Mission: Texas

Kate Rumsey & Alex Clark

Texas is growing faster than anywhere else — and that growth means more electoral power. As blue strongholds lose seats, the road to protecting the White House must run through the Lone Star State.  If we do not flip Texas by the next census, we risk losing the White House for a generation.  “Mission: Texas” dives into the strategy, people, and stories needed to flip the state.  Hosted by two Texas lawyers and parents — a former candidate and a long-time organizer, both with military roots — we mix mission-driven focus with a dose of pop-culture fun.  Think of us as your Democratic club while you cook, commute, or go for a walk.  And don’t worry: this mission is serious, but it’s definitely not impossible. (Viewpoints expressed are those of the hosts and not of their employers or of the U.S. Department of Defense)

  1. Ep. 38: From Political Rivals to Friends (Rep. Cassandra Hernandez)

    4日前 ·  ビデオ

    Ep. 38: From Political Rivals to Friends (Rep. Cassandra Hernandez)

    Kate's primary rival turned good friend joins the podcast. State Rep. Cassandra Garcia Hernandez (HD-115) beat Kate in the March 2024 Democratic primary, and this episode is the full story of that race, how they built a real friendship out of it, and what it means heading into the general election season. With Texas Democrats gathering in Corpus Christi this week for the state convention, this conversation is a reminder of what it looks like when Democrats come together after a hard primary to fight for the bigger goal: flipping the state. Plus: Alex is about to become board president of a 75-year-old Dallas preschool, Cassandra's district office officially opens this month, and Kate makes summer plans.  We discuss: How Cassandra went from losing her first race to becoming a state rep — and the piece of advice from a sitting appellate justice that changed how she handled the loss The "olive branch" pact she and Kate made before the primary even started — and what it actually looked like behind the scenes Inside the quorum break: what it was like meeting governors in New York and organizers in Chicago, and why she says "Texas Democrats have fight — we just need help" The DLCC's new push to target 12 Texas House seats, and why Cassandra says the resources need to come "yesterday" Why the GOP's mid-decade redistricting fight is now baked into every future legislative session Her block-walking philosophy: why door-knocking beats everything else, and how her team is using off-cycle elections to build long-term voter relationships The honor of serving alongside state-wide candidates Vikki Goodwin, James Talarico, Gina Hinojosa, and Jon Rosenthal — and what she learned watching them fight up closeFollow Cassandra: @CasForTX | cassandrafortexas.com Love what we're doing? Become a member at patreon.com/missiontexaspodcast — just a few dollars a month keeps independent Texas media alive. And if you can't spare the cash, a five-star review goes just as far. God bless Texas. 🤠

    58分
  2. Ep. 37 (audio): The Obama Organizer Who Showed Up in Sherman and Changed Alex's Life (Scott Mackey)

    6月18日 ·  ビデオ

    Ep. 37 (audio): The Obama Organizer Who Showed Up in Sherman and Changed Alex's Life (Scott Mackey)

    Alex has told this story before — how a campaign organizer showed up in Sherman, Texas of all places, and changed the trajectory of his life. This week, that organizer is finally on the mic. Scott Mackey recruited Alex as a high school senior during the 2008 Texas Democratic primary, back when the campaign had no budget, no VAN data, and was cutting turf on hand-drawn Google Maps. It's a homecoming conversation and nostalgia journey. But Scott and the hosts don't just stay in 2008. They use the Obama years as a lens for everything that's happened since — what that campaign got right about organizing and message, where the party has drifted, and what it would actually take to build that kind of coalition again in Texas and beyond. In this conversation: How Scott went from Peace Corps-bound in Guatemala to catching a flight to South Carolina the morning after New Hampshire Organizing Sherman with no data, no staff, and hand-drawn turf maps — and what that scrappy model still teaches The Obama organizing principle of "respect, empower, include" — and how far Democrats have drifted from it Why Trump's rise runs on the same playbook as Obama's, just a different feeling James Talarico's "top vs. bottom" framing and why it's connecting where traditional Democratic messaging hasn't Citizens United, dark money, and how Democrats became the party defending institutions instead of people The 2028 primary field — and why the candidate who changes everything might not be on anyone's radar yetPlus: Scott ran the 2030 census numbers — and even holding Obama's exact 2008 map, Democrats lose seven electoral votes. The old math won't cut it. Follow Scott: @scottmackeywriter on InstagramScott's novel: Love Is Not The AnswerLearn more: Veterans for All Voters — veteransforallvoters.org Support the show:  Love what we're doing? Become a member at patreon.com/missiontexaspodcast — just a few dollars a month keeps independent Texas media alive. And if you can't spare the cash, a five-star review goes just as far. God bless Texas. 🤠

