McAllen, Texas — 85 Percent Hispanic — Elects Republican Mayor
Along with the news Saturday that Republicans had won mayoralties in Fort Worth (population: 1 million) and Arlington (population 400,000), there was a less-reported result from Texas but one with major significance — that a Republican had captured City Hall in McAllen (population: 140,000), which is roughly 85 percent Hispanic.
The contest is particularly significant. McAllen is a border city and voting came a week after a much-publicized incident in which U.S. Border Patrol agents saved several migrants from drowning in the Rio Grande as they were attempting to make it to the nearby town of Roma.
More than a few Republicans suggest that continued controversy with the Biden Administration over its border policies will help Texas become even more of a “red” state than it has been.
Following a hard-fought campaign, former Hidalgo County Republican Chairman Javier Villalobos was elected mayor of McAllen by 208 votes (51.14 percent) in a runoff against Democrat and City Commissioner Veronica Whitacre.
Like all municipal races in the Lone Star State, the race in McAllen is nonpartisan. But the partisan identities of both Villalobos and Whitacre was well-known throughout the city.
“And McAllen has elected Republican mayors and city officials in the past,” Hollis Rutledge, past Hidalgo County GOP Chairman and a former official of the Reagan and Bush-41 Administrations, told Newsmax, “Hidalgo County is one of the last holdouts of ‘yellow dog Democrats’ [Democrats who will vote their party line no matter what], but we make an exception here.”
Rutledge noted that former President Donald Trump drew 28 per cent in McAllen in 2016 and 41 percent in ’20.
John Gizzi is chief political columnist and White House correspondent for Newsmax. For more of his reports, Go Here Now.
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