U.S. Rep.ย Colin Allred, D-Dallas, is set to challenge U.S. Sen.ย Ted Cruz, R-Texas, for reelection in 2024 and could announce his campaign within days, according to two sources familiar with his plans.
Allred, a former NFL player and civil rights lawyer who was first elected to Congress in 2018, has been considering for months whether to take on Cruz. Speculation ramped up last week after it wasย notedย that Allredโs campaign website appeared to be undergoing changes.
Politicoย first reported Mondayย that Allred could launch a bid against Cruz as soon as this week. The two sources who spoke to The Texas Tribune were not authorized to publicly discuss Allredโs plans, and aides to the representative did not respond to requests for comment.
Allred was in Richardson on Monday to hold an event highlighting the CHIPS and Science Act, the bipartisan legislation that President Joe Biden signed into law last year to spur domestic semiconductor production. Asked about a potential Senate runย by a Dallas TV reporter, Allred declined to answer but criticized Cruz for voting against the CHIPS Act, noting the stateโs senior GOP senator,ย John Cornyn, supported it.
Allred would begin the campaign as a major underdog in a state that has not elected a Democrat to statewide office since 1994. Beto OโRourke ran a surprisingly tight race against Cruz in 2018 โ losing by less than 3 percentage points โ but Democrats have not come as close since then.
The race is not without risk for Allred. He would have to give up his newly safe seat in Congress, where he has been rising within the Democratic caucus.
Allred also is likely to have credible primary competition. State Sen.ย Roland Gutierrezย of San Antonio isย poised to run, though he is unlikely to make any announcements until after the current legislative session, which ends May 29.
Allred worked at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development under President Barack Obama before returning home to Dallas to run for Congress in 2018. With OโRourke at the top of the ballot, Allred became one of two Democrats who flipped congressional seats that year in Texas, unseating U.S. Rep.ย Pete Sessions, R-Dallas, in the 32nd District.
National Republicans sought to win back Allredโs seat in 2020, but he won by a comfortable margin. The next year, the Legislature redrew his seat to be safer for Democrats, and Allred sailed to a third term.
One advantage Allred could have โ at least over fellow Democrats โ is money. He has proven himself to be a strong fundraiser through multiple election cycles, and he ended the first quarter of this year with $2.2 million cash on hand. Cruz had $3.3 million in the bank.
Allredโs Senate campaign would likely focus on his bipartisan bona fides. His 2018 victory marked a major breakthrough for Democrats in the traditionally Republican suburbs of Dallas, and the GOP-leaning U.S. Chamber of Commerce has endorsed him in both of his reelection campaigns.
Republicans are already gearing up to take on that image. A spokesperson for the National Republican Senatorial Committeeย tweeted Mondayย that Allred โvoted in favor of reduced sentences for violent criminals,โ referring to Allredโs February vote against aย resolution to block a controversial overhaulย of the Washington, D.C., criminal code.
Matthew Choi contributed reporting.
This article was written byย PATRICK SVITEK ofย ย The Texas Tribune.ย The Texas Tribune is a nonpartisan, nonprofit media organization that informs Texans โ and engages with them โ about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.ย This article originally appeared at:https://www.texastribune.org/2023/05/01/colin-allred-senate-ted-cruz-election/