Source: Common Dreams

Photo by lev radin/Shutterstock

Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York spent the weekend in Texas as she headlined rallies with a pair of progressive candidates vying to join her in Washington, D.C. next year by winning upcoming elections in the Lone Star State.

With Democratic primary in Texas set for March 1, Ocasio-Cortez appeared at events for both Jessica Cisneros, challenging Democratic incumbent Rep. Henry Cuellar in District 28, and Greg Casar, running for an open seat in the state’s newly-created District 35. Both districts stretch from Austin to areas in and around San Antonio.

U.S. Senator Ted Cruz, a Republican, “could never,” tweeted AOC on Sunday afternoon as she shared a video of herself dancing with constituents following an afternoon rally with Casar in San Antonio:

At a rally on Saturday, Ocasio-Cortez bolstered both candidates by saying that Texas deserves more members in Congress willing to fight for working people and families over corporate interests.

“If we send a Democrat who doesn’t give a damn about people, why would we expect people to vote for that person?” she said. “How can we win when we don’t stand for anything? We have to stand for something in order to bring it home.”

Ocasio-Cortez said she was in Texas “to support two incredible game-changing candidates—both, I think, for the Democratic Party, but, frankly, for the country writ large.”

In separate comments, she said she was in town because of the “long game” Democrats must be playing—and not just in safely blue states. “We flip Texas,” she said, “we flip the country.”

“Cisneros has really shown what is possible—not only here in San Antonio but all the way down South Texas,” said AOC at the Saturday rally. “She’s shown that we don’t have to accept status quo politics before we actually fight for change.”

During a canvas launch party hosted by CWA Local 6143 on Saturday, Ocasio-Cortez and Cisneros were welcomed by union members and the New York Democrat described why deep canvassing in Texas and elsewhere remains one of the most vital tools if progressives want to win:

Sharing a video of Sunday’s rally, Casar said a “better Texas is possible” so long as the people of Texas fight and organize for it.

During the rally, Casar credited Ocasio-Cortez for being an organizer who later “shook the halls of Congress” by running and winning as a bold progressive.

“She reignited in me and so many of us a fire by instead of talking about what can’t get done, what it is possible for us to do,” he said. “She showed us that when the people lead, the politicians must follow—that’s what we’re gonna do.”


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Jon Queally is managing editor of Common Dreams.

1 Comment

  1. Like many, I have little trust in party politics as they have developed in the US. Congress has come to represent only a small fraction of USAmericans, the rich, elite, and powerful. If the Democratic Party is to have any future, and at this point it is the only party that offers any hope for the US, it is people like Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, Jessica Cisneros, and Greg Casar that need to enter into Congressional chambers.

    I speak as a US-born, several generations deep “German-American” (although our family was so far removed from long ago immigrants that we never thought of ourselves that way, and after two world wars, I was never connected or taught about that distant association–until I was an adult and discovered a bit of family history on my own).

    Then a surprise took place, I became a “Latin American specialist” at the university, spent a lifetime learning of this field, and eventually as a mature adult in my 50’s lived successively in two Latin American countries, where I really learned Spanish, immersed myself in the culture, and eventually returned to the US with a Nicaraguan wife. While much of this was unplanned and unexpected, I am a much better person for it and find that my dual person hood and life as an immigrant in Latin America changed me immensely and opened the real world to me. I now consider myself an “All-American,” rooted deeply in the North, South, and Central of America, bilingual and perhaps I should say, tri-cultural. It is remarkable how much this kind of blended people (new immigrants, first-generation USAmericans with immigrant parents, and even more distantly-related and longtime citizens who are Hispanics have done for this country. Ocasio Cortez, Cisneros, and Casar are three who demonstrate this. ¡Viva ellos, que tengan mucho éxito.”

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