OK, so Tom DeLay won his Republican primary challenge by a 2-to-1 margin. That said, DeLay should still be concerned about the results.
Representative Tom DeLay survived a challenge to his renomination for Congress Tuesday night, outpacing three Republican primary rivals seeking to capitalize on the criminal charges and ethics citations against him.
Mr. DeLay, 58, an 11-term incumbent, turned out a disciplined army of poll workers and pledged his Washington influence on behalf of NASA’s Johnson Space Center and other big constituencies.
With nearly 88 percent of precincts reporting, Mr. Delay had 19,684, or 61 percent of the vote, far ahead of his closest opponent, Tom Campbell, at 9,595, or 30 percent.
Let’s put those numbers in context a bit. DeLay won 61% of Republican votes in a district he’s represented for 22 years, running against a primary opponent who has never held elective office in his life. National Journal said yesterday that if DeLay didn’t get at least 65% of the vote, it “would spell major problems in a race against Nick Lampson,” DeLay’s Dem opponent in November. And sure enough, DeLay fell short.
The fact that there was a serious primary challenge suggests DeLay has a problem locally, and the fact that two in five Republicans in his district don’t even want him as their GOP nominee only highlights just how precarious DeLay’s future is. Put it this way, if DeLay enjoys similar Republican support in November, he’s going to lose. Badly.
Of course, there was one other House primary in Texas yesterday worth watching.
First-term incumbent Henry Cuellar passed his political rival, former Congressman Ciro Rodriguez, when the first votes from Cuellar’s home county were tabulated late Tuesday in the Democratic primary in House District 28.
With 190 of 276 precincts reporting, Cuellar had 16,705 votes, or 49 percent of the ballots tallied. Rodriguez, who narrowly lost to Cuellar in the 2004 primary in the South Texas district, had collected 15,408 votes, or 45 percent, and Victor Morales had 2,145 votes, or 6 percent.
This race, of course, has been a focus of major attention on a number of leading progressive blogs. As Chris Bowers noted last night, “This is the first election where the netroots have tried to knock off a Democratic incumbent.” Cuellar is the prototypical Democrat-In-Name-Only, prompting many leading blogs to rally behind Rodriguez in a bid to help the former House member regain his old seat.
At this point, Cuellar appears to have fallen short of the 50% support he needed to win the seat outright. (The winner of the primary gets the seat; there is no GOP candidate.) If those results hold up, a run-off between Cuellar and Rodriguez would be held on April 11. Stay tuned.