⏱ 12 minute read
Texas Senate District 9 was supposed to be boring. It was supposed to be a routine Republican hold in north Tarrant County, the kind of seat you pencil in without drama. President Trump carried the district by more than 17 points in 2024, and Republicans had held the ground for decades, to the point that Democrats had not represented it in roughly half a century. Yet in the span of a special election and a runoff, a Democrat not only flipped it but did so with a crushing 57.27% to 42.73% margin, a roughly 14-point defeat that signaled weakness in GOP cohesion, turnout, and persuasion in a place Republicans had treated as home turf.
This mess has a name. It is 100% John Huffman’s fault.
That is a blunt claim, so let us be precise about what “fault” means here. Not everything in politics has a single cause. Sometimes losses are overdetermined, the way a house can be condemned by termites, water damage, and mold all at once. But sometimes there is a clear difference-maker, the one choice without which the disaster does not occur. SD9 was that kind of case. The key difference-maker was not “low turnout” in the abstract, or “bad messaging” in the abstract, or “national headwinds” in the abstract. The key difference-maker was a deliberate act that made the loss structurally easier to happen. John Huffman chose to run in a system where a fractured majority is punished; he took the money to do it, and he lit the match.
Consider the basic arithmetic of the first round on November 4, 2025. Democrat Taylor Rehmet led with 47.57%. Republican Leigh Wambsganss had 35.94%.
Republican John Huffman had 16.49%. No one reached a majority, so the top two advanced to a runoff. That runoff, on January 31, 2026, ended with Rehmet winning 57.27% to 42.73%. If you want to understand the whole story, do not start with the runoff. Start with why there was a runoff at all.
Texas law explicitly contemplates runoffs in special elections to fill vacancies in Congress or the legislature. When no one clears the threshold that triggers an outright win in that context, a runoff follows. The political meaning of that legal structure is simple. In an all-party, open-field special election, you do not merely run against the other party; you run against fragmentation. If you are the dominant party in the district, your enemy is not first the Democrat; it is the splinter. A splinter prevents closure. A splinter delays the win. A splinter forces a second election, where the minority party can consolidate, mobilize, and nationalize the fight.
Huffman was the splinter. He did not “participate.” He altered the game board. He made it far harder for Republicans to win outright in the first round and far easier for Democrats to make the contest a two-person, two-month knife fight. Even if you grant that not every Huffman voter would have backed Wambsganss, the point remains that Huffman’s entry was the single decision that created the conditions for a runoff in a district where a runoff was the one format Democrats needed. It is the political equivalent of pulling the fire alarm in a crowded building and then acting surprised that people get trampled.
Now add the second ingredient: money, and not the kind that strengthens a movement. The Texas Tribune reported Huffman was the best-funded candidate in that special election, with major backing tied to pro-gambling interests linked to Miriam Adelson and Las Vegas Sands, and he still finished a distant third. That is the deeper scandal. The district did not need a vanity campaign financed by casino interests. It needed a disciplined Republican coalition that understood the stakes and acted like it. Instead, SD9 became a laboratory for what happens when a candidate treats a safe seat as a personal promotion opportunity and a wealthy donor treats a party primary environment as a purchase order.
Here is what many readers outside Tarrant County will miss. A special election is not just a vote. It is an attention contest. It is about what voters talk about at church, at school board meetings, in group chats, in the parking lot after a city council meeting. When the dominant party is united, the conversation is about the other side’s agenda. When the dominant party fractures, the conversation becomes internal, personal, and demoralizing. In SD9, resources and attention that should have gone to turning out Republicans against a Democrat instead went to Republicans attacking Republicans. Reporting around the runoff even noted the scale of spending and the bruising intra-Republican fight leading into it. This was not an accident. It was the predictable consequence of Huffman’s choice to force himself into the story.
Who is Huffman, and why does his biography matter here? Huffman is a Texas Republican politician, an attorney and small business owner, who served on the Southlake City Council from 2015 to 2021 and then as mayor from 2021 until 2024, before stepping down to run for higher office. In 2024, he ran in the Republican primary for Texas’s 26th Congressional District and received 10.0% of the vote. In 2025, he pivoted to the open SD9 seat, took a torrent of pro-gambling money, and finished third with 16.49%. None of this is disqualifying by itself. People are allowed to run. People are allowed to lose. But a pattern of losing is relevant when the candidate then tries to assume the role of party elder, scolding the winners, instructing the activists, and posing as the architect of unity.
Which brings us to the title-worthy structure of the story, the one my source captured with the phrase “The Arsonist & The Fireman.” The arsonist act was running in the first place, splitting the Republican vote in a district where unity was the whole ballgame. The firefighter act came immediately afterward, when Huffman moved to recast the aftermath as a problem of everyone else’s disunity.
This is not speculation about tone. It is reported. The Dallas Morning News described Huffman faulting Wambsganss for not unifying the party after the Democrats’ double-digit win, with Wambsganss dismissing the complaint as “sour grapes.” That is the rhetorical inversion at the heart of the SD9 episode. The candidate who chose fragmentation presents himself as the victim of fragmentation. The candidate who forced a runoff blames the party for losing a runoff. The candidate who lit the match offers to sell you the fire extinguisher.
At this point, an attentive reader might ask a fair question. Even if Huffman bears heavy responsibility for forcing the runoff, how do we get from that to the more serious charge, that he is now trying to use the chaos he helped cause as a pretext to knock out county GOP leadership and sideline conservatives? Here is where the story moves from public record to first-hand reporting from within the local apparatus.
In late November 2025, Tarrant County Republicans elected Tim Davis as county party chair. That is not a trivial institutional fact. County chairs control coordination, messaging, party infrastructure, relationships with precinct leadership, and the basic machinery of turnout. If you want to steer the party without persuading its grassroots, you target the machinery.
According to an on-background, first-hand source involved in the events, Huffman did exactly that. The source describes a surreptitious February 4th meeting at the office of Fort Worth power broker, attorney Dee Kelly Jr, attended by Huffman, Rep. Matt Krause, Chandler Crouch, and former Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price, among others. The claim is that this meeting functioned as a staging ground for a “unity” campaign that was really a power play, to orchestrate a plan to force Chair Tim Davis to resign and to pressure for removing Leigh Wambsganss from the ballot, a demand the source says was legally and practically impossible. The point, in other words, was not feasibility; it was leverage to destabilize the current conservative leadership and reopen the question of who runs the county party.
The details, as described to me, are almost too on the nose, which is why they matter. The source says Fort Worth City Council Member Charlie Lauersdorf emerged from the meeting texting people, pushing the line that Davis must resign. Then came the mistake that turned an internal whisper campaign into an evidentiary artifact. Lauersdorf accidentally sent a text to Tim Davis, a text meant for someone else, stating they needed to force Davis to resign. The source claims he other Republican Fort Worth council members, Michael Crain and Alan Blayalock (currently a candidate himself for HD 93, declined to participate in the calls for Davis’ resignation, and the effort has gathered no steam since although uncertainty remained about where Mayor Mattie Parker would land after previous public calls for Bo French’s resignation when he was the TCGOP Chair. At least one source reports that Mayor Parker was not involved in the meeting in any way. If that account is accurate, it is not “party reform.” It is a coup attempt carried out in the language of unity.
Notice how the pieces fit. Huffman helps create a special election structure that exposes Republicans to a runoff in a district Democrats should not win. Republicans lose, spectacularly, and the loss becomes a cudgel. Huffman then poses as the diagnostician of “unity,” even as he is described by first-hand sources as courting the very Fort Worth establishment actors who, in the source’s telling, “hate” the county’s conservative leadership and want it removed. The fire creates smoke. The smoke creates panic. Panic creates cover. Cover creates opportunity. That is the logic of the arsonist who returns with a uniform and a camera crew.
One can steelman this without resorting to mind-reading. You do not have to claim Huffman wakes up each morning plotting melodrama. You only need to recognize a simpler phenomenon, familiar to anyone who has watched institutions up close. Ambitious people seek the path of least resistance to power. When they cannot win power by persuading voters, they seek it by manipulating procedures, coalitions, and gatekeepers. They frame their opponents as “divisive,” not because division is their enemy, but because division is their instrument, a way to redefine the center, marginalize the grassroots, and re-legitimize the old network.
At this point, another reader’s confusion is natural. “Is it really fair,” you might ask, “to say the SD9 mess is 100% Huffman’s fault? Surely Democrats campaigned. Surely Republicans underperformed. Surely turnout in a runoff is volatile.” All true, and still beside the point. We often distinguish background conditions from difference-makers. Oxygen is a background condition for fire. The spark is the difference-maker. Democrats’ campaigning is oxygen. Turnout dynamics are oxygen. The decisive spark was the choice to fracture the Republican vote in the first round, under a legal structure that rewards consolidation and punishes fragmentation. Huffman supplied that spark, then lectured everyone else about the smoke.
Finally, credibility matters, not because politics is about purity, but because politics is about trust. Huffman presents himself as a conservative leader, yet there are photos of him at a BLM rally in a supportive posture. That is not, by itself, a philosophical refutation of his policy preferences. But it is evidence relevant to a different question, whether his public brand is stable conviction or flexible marketing. And his current posture toward Don Huffines follows the same pattern. Huffman is now piling on, suggesting Huffines should not run because of a property transaction tied to Jeffrey Epstein’s former New Mexico ranch. Whatever one thinks of that attack line, it fits the same template. Huffman divides, loses, declines responsibility, then reappears as the moral judge and unity enforcer. A party can survive disagreement. It cannot survive leaders who treat disagreement as a weapon to be used against their own side, whenever it suits their personal trajectory.
So what should Tarrant County Republicans conclude? Not that politics must be genteel. Politics is not genteel. Not that every coalition is corrupt. Coalitions are inevitable. The conclusion is narrower and more practical. When you see the arsonist pick up the hose, do not applaud the performance. Ask who struck the match, who bought the gasoline, and who benefits from the rebuilding contracts.
