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January 26, 2018 Newswires
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Texas Democrat risks rising-star status in long-shot race

Associated Press

MCALLEN, Texas (AP) — He's running for U.S. Senate but as the Sunday morning sun rose over a park near the Texas-Mexico border, Democratic Congressman Beto O'Rourke had another run in mind.

Wearing well-worn shorts and sneakers, the onetime punk rock guitarist was leading a group of supporters on a jog around a duck-dotted pond. Not everyone was game, though, including 76-year-old retiree Merrie DeVoe who said she'd instead be going to church.

"But we'll be praying for you," DeVoe said.

That could come in handy since O'Rourke looks not to have a prayer of unseating incumbent Republican Ted Cruz, whose presidential campaign only two years ago racked up millions of GOP primary votes nationwide. Even before Cruz, O'Rourke's party hadn't won a Senate seat in deep-red Texas since Lloyd Bentsen was re-elected in 1988.

High-energy and bilingual, with a lanky, 6-foot-4 frame and a mop of dark hair that's begun turning a distinguished gray, the 45-year-old O'Rourke reminds some Democrats and even a few Texas Republicans of a Spanish-speaking Kennedy.

But many wonder why he's giving up a rising-star congressional career and safe seat in his native El Paso for a race that looks unwinnable.

"It's going to be hard but it's absolutely worth doing," O'Rourke said over lunch of chicken fajitas at Jose's Cafecito restaurant in the nearby town of Weslaco, amid a blitz of recent campaign events along the border. "The odds are certainly long."

Still, he said he saw little hope of changing the country's direction under President Donald Trump by just returning to the House. So lately, he's been holding jogging sessions, rallies and town halls across the state while raising a respectable nearly $4 million.

If it's a suicide mission, O'Rourke's campaign is a colorful one, with lively, occasionally profane rhetoric and attention-getting events that sometimes seem as much about partying as policy.

He wants to legalize marijuana and ease immigration policies and opposes Trump's border wall, likening it to the Berlin Wall that future generations will rue. But O'Rourke says also he's courting Trump voters since the president has "asked the right questions about people who have felt left behind."

At his rallies, he invites anyone to ask him anything, which provides openings to slag his own party.

"I feel like the Democratic Party up in D.C. is corporate politics," O'Rourke told the audience of around 250 quaffing microbrews at an open-air beer garden stop. "They're listening to the corporations and the special interests and the PACs. And the folks who write the checks are calling the tune. It's not you and it's not me."

O'Rourke opposed ending the government shutdown, accusing the top Democrat in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, of "offering a wall to the president in exchange for doing obvious, correct things." He said his party shouldn't have made concessions in return for Republican assurances to soon take up legislation on young immigrant "dreamers" brought to the country illegally.

A booming Hispanic population means Texas could one day be more favorable to Democrats, but the demographic shift won't come fast enough to help O'Rourke. He also supports abortion rights, which is a tough Texas sell — even among some Hispanic Democrats who are devout Catholics.

O'Rourke's campaign has refused outside political money and doesn't employ consultants. Before announcing his Senate run, O'Rourke called U.S. Sen. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, head of the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee, about possible financial help.

"He said, 'Hey Beto, I've got to tell you, from the DSCC's perspective, I would be fired for malpractice if I invested any money in Texas,'" O'Rourke recalled.

O'Rourke said he hopes to woo Republicans angry that Cruz spent so much time outside Texas running for president. O'Rourke pledges to campaign in each of Texas' 254 counties before the election.

Along the way, he's drawn larger-than-expected crowds, even in deeply conservative, rural areas like Lubbock.

"If anyone can do it, Beto can," said Illiana Noemi Holguin, chairwoman of the El Paso Democratic Party. She said he's laying a foundation for his party's future candidates by "going to all of these small, rural counties where, frankly, not a lot of Democratic candidates have gone."

U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Democrat from Laredo, said O'Rourke rallies in border towns could help improve traditionally low turnout in one of Texas' few reliably blue strongholds: "He's trying to build up the enthusiasm."

Cruz, believing he's comfortably ahead, has decided he can largely ignore O'Rouke through November. At last count this fall, Cruz's campaign fund was worth around $6 million compared to O'Rouke's roughly $2.8 million. Asked about criticisms that Cruz was more interested in being president than senator, a spokeswoman didn't mention O'Rourke while saying Cruz has "kept the promises he made" to Texans.

Even some at O'Rourke's events aren't expecting miracles. "I don't think it's necessarily about winning the race as much as it is slowly changing the tide where, maybe next race, it is winnable," said Pete Banda, 26, who attended a town hall in San Benito.

A fourth generation Irish-American whose favorite phrase is "right on," O'Rourke is the son of a longtime Democratic county judge and a Republican mother "who we've almost convinced to vote for me." His first name is Robert but his parents called him Beto from birth.

In the summers between semesters at Columbia University, where he studied English literature, O'Rourke played guitar and occasionally bass for an El Paso punk band called Foss. Bandmate Cedric Bixler-Zavala later fronted the better-known act The Mars Volta.

O'Rourke stops short of calling his campaign punk rock-inspired but does see similarities.

Punk rock means acting "without waiting for the corporation or someone else, somewhere else, to give you orders, or to show you how to do it," he said.

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