Anita Moncrief, an ACORN Whistleblower, Has Passed Away
This Woman Was Cut Off While Driving and Then Assaulted. Here's Why.
Trump Has Begun to Clean House at the Department of Justice
When Conservatives Refuse to Play Along, the Dems and Regime Media Lose
Democrats Have a 'Plan' for the Mid-Terms
We Reserve The Right
Why Don't We Buy Greenland?
Oh Canada, Our Fifty-First State?
The Pot Calling the Kettle Black
Who Controls Whom?
Tariffs Will Make America Rich Again
Time to Stand Up to Iran's Policy of Hostage Taking
Trump’s Directive to Defund Planned Parenthood Is Long Overdue
What Can be Done About the Corrupt Progressive Judges Destroying the Rule of...
Wisconsin Supreme Court Deals Win to Musk, Rejects AG's Bid to Block $1M...
Tipsheet
Premium

Another One: A Blue-to-Red Party Flip, This Time In...

AP Photo/Eric Gay

In case you missed it, earlier in the week, a formerly-Democratic member of the Florida state legislature announced she was bolting from her party and joining the GOP.  Susan Valdez of West Tampa announced her decision Monday, stated that she'd grown "tired of being the party of protesting when I got into politics to be part of the party of progress. I know that I won't agree with my fellow Republican House members on every issue, but I know that in their caucus, I will be welcomed and treated with respect."  Valdes does not have a conservative voting record, to put it mildly, but we'll see if that changes in the days to come.  Regardless, she clearly decided remaining a Democrat was a dead end in her state and for her constituents, so she made the jump.  

Perhaps she also did the math and saw some writing on the wall:

Notably, over Valdés’ time in office, Hillsborough County has shifted increasingly Republican. More voters there backed Republican Donald Trump for President in November than supported Democrat Kamala Harris, four years after Democrat Joe Biden received more votes in the county. According to MCI Maps’ Matt Isbell, Valdés’ House District 64 was one of a small number of legislative districts in which a Democrat was elected, but a majority of voters supported Trump over Harris...The House website listing Representatives has already been updated to reflect Valdés will caucus with Republicans. Valdés’ departure leaves just 34 Democrats in the 120-member Florida House of Representatives. The Republican supermajority now sits at 86 members, a net increase of two seats since before the General Election.

As the story notes, it is pretty wild that the Florida GOP somehow increased its lower chamber super-majority, even beyond the massive red wave that swept Democrats away in 2022.  Then again, Donald Trump carried Florida by a wider margin that Harris won New York, so it was that sort of year.  Another red state that got redder in 2024 was Texas, where Democrats' dreams of flipping it blue crashed and burned this past cycle.  Trump won Texas by 14 points, with Sen. Ted Cruz winning re-election relatively handily in the process.  Some heavily-Hispanic areas of the state swung significantly to the right, as we've mentioned previously.  One of those jurisdictions features another D-to-R defection:


Tijerina explained his reasoning on Fox & Friends yesterday:


One wonders if a guy like this -- and we've seen others in Texas doing the same in recent months -- might have seen how his former party operates and decided there wasn't really much of a future there:


I'll leave you with this:

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement