Acrobatically Avoiding Denton
Running against a Libertarian, Michael Burgess (R-Pilot Point) won an 11th term in Congress with nearly 70% of the vote.
New York Times, 7/12/2022
The downtown of Denton, Texas, a city of about 150,000 people and two large universities just north of Dallas, exudes the energy of a fast-growing place with a sizable student population: There’s a vibrant independent music scene, museums and public art exhibits, beer gardens, a surfeit of upscale dining options, a weekly queer variety show. The city is also racially and ethnically diverse: More than 45 percent of residents identify as Latino, Black, Asian or multiracial. There aren’t too many places in Texas where you can encounter Muslim students praying on a busy downtown sidewalk, but Denton is one of them.
Drive about seven hours northwest of Denton’s city center and you hit Texline, a flat, treeless square of a town tucked in the corner of the state on the New Mexico border. Cow pastures and wind turbines seem to stretch to the horizon. Texline’s downtown has a couple of diners, a gas station, a hardware store and not much else; its largely white population is roughly 460 people and shrinking.
It would be hard to pick two places more different from one another than Denton and Texline — and yet thanks to the latest round of gerrymandering by Texas’ Republican-dominated Legislature, both are now part of the same congressional district.
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District 2. (4/19/2023)
District 3. (4/19/2023)
District 4. (4/21/2023)
District 5. (4/21/2023)
District 6. (4/21/2023)
District 7. (4/24/2023)
District 8. (4/24/2023)
District 9. (4/25/2023)
District 10. (4/25/2023)
District 11. (4/26/2023)
District 12. (4/26/2023)
District 13. (4/27/2023)
District 14. (4/27/2023)
District 15. (4/28/2023)
District 16. (4/28/2023)
District 17. (4/29/2023)
District 18. (4/29/2023)
District 19. (4/30/2023)
District 20. (5/1/2023)
District 21. (5/2/2023)
District 22. (5/3/2023)
District 23. (5/4/2023)
District 24. (5/5/2023)
District 25. (5/6/2023)
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