The political obituary for radical Democrat Rep. Jasmine Crockett might already be written, as devastating new polling data reveals her Texas Senate campaign is in complete freefall just months before the primary election.
According to bombshell numbers from Emerson College Polling/Nexstar Media released Thursday, Crockett is getting absolutely crushed by fellow Democrat James Talarico, a Texas state representative who's leading by a whopping nine points in the race for their party's Senate nomination.
The brutal reality for Crockett: Talarico commands 47 percent of likely Democrat voters while she's stuck at a pathetic 38 percent, with 15 percent still undecided. That's not a competitive race – that's a political massacre in the making.
Squad Member's Radical Agenda Backfiring
This polling disaster shouldn't surprise anyone who's watched Crockett's inflammatory antics in Congress. The Texas Democrat has made a name for herself with unhinged rants and radical leftist positions that clearly aren't resonating even with her own party's voters.
While President Trump continues his America First agenda with sky-high approval ratings, Democrats like Crockett are learning the hard way that woke extremism doesn't sell – even in blue primaries.
Talarico's commanding lead suggests Texas Democrats are looking for someone who can actually win elections rather than generate Twitter headlines with divisive rhetoric. With 15 percent of voters still undecided, Crockett's path to victory looks virtually impossible unless she can pull off the political comeback of the century.
The Clock Is Ticking
Political veterans know that being down nine points this late in the game is often insurmountable, especially when your opponent already has nearly half the vote locked up. Crockett would need a miracle – or a major scandal involving Talarico – to turn these numbers around.
For Texas patriots, watching the Democrat party tear itself apart in expensive primary battles is just another gift that keeps on giving. While they waste resources fighting each other, Republicans are unified behind Trump's proven America First agenda.
The question now isn't whether Crockett can win – it's whether she'll gracefully exit the race or drag her party through a costly, divisive primary that weakens whoever eventually gets the nomination. Either way, Texas Republicans should be celebrating these numbers.
