For Beto O'Rourke, 2020 Still Haunts 2022
New York Times
TYLER, Texas Even in deep red East Texas, even on a Tuesday afternoon, even after a failed bid for the Senate followed by a failed bid for president, Beto ORourke still draws a crowd.
More than 100 supporters gathered last week in a park in the city of Tyler, southeast of Dallas in the Piney Woods region. Among the friendly crowd, however, there was concern and even skepticism as Mr. ORourke tries to become the first Democratic governor of Texas in nearly 30 years.
The Texas primary is fast approaching on March 1 early voting began on Monday but his real challenge is the general election in November, when he is expected to face the Republican incumbent, Gov. Greg Abbott. Some of Mr. ORourkes comments aimed at wooing national Democratic voters in the 2020 presidential primary such as Hell yes, were going to take your AR-15 may have already weakened if not doomed his chances in November.
The comment about guns is going to be his biggest problem, said Holly Gage, 40, who arrived at the Tyler park early with her family. My husband is on the fence. Its due to the gun thing.
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Mr. ORourkes presidential campaign shadows his run for governor, complicating his effort to present himself as a pragmatic, there-for-you Texan who embraces responsible gun ownership and wants to win over moderate voters. His 2020 campaign remarks have figured prominently in attacks by Mr. Abbott and are familiar to many voters in a state where Democrats also proudly own guns. Mr. ORourke counts himself among their number he and his wife own firearms, his campaign said and he appears well aware of the liability.