Politics

The Most Important Political Event You’re Probably Ignoring

It’s that magical time again, that happens once every two years, when the Texas Democratic Party meets to discuss its rules, resolutions, and platform again. Actually, that’s in June, but next week the County Conventions will meet to discuss platform resolutions for the 2026 Texas Democratic Party platform, as well as rules and other resolutions.

Exciting stuff, if you didn’t know. 😁

If you aren’t a precinct chair, now is a great time to become one. Precinct chairs are often delegates to county and state conventions, voting on the very policies we discuss here. To become a precinct chair, contact your county party.

In 2024, we watched together both the Democratic and the Republican Parties’ conventions. This year, we’ll be doing the same thing.

  • RPT: June 11 – 13

  • TDP: June 25 – 27

Unfortunately, I’m not going to Corpus Christi. First, Texas is just way too big for me to go that far for three days. Second, they might not even have water. But everything will be live-streamed (I think), and that works for us.

If you were not planning on going to your local County Conventions, you should at least. You’ll have the chance to vote on the platform planks and resolutions that actually make it to the halls of Austin and DC.

And if you haven’t already read the Texas Democratic Party platform, you should. I think it’s fantastic. But looking at it now, there are probably some improvements that could be made.

I may be the only evangelist for the platform in Texas, but I truly think it is more than a symbolic document. A party platform is the closest thing a political party has to a mission statement. It’s the document that tells candidates, elected officials, and activists what the party’s base actually wants. When Democratic members of Congress or the Texas Legislature introduce bills, they don’t do it in a vacuum. In theory, they’re responding to priorities laid out in the platform.

Those priorities don’t come from party leadership alone. They come from the ground up.

That’s where the conventions come in.

County conventions feed into the state convention. Along the way, ordinary Democrats submit resolutions and platform planks about what they think the party should fight for.

Some of those ideas disappear along the way. Some get rewritten. Some get merged with similar proposals.

But some of them make it all the way into the official Texas Democratic Party platform.

And once they’re there, they become a signal to every Democratic candidate in the state. This is what the party stands for. 🦸🏻‍♀️

Right now, the Texas Democratic Party has opened the door for attendees to submit ideas for rules changes, resolutions, and platform planks. If you’re attending your county convention this weekend, you can submit those ideas directly.

Now, you know I’m an optimist, and I’m expecting Texas Democrats to sweep the elections in November. The Senate race, the Governor race, 17 Congressional seats, and at least 14 House seats. So, I’m thinking about what should be on our platform when we’re big, bright, and blue, and we can put the squeeze on our elected officials for the priorities on our platform.

Now, there’s something else happening inside Texas Democratic politics right now that we can’t ignore.

Over the past few weeks, we’ve seen a debate bubble up inside the party about political strategy. Some people frame it as a question of class politics versus race politics. Others describe it as the difference between “up versus down” populism and traditional liberal coalition politics.

A lot of that conversation spilled into public view after James Talarico’s Senate primary win.

Talarico talks about politics as “up versus down,” meaning the real divide in American politics is between ordinary people and concentrated wealth and power. That language resonates with many working Texans who feel that both parties have ignored them for decades.

But some Democrats, particularly those who supported Jasmine Crockett, heard that message differently. They worried that focusing on economic populism might mean downplaying racism or inviting people into the coalition who have historically opposed civil rights.

That’s a serious concern. And it’s one worth addressing honestly.

Obviously, there is no place in the Democratic coalition for Nazis, white supremacists, or people who want to roll back civil rights. Period.

I’m confident Talarico understands that, and I suspect he’ll say so publicly as the campaign moves forward.

But stepping back from the social media arguments, we’re really looking at a deeper question. How the Democratic Party builds a durable coalition in a state like Texas.

Because the platform is where we write down, in plain language, what the Democratic Party actually believes and what it intends to fight for.

If the party wants to make it clear that it stands firmly with Black Texans, the platform is where that commitment gets written.

The truth is, the Texas Democratic Party platform already includes strong language about racial justice, voting rights, maternal health, and economic equality. It’s already the most progressive state party platforms in the country.

But the question we should always ask at convention time is, does it go far enough?

Does the platform fully reflect the urgency of the issues Texans are facing?

Does it clearly show that the Democratic coalition is committed to improving the lives of Black Texans, working Texans, and every community that has been pushed to the margins of political power?

Because once those commitments are written into the platform, they become expectations.

Candidates run on them. Activists organize around them. And voters use them to hold elected officials accountable.

That’s why getting these commitments into the party platform matters so much.

It turns values into obligations.

A lot is happening across Texas politics right now, and we’ll keep digging into all of it.

But before we get swept back into campaign coverage, I wanted to take a minute to point everyone toward something just as important. The County conventions are happening this weekend.

Because politics doesn’t start with elections, it starts with ideas. With policies. With the long, occasionally tedious, but essential work of deciding what a political party actually stands for.

That work happens at conventions.

It happens when someone stands up and proposes a resolution about voting rights, or when someone suggests a stronger plank on maternal health. When activists argue over wording until it finally captures what they believe the party should fight for.

That process may not be flashy, but it’s where the foundation gets built.

So if you’re attending your county convention this weekend, speak up. Submit a resolution. Propose a platform plank. Vote on the priorities you want to see Texas Democrats champion.

Because when November rolls around, and we’re big, bright, and blue, those platform commitments will be the promises our elected officials are expected to keep.

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