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Ted Cruz Losing to Colin Allred for First Time: Texas Poll

Ted Cruz is losing to Colin Allred for the first time in the U.S. Senate race, according to new polling.
The survey, conducted by Morning Consult between September 9 and 18, showed Allred one point ahead of Cruz, on 45 percent to his 44 percent among 2,716 likely voters. His lead was within the poll’s margin of error of +/-2 percentage points.
Cruz, who is the incumbent Texas Senator, has had a consistent lead over his opponent in previous polls.
“For the first time in this race, a new poll has us leading Ted Cruz by 1 point. I don’t know about y’all but I’m fired up and ready to WIN! We’ve got 47 days, let’s do this Texas,” Allred said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
Newsweek has contacted the Cruz campaign for comment via email.
Despite Allred’s small lead, the Cook Political Report still classifies the Senate race in Texas as a likely Republican seat.
The previous poll conducted by Morning Consult found that Cruz was 5 points ahead, on 47 percent to Allred’s 42 percent, among 2,940 likely voters. The poll was conducted between August 30 and September 8.
Meanwhile, a poll conducted by YouGov and the University of Texas between August 23 and 31 found that Cruz was 8 points ahead among 1,200 registered voters.
Another poll, conducted by ActiVote between August 13 and 29 among 400 likely voters, put Cruz 10 points ahead. Other surveys have shown Cruz with a smaller lead of between 2 and 4 points.
RealClearPolitics’ polling tracker puts Cruz on average 6 points ahead.
Texas has selected a Republican to represent them in the Senate every year since 1990.
In 2018, Cruz narrowly defeated Beto O’Rourke by 214,921 votes out of more than 8.3 million cast.
Nonetheless, some Republicans are still worried about how close the polls have been in this race so far.
“What the hell is wrong with the Senate race in Texas ? I think i know …and i think i know his name … time to get some real professionals in to save @tedcruz,” Donald Trump’s campaign manager, Chris LaCivita, wrote in a post on X last week.
Meanwhile, Cruz suffered a blow on Monday when former Republican Rep. Liz Cheney told voters she’d made a trip to Dallas to support Allred.
“I’ve known Ted Cruz for 20 years. And it’s been clear—everybody who knows Ted Cruz, and I’m sure most of you in this room know Ted Cruz, nobody thinks Ted Cruz is a man of great honor,” Cheney said.
“What Ted Cruz did after the 2020 election makes him clearly unfit for office. Ted Cruz, knowing—knowing that it was unconstitutional, knowing that Joe Biden had won the election, knowing that the election had been certified in every one of our states and that a legitimate slate of electors—that there were no contested slates of electors that were legitimate, knowing that, Ted Cruz put in place a proposal to reject many of those votes, to essentially reject the votes of millions of Americans, what would have been overturning the election. And he did that to please Donald Trump,” she continued, referring to Cruz’s efforts to push Trump’s baseless claims that the 2020 election was stolen from the former president.
“These jobs really matter, and in this race, I want to do everything I can to help ensure that the people of Texas elect Collin Allred,” Cheney added. Cheney has also endorsed Kamala Harris for president.
Monique Alcala, executive director of the Texas Democratic Party, previously told The Hill that that “enthusiasm is high” among Democrats for Allred in the state.

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