权。
在休斯顿一个投票站外,民主党选民安德烈·格雷夫斯(Andre Graves)表示,他认为克罗基特的信息将激励那些“一直袖手旁观”和“接受现状”的选民。
“有时候你必须打破常规,因为传统方式已经不起作用了,”他说。“有时候你必须与猪共舞,我认为她会这么做。”
How Jasmine Crockett’s unconventional Senate campaign is testing Texas politics
Published Feb 23, 2026, 6:00 AM ET / Source: CNN
Houston—
Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett is quick to admit she’s not running a traditional Senate campaign, a strategy that will soon be put to the test in next month’s Democratic primary.
“I don’t really subscribe to this idea of doing everything in a traditional way,” Crockett told a group of faith leaders over breakfast at a Houston restaurant Friday morning.
By the end of the day, the 44-year-old congresswoman was taking her pitch to the Houston nightlife scene, captured on social media introducing herself to voters at a bar by saying, “I’m Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett. Right now, I’m ready to kick some a** and become your next US senator.”
Crockett’s at-times unfiltered and largely unconventional approach is challenging the traditional rules of electoral politics at a time when Democrats nationwide are debating how to win in a consequential midterm year and beyond.
A former public defender and civil rights attorney, Crockett has pushed back on those questioning her electability, referring to such suggestions as a “dog whistle” and “tearing down a Black woman,” pointing to attacks from a super PAC supporting her Democratic primary rival, state Rep. James Talarico. She’s making the case that the path to a Democratic victory in Texas is through reenergizing the party’s base, including voters of color — not by persuading moderates and Republicans who have soured on President Donald Trump.
“For the last 30 years, we’ve tried it the traditional way, and it’s not worked. And the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over,” Crockett told CNN after an event in Conroe, Texas. “In this moment, there is nothing traditional about how our government is operating, and so I think that people are looking for something different.”
After gaining notoriety for her blunt showdowns with Republicans on Capitol Hill, Crockett rode into the Texas Senate contest with high name recognition, a factor playing to her advantage in the early stages of the campaign. But by some traditional metrics, Crockett lags Talarico in the Democratic primary.
Talarico holds a commanding advantage over Crockett in fundraising, bringing in more than $20 million since launching his candidacy last September compared with the $3.7 million she raised since announcing her bid in December. Crockett has also transferred an additional $4.8 million from her House campaign account. Television ads from Talarico and groups supporting him have far outpaced Crockett’s presence on the airwaves.
Her decision to enter the Senate contest right before the filing deadline also left Crockett with a much shorter runway than Talarico leading up to the March primary. She has not built out a robust campaign team and has had to juggle her campaign schedule with her congressional duties in Washington.
Public polling in the race has been limited, but a University of Houston Hobby School of Public Affairs poll conducted in January found Crockett leading Talarico by 8 points among likely Democratic primary voters.
Talarico’s recent viral moment with “Late Show” host Stephen Colbert has helped boost his profile, injecting a new dynamic in the critical early voting stretch. His campaign said he raised $2.5 million in the 24 hours after the late-show dustup.
“The race is about: Does James have enough money and time to introduce himself to Democratic primary voters statewide and to try to catch up to where Jasmine Crockett has been for some time?” said one Democratic strategist in Texas who is tracking the contest. “She’s known as a fighter, and she’s well-liked by Democrats and in a lot of corners of the state.”
The electability debate
Whether Crockett can succeed in a general election against a Republican opponent in a state like Texas has become an undercurrent of her campaign.
One of the most prominent examples of the split among Democrats came in January when two comedians on the popular “Las Culturistas” podcast told audiences not to donate to Crockett’s campaign, suggesting she couldn’t win the general election contest.
The two have since apologized, but it pushed a debate over electability to the forefront of the primary race.
The Texas Democratic strategist dismissed the amount of discussion focused on electability, saying, “If there was a recipe for electability in Texas Democratic politics, we probably would have solved this a long time ago.”
State Rep. Nicole Collier, a Crockett supporter who has known the congresswoman for a decade, told CNN some of these concerns are “coming from a place of fear of the unknown” and will depend on an individual’s view of electability.
