After more than two decades in Washington, Texas Democrat Al Green has finally been shown the door.
The long-time congressman lost his primary runoff to 37-year-old Christian Menefee on Tuesday evening, ending [1] one of the longest stints of any Houston-area Democrat in Congress.
Decision Desk HQ projected Menefee as the winner in the runoff for Texas’s 18th Congressional District, a seat so safely blue that whoever wins the Democratic primary is practically guaranteed victory in the general election.
Despite that advantage, Green could not convince voters to stick with him yet again.
At seventy eight, Green represented the aging face of the Democratic Party, and his loss to Menefee, a much younger attorney, highlights the growing generational divide inside Democrat ranks.
Younger progressives like Menefee are anxious to push aside the old guard that came up during the Obama and Clinton eras, and Al Green became their latest casualty.
Green had served in Congress since 2005, using his seat mostly to deliver fiery speeches about alleged racism in America and to lead quixotic impeachment efforts against President Donald Trump.
That might have made him a hero on MSNBC, but clearly it did not secure enough loyalty back home in Texas.
Menefee’s rise has been swift. Earlier this year, he won a special election to fill out the term of the late Democrat Sylvester Turner, giving him a brief incumbency advantage going into this contest.
That experience, combined with deep local ties and the appetite among younger voters for new blood, proved enough to finish off the long-serving Green.
Neither candidate cleared the fifty percent mark during the March 3 primary, forcing Tuesday’s runoff and setting up this head-to-head showdown.
While the district is safely Democratic, Republicans in the state legislature reshaped several districts in recent years to create more competitive opportunities for the GOP.
Those efforts caused predictable outrage among Democrats, who rushed to draw counter maps in states like California to blunt any Republican gains.
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Green’s career had already taken a few public hits before this election loss.
Earlier this year, he was literally thrown out of President Trump’s State of the Union Address after holding up a massive banner reading “Black People Aren’t Apes.”
It was a bizarre protest that even some of his fellow Democrats privately found embarrassing.
That incident was not his first disruption inside the House chamber either.
It was actually the second consecutive year he had been ejected from the State of the Union for similar behavior, and the moment perfectly captured what many Texans saw as his slide into political irrelevance.
During that same protest, Majority Whip Steve Scalise personally ripped the banner down before Capitol security removed Green from the room.
The scene was chaotic and certainly not the kind of decorum constituents expect from someone representing them in Congress.
To many voters in Houston’s 18th District, this runoff became a referendum on professionalism and results.
After so many years of soundbites and protests, Green could not make the case that he had done much for his district.
Menefee, on the other hand, positioned himself as someone eager to modernize the seat with a fresh approach, even if his political leanings remain firmly liberal.
The race’s outcome offers a glimpse into how Democrats are attempting to revamp their image before the next election cycle.
They are trading fiery old voices for younger polished ones who can repackage the same tired policies under new branding.
Doing so, they hope, will keep their progressive base energized despite voter fatigue with the Biden era and discontent with the direction of the country.
For Republicans, Green’s fall is another sign that even deep blue districts are not immune from political shakeups.
Conservative activists in Texas have continued pressing for fair district lines and competitive contests, and the resulting debates over redistricting have forced Democrats into messy internal wars over power.
Al Green may have spent two decades championing liberal policies in Washington, but none of that protected him from his own party’s appetite for new faces.
After years of using his seat to score cable news appearances and grandstand at the expense of his constituents, voters opted for change.
Menefee will almost certainly glide through the general election in November, given the partisan makeup of the district.
Yet his victory tells a deeper story about a Democratic Party eager to purge its older establishment figures while keeping its ideological course firmly leftward.
Al Green’s loss may be celebrated as renewal, but for many Texans, it is just one more reminder that Democrats are shuffling chairs without ever shifting direction.