    59分
  3. Ep. 37 (video): The Obama Organizer Who Showed Up in Sherman and Changed Alex's life (Scott Mackey)

    6月18日 ·  ビデオ

    Ep. 37 (video): The Obama Organizer Who Showed Up in Sherman and Changed Alex's life (Scott Mackey)

    Alex has told this story before — how a campaign organizer showed up in Sherman, Texas of all places, and changed the trajectory of his life. This week, that organizer is finally on the mic. Scott Mackey recruited Alex as a high school senior during the 2008 Texas Democratic primary, back when the campaign had no budget, no VAN data, and was cutting turf on hand-drawn Google Maps. It's a homecoming conversation and nostalgia journey. But Scott and the hosts don't just stay in 2008. They use the Obama years as a lens for everything that's happened since — what that campaign got right about organizing and message, where the party has drifted, and what it would actually take to build that kind of coalition again in Texas and beyond. In this conversation: How Scott went from Peace Corps-bound in Guatemala to catching a flight to South Carolina the morning after New Hampshire Organizing Sherman with no data, no staff, and hand-drawn turf maps — and what that scrappy model still teaches The Obama organizing principle of "respect, empower, include" — and how far Democrats have drifted from it Why Trump's rise runs on the same playbook as Obama's, just a different feeling James Talarico's "top vs. bottom" framing and why it's connecting where traditional Democratic messaging hasn't Citizens United, dark money, and how Democrats became the party defending institutions instead of people The 2028 primary field — and why the candidate who changes everything might not be on anyone's radar yetPlus: Scott ran the 2030 census numbers — and even holding Obama's exact 2008 map, Democrats lose seven electoral votes. The old math won't cut it. Follow Scott: @scottmackeywriter on InstagramScott's novel: Love Is Not The AnswerLearn more: Veterans for All Voters — veteransforallvoters.org Support the show: Love what we're doing? Become a member at patreon.com/missiontexaspodcast — just a few dollars a month keeps independent Texas media alive. And if you can't spare the cash, a five-star review goes just as far. God bless Texas. 🤠

    59分
  4. Ep. 35 (audio): Sarah Eckhardt on the Comptroller Race, One-Party Rule, and How the GOP Is Gutting Your Public Schools

    6月4日 ·  ビデオ

    Ep. 35 (audio): Sarah Eckhardt on the Comptroller Race, One-Party Rule, and How the GOP Is Gutting Your Public Schools

    Texas State Senator Sarah Eckhardt joins Kate to break down the race for Texas Comptroller — one of the most powerful offices in state government that almost nobody's talking about. Eckhardt, the Democratic nominee, faces Don Huffines, the multimillionaire who purchased the Epstein Ranch and is promising to gut public education and "DOGE" state government. Kate and Senator Eckhardt make the case for why this race could determine the future of Texas. Plus: Senator Eckhardt heads to an LGBTQ-founded food bank in Amarillo after the interview — a community effort that's grown into a lifeline for Panhandle families struggling with the rising cost of living. We cover: Why the Texas Comptroller is the most powerful office you've never heard of — and why it matters who holds it The case against Don Huffines: the Epstein Ranch, a history of buying seats, and a plan to weaponize the comptroller's office Public education as the greatest engine of prosperity ever created — and what vouchers are really doing to Texas schools What Eckhardt would actually do as Comptroller: transparent voucher audits, economic impact reporting, raising the basic allotment, and indexing it to inflation Texas has the highest uninsured rate in the nation — including double-digit uninsured rates for children — and what Medicaid non-expansion is actually costing insured Texans No-bid state contracts up fourfold since 2019, TEA takeovers funneling schools to private contractors, and the normalization of corruption The "don't California my Texas" myth — and the actual numbers Amarillo staring down the world's largest data center next door while 17 of 26 Panhandle counties are maternity deserts Why 2026 could outperform 2018 — and what grassroots organizing can do that MAGA millions can't buy Last Word: if you don't do politics, politics will do youSupport Senator Eckhardt: SarahEckhardt.com | Volunteer, donate, and follow @SarahEckhardtTX Support the show: Love what we're doing? Become a member at patreon.com/missiontexaspodcast — just a few dollars a month keeps independent Texas media alive. And if you can't spare the cash, a five-star review goes just as far. God bless Texas. 🤠

