- Air Force veteran and 2018 House candidate MJ Hegar is challenging incumbent GOP Sen. John Cornyn in Texas in 2020.
- Cornyn, who was first elected in 2002 and has served in a number of positions in Senate leadership, is seeking a fourth term to the US Senate.
- The political tide has been shifting in the state in recent cycles, and Democrats are making a play for several statewide and congressional races.
- See the live coverage and full results from the U.S. Senate elections.
- Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.
Air Force veteran and 2018 US House candidate MJ Hegar is challenging incumbent Sen. John Cornyn in Texas.
The candidates
Cornyn, first elected in 2002, is seeking a fourth term to the US Senate. He’s served in leadership positions as the Senate minority whip from 2013 to 2015 and then as the majority whip from 2015 to 2019.
Hegar, who ran for the House of Representatives in Texas’ 31st District in 2018, gained national attention for a powerful TV ad she aired highlighting her military service and her work breaking down barriers for women in the military.
A combat veteran and search and rescue pilot in the US Air Force, Hegar received a Purple Heart for injuries she sustained while flying a helicopter rescue mission in Afghanistan. When her injuries left her unable to keep flying, she worked to change rules prohibiting women from serving in ground combat positions, and was then inspired to run for office.
Cornyn serves on the powerful Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, the Senate Finance Committee, and the Senate Judiciary Committee.
His seniority in the Senate and long tenure representing the state means he currently holds a massive cash advantage in a large state with multiple expensive media markets.
As of the most recent campaign finance filings, Cornyn held $14.5 million in cash on hand compared to just under $1 million for Hegar, who won her primary runoff on July 14.
The stakes
In addition to winning back the White House, regaining control of the US Senate for the first time since 2015 is a top priority for Democrats and would be a major accomplishment towards either delivering on a future president Joe Biden’s policy goals or thwarting President Donald Trump’s second-term agenda.
Currently, the US Senate is made up of 53 Republicans, 45 Democrats, and two independents that caucus with Democrats, winning that Democrats need to win back a net total of four seats to have a 51-seat majority (if Biden wins, his vice president would also serve as president of the Senate and would be a tie-breaker vote).
And now, the US Senate is gearing up for a high-stakes confirmation battle to replace Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died at age 87 from pancreatic cancer on September 18. Within hours of her death, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky pledged that Trump’s nominee for the high court would receive a vote on the floor of the Senate, and Trump said the day after that he would name a replacement “without delay.”
Ginsburg’s death threw a stick of dynamite into an already supercharged election shaped by a deadly pandemic that has so far claimed over 200,000 American lives, and a national reckoning around race after several high-profile deaths of Black Americans in encounters with police.
Trump and McConnell’s posturing on the issue has excited conservatives enthusiastic about the possibility of Trump getting to appoint a third justice in his first term, but infuriated liberals who accused McConnell of blatant hypocrisy after he refused to hold confirmation proceedings for Obama’s Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland in 2016, citing the upcoming presidential election. Senate Republicans held the seat open long enough for Trump to appoint his choice, Justice Neil Gorsuch, to the seat.
The issue is already shaping Texas’ Senate race due to Cornyn’s role on the Judiciary Committee. Already, Hegar is hitting Cornyn over his remarks in 2016 arguing against holding confirmation hearings for Garland.
—MJ Hegar (@mjhegar) September 19, 2020
See Insider’s full guide to the race for the US Senate here
Texas has been a Republican bastion for decades and hasn’t elected a Democrat statewide since the 1990s.
But Democrats have gained ground in recent elections largely thanks to the state’s expanding population in major metro areas, a growing Hispanic segment of the electorate, and most importantly, the suburban, college-educated voters who made up the GOP base for years fleeing the party over their strong dislike of Trump.
In 2018, Democrats flipped two US House seats, the 7th District in the Houston suburbs and the 32nd District in the Dallas-Forth Worth area, and Democrat Beto O’Rourke came within three percentage points of defeating Sen. Ted Cruz statewide.
Now, with Trump’s favorability declining, Democrats are looking to expand their margins and put the seat back in play. The Biden campaign has expanded its investment and staffing in the state, as polls show Trump ahead of Biden by a margin of just one percentage point, according to FiveThirtyEight’s polling averages.
But even if Biden pulled off the Texas-sized feat of flipping the state back to Democrats, Hegar’s path to victory would still be far more difficult. While Trump’s brand may be increasingly toxic in the Lone Star State, Cornyn is still comfortably ahead of Hegar in most of the polls of the race conducted so far.
And recently, Cornyn has been attempting to create some daylight between himself and Trump and to win some crossover voters, recently told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that he has “privately” disagreed with Trump on issues including the national deficit and border security.
Cornyn told the outlet’s editorial board that his relationship with Trump is “maybe like a lot of women who get married and think they’re going to change their spouse, and that doesn’t usually work out very well.”
Indeed, in 2016, voters splitting their tickets between Hillary Clinton and Republican Senate candidates allowed Republican senators including Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and Sen. Ron Johnson Wisconsin to outperform Trump’s razor-thin margins in those states.
As O’Rourke’s 2018 race proved, getting close to winning a statewide election in Texas is no small feat. At the time, O’Rourke’s Senate bid broke the all-time record for most money raised for a Senate campaign in a single quarter.
The money race
Cornyn has raised $22 million this cycle and spent $10.6 million compared to $6.5 million raised and $5.6 million spent for Hegar, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
What the polls say
Cornyn has led Hegar in all of the non-partisan polls conducted of the race this year, according to FiveThirtyEight’s tracker of US Senate polls.
The most recent poll of the race, conducted by Quinnipiac University from October 16-19 found Cornyn leading Hegar by six points, 49% to 43%, among likely voters.
Two other polls also conducted in mid-October by Public Policy Polling and Data for Progress both showed Cornyn leading Hegar by three points among likely voters, with Cornyn at 49% to 46% for Hegar in the PPP poll and Cornyn at 44% with Hegar at 41% in the Data for Progress survey.
See the live coverage and full results from the U.S. presidential election.
What the experts say:
The Cook Political Report and Inside Elections rate the race as “leans Republican” and Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia Center for Politics rates the race as “likely Republican.”
According to FiveThirtyEight’s US Senate forecasting model, Cornyn has an 89% chance of defeating Hegar in the November election and is expected to receive just over 10% more of the popular vote than Hegar.
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