“There’s enough Democrats or people who have identified as Democrats that are out there. It’s just getting them to the polls, getting them to vote, and it’s finding that candidate who motivates them to do that. That’s the person who’s electable,” she said. “You’re electable when I vote you in.”
Collier pointed to Crockett’s run for the Texas House of Representatives in 2020, when she won a Democratic primary runoff against Lorraine Birabil, who had recently been elected to the Dallas-area seat in a special election.
“She’s defied things,” Collier said. “You look at her race for the state rep. seat … she beat them. She got out there and did the work. They didn’t think she was electable.”
Speaking with CNN after seeing Crockett at an event in Conroe, undecided voter Richard Traylor said he was struggling with his decision. He said he favored Crockett but was concerned she might not be able to win Latino voters in a general election.
“I have vacillated back and forth, and back and forth, and back and forth. I like her better than all of them,” said Traylor, who lives in New Waverly, Texas. “But I like winning better.”
“It’s hard to vote against somebody that I like the best. It really is. Maybe I’ll flip a coin,” Traylor said.
Crockett has faced scrutiny for a 2024 comment suggesting some Latino voters exhibited a “slave mentality” by supporting Trump, including on immigration policy. Pressed about the comment in a CNN interview last year, Crockett said, “No, and that’s not what that said at all, to be clear. It did not say that every Latino has that type of mentality.”
“I don’t believe that the people that voted for Trump believe in what they’re actually getting. That is No. 1,” she added. “What Trump said is that he was going to kick out the bad guys. And that’s what I was talking about.”
Sonya Bernhardt, a Democratic voter from Houston, told CNN she loved Crockett’s fiery style and willingness to take on Republicans in committee hearings on Capitol Hill. But she grew emotional as she shared why she voted for Talarico over the congresswoman.
“We need a fighter. And I was so ready to vote for Jasmine Crockett, because I love her, but I voted for Talarico because we need somebody who can win,” Bernhardt said after casting her vote Friday. “That was one of the most difficult votes I’ve ever voted in my entire life.”
In an interview with CNN, Crockett pointed to other Democratic politicians who faced doubts about their ability to win, including Barack Obama, Kamala Harris when she was Joe Biden’s running mate, and Ann Richards, the last Democratic governor of Texas and only the second woman to hold the office.
“This isn’t about what can’t be done,” Crockett said. “This is about imagining what it is that we want to get done. And frankly, right now, Texans need a fighter in this moment.”
Turning out base voters
An intensely fought primary on the Republican side is giving some in the Democratic Party hope the reliably conservative state could be put in play this November. But Democrats face difficult political terrain in Texas, where no member of the party has won statewide in more than 30 years.
“I don’t agree that we are a conservative state. We are a non-voting state,” Crockett told CNN.
Crockett, whose fiery brand has amassed a large social media following, is betting her more combative style will help mobilize voters heading into a November contest. At the center of her strategy is turning out once-reliable parts of the Democratic base, including young people and voters of color.
Over the weekend, Crockett appeared at several events with the Texas Organizing Project, a PAC focused on organizing in Black and Latino communities in some of the state’s largest counties.
Crockett is also trying to engage low-propensity voters, saying her team tries to maintain a presence at non-political venues like bars, concerts and flea markets.
“We are a majority-minority state,” Crockett told the group of faith leaders Friday. “This scaredy-cat tactic that some people want to take, we ain’t got time for that. We have to be bold, and we have to make sure that people know there’s someone that sees them.”
Talarico, a Presbyterian seminarian and former teacher who has cultivated his own online fan base, has discussed the need to not just turn out base voters but to also draw in independents and Republicans who have soured on their party leaders.
The diverging turnout strategies come as the Democratic Party tries to rebound from the 2024 election, when many young, Black and Latino voters either shifted toward Trump or sat out.
Outside a polling location in Houston, Andre Graves, a Democratic voter, said he thinks Crockett’s messaging will motivate voters who “have been sitting on their hands” and “accepting the status quo.”
“Sometimes you got to be untraditional because traditional hasn’t been working,” he said. “Sometimes you got to get in the mud with the pigs, and I think she’ll get in the mud with the pigs.”
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