    55分
  5. Ep. 35 (video): Sarah Eckhardt on the Comptroller Race, One-Party Rule, and How the GOP Is Gutting Your Public Schools

    6月4日 ·  ビデオ

    Ep. 35 (video): Sarah Eckhardt on the Comptroller Race, One-Party Rule, and How the GOP Is Gutting Your Public Schools

    Texas State Senator Sarah Eckhardt joins Kate to break down the race for Texas Comptroller — one of the most powerful offices in state government that almost nobody's talking about. Eckhardt, the Democratic nominee, faces Don Huffines, the multimillionaire who purchased the Epstein Ranch and is promising to gut public education and "DOGE" state government. Kate and Senator Eckhardt make the case for why this race could determine the future of Texas. Plus: Senator Eckhardt heads to an LGBTQ-founded food bank in Amarillo after the interview — a community effort that's grown into a lifeline for Panhandle families struggling with the rising cost of living.  We cover:  Why the Texas Comptroller is the most powerful office you've never heard of — and why it matters who holds it The case against Don Huffines: the Epstein Ranch, a history of buying seats, and a plan to weaponize the comptroller's office Public education as the greatest engine of prosperity ever created — and what vouchers are really doing to Texas schools What Eckhardt would actually do as Comptroller: transparent voucher audits, economic impact reporting, raising the basic allotment, and indexing it to inflation Texas has the highest uninsured rate in the nation — including double-digit uninsured rates for children — and what Medicaid non-expansion is actually costing insured Texans No-bid state contracts up fourfold since 2019, TEA takeovers funneling schools to private contractors, and the normalization of corruption The "don't California my Texas" myth — and the actual numbers Amarillo staring down the world's largest data center next door while 17 of 26 Panhandle counties are maternity deserts Why 2026 could outperform 2018 — and what grassroots organizing can do that MAGA millions can't buy Last Word: if you don't do politics, politics will do youSupport Senator Eckhardt: SarahEckhardt.com | Volunteer, donate, and follow @SarahEckhardtTX Support the show: Love what we're doing? Become a member at patreon.com/missiontexaspodcast — just a few dollars a month keeps independent Texas media alive. And if you can't spare the cash, a five-star review goes just as far. God bless Texas. 🤠

    57分
  6. Ep. 34 (Video): She's Suing Greg Abbott (Angel Carroll)

    5月28日 ·  ビデオ

    Ep. 34 (Video): She's Suing Greg Abbott (Angel Carroll)

    You may have seen Angel on the news talking Texas politics. But what you may not know is that Angel Carroll spent her career fighting for criminal justice reform, ran for the Texas House, and was arrested at the Texas Capitol during the redistricting protest. Now she's suing Governor Greg Abbott for banning her from the building without due process. Kate and Alex sit down with Angel to hear the full story: what led her to that moment, what happened inside county jail, and why this lawsuit is about so much more than four women and a one-year ban. Plus: Kate spoke at a veterans event, Alex celebrates 14 years of marriage, and Angel shares a milestone birthday and a prayer she made at 16 that she never thought she'd live to see answered. We cover:  Angel's path from the foster care system to the Texas Capitol  What actually happened the night Nicole Collier was locked on the House floor The moment Angel decided she wasn't leaving and what that felt like 30 state troopers for four women: the arrest and six hours in Travis County jail Charges rejected, but the ban upheld — the constitutional case for why that's wrong The Alabama pilgrimage: Africatown, the Selma bridge, and the lynching museum Marching orders: what every Texan can do right now to fight backFollow Angel:  @iangelcarroll on social media  Support the show:  Love what we're doing? Become a member at patreon.com/missiontexaspodcast — just a few dollars a month keeps independent Texas media alive. And if you can't spare the cash, a five-star review goes just as far. God bless Texas. 🤠

    54分

番組について

Texas is growing faster than anywhere else — and that growth means more electoral power. As blue strongholds lose seats, the road to protecting the White House must run through the Lone Star State.  If we do not flip Texas by the next census, we risk losing the White House for a generation.  “Mission: Texas” dives into the strategy, people, and stories needed to flip the state.  Hosted by two Texas lawyers and parents — a former candidate and a long-time organizer, both with military roots — we mix mission-driven focus with a dose of pop-culture fun.  Think of us as your Democratic club while you cook, commute, or go for a walk.  And don’t worry: this mission is serious, but it’s definitely not impossible. (Viewpoints expressed are those of the hosts and not of their employers or of the U.S. Department of Defense)

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