Last updated on December 11th, 2024 at 05:44 pm
Webb County Judge Tano Tijerina, elected nearly a decade ago as the top executive of the border county that includes Laredo, announced Tuesday that he is switching from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party.
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“Over the years, I’ve watched the Democratic Party shift further and further to the left and leaving the values that I hold dear to my heart,” Tijerina said during an interview on Fox & Friends. “I’ve always been a conservative, and the radicalization of the national Democrats pushed me away a long time ago.”
Tijerina’s departure from the party comes after major defeats along the U.S.-Mexico border in November’s presidential election — counties that have been reliably Democratic for generations.
President-elect Donald Trump won 14 out of the 18 counties within 20 miles of the border, including all four counties in the Rio Grande Valley, eight years after winning only 29% of the vote in the region during his first presidential run.
Among them was Webb County, which experienced the fourth-largest swing for Trump since 2016 — more than 50 percentage points, according unofficial results for 2024. However, voters in the county chose Democrats in the down ballot races, including the U.S. Senate and U.S. Representative contests.
In his interview on Fox & Friends, Tijerina added that his decision was also driven by the need for more border security, threats to the region’s oil and gas industry and differing cultural views “from our, you know, the woke movements, you know, from the boys playing in girls sports and whatnot.
“It’s something that I had to do. It’s something that’s dear in my heart,” he said. “I have a moral compass that I need to continue moving forward.”
Following this year’s presidential election, Webb County Democratic Party Chair Sylvia Bruni said she had warned state and national party leaders about the Republican party’s advances but had received little support. “We need help,” Bruni said.
This article in this post was originally published on the Texas Tribune website and parts of it are republished here, with permission under a Creative Commons license.