SD9 was a Republican stronghold. It was lost in a way that should terrify any party that cares about governing. If the lesson conservatives take is “try harder next time,” they will miss the real point. The real point is institutional. Discipline matters. Candidate recruitment matters. Donor incentives matter. And the difference between unity and “unity” matters, because the second is often a word used to dissolve the first.
If Tarrant County wants to avoid repeating SD9, it should refuse the temptation of unity theater. It should reward those who build coalitions before elections rather than those who demand submission after they create chaos. It should defend legitimate county party leadership from backroom maneuvers dressed up as “healing.” And it should tell every future would-be arsonist the same thing: you do not get to burn down the house, then charge admission to the rebuild.
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The Arsonist & The Fireman: John Huffman And the SD9 Self-Inflicted Loss
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Texas Senate District 9 was supposed to be boring. It was supposed to be a routine Republican hold in north Tarrant County, the kind of seat you pencil in without drama. President Trump carried the district by more than 17 points in 2024, and Republicans had held the ground for decades, to the point that Democrats had not represented it in roughly half a century. Yet in the span of a special election and a runoff, a Democrat not only flipped it but did so with a crushing 57.27% to 42.73% margin, a roughly 14-point defeat that signaled weakness in GOP cohesion, turnout, and persuasion in a place Republicans had treated as home turf.
This mess has a name. It is 100% John Huffman’s fault.
That is a blunt claim, so let us be precise about what “fault” means here. Not everything in politics has a single cause. Sometimes losses are overdetermined, the way a house can be condemned by termites, water damage, and mold all at once. But sometimes there is a clear difference-maker, the one choice without which the disaster does not occur. SD9 was that kind of case. The key difference-maker was not “low turnout” in the abstract, or “bad messaging” in the abstract, or “national headwinds” in the abstract. The key difference-maker was a deliberate act that made the loss structurally easier to happen. John Huffman chose to run in a system where a fractured majority is punished; he took the money to do it, and he lit the match.
Consider the basic arithmetic of the first round on November 4, 2025. Democrat Taylor Rehmet led with 47.57%. Republican Leigh Wambsganss had 35.94%.
Republican John Huffman had 16.49%. No one reached a majority, so the top two advanced to a runoff. That runoff, on January 31, 2026, ended with Rehmet winning 57.27% to 42.73%. If you want to understand the whole story, do not start with the runoff. Start with why there was a runoff at all.
Texas law explicitly contemplates runoffs in special elections to fill vacancies in Congress or the legislature. When no one clears the threshold that triggers an outright win in that context, a runoff follows. The political meaning of that legal structure is simple. In an all-party, open-field special election, you do not merely run against the other party; you run against fragmentation. If you are the dominant party in the district, your enemy is not first the Democrat; it is the splinter. A splinter prevents closure. A splinter delays the win. A splinter forces a second election, where the minority party can consolidate, mobilize, and nationalize the fight.
Huffman was the splinter. He did not “participate.” He altered the game board. He made it far harder for Republicans to win outright in the first round and far easier for Democrats to make the contest a two-person, two-month knife fight. Even if you grant that not every Huffman voter would have backed Wambsganss, the point remains that Huffman’s entry was the single decision that created the conditions for a runoff in a district where a runoff was the one format Democrats needed. It is the political equivalent of pulling the fire alarm in a crowded building and then acting surprised that people get trampled.
Now add the second ingredient: money, and not the kind that strengthens a movement. The Texas Tribune reported Huffman was the best-funded candidate in that special election, with major backing tied to pro-gambling interests linked to Miriam Adelson and Las Vegas Sands, and he still finished a distant third. That is the deeper scandal. The district did not need a vanity campaign financed by casino interests. It needed a disciplined Republican coalition that understood the stakes and acted like it. Instead, SD9 became a laboratory for what happens when a candidate treats a safe seat as a personal promotion opportunity and a wealthy donor treats a party primary environment as a purchase order.
Here is what many readers outside Tarrant County will miss. A special election is not just a vote. It is an attention contest. It is about what voters talk about at church, at school board meetings, in group chats, in the parking lot after a city council meeting. When the dominant party is united, the conversation is about the other side’s agenda. When the dominant party fractures, the conversation becomes internal, personal, and demoralizing. In SD9, resources and attention that should have gone to turning out Republicans against a Democrat instead went to Republicans attacking Republicans. Reporting around the runoff even noted the scale of spending and the bruising intra-Republican fight leading into it. This was not an accident. It was the predictable consequence of Huffman’s choice to force himself into the story.
Who is Huffman, and why does his biography matter here? Huffman is a Texas Republican politician, an attorney and small business owner, who served on the Southlake City Council from 2015 to 2021 and then as mayor from 2021 until 2024, before stepping down to run for higher office. In 2024, he ran in the Republican primary for Texas’s 26th Congressional District and received 10.0% of the vote. In 2025, he pivoted to the open SD9 seat, took a torrent of pro-gambling money, and finished third with 16.49%. None of this is disqualifying by itself. People are allowed to run. People are allowed to lose. But a pattern of losing is relevant when the candidate then tries to assume the role of party elder, scolding the winners, instructing the activists, and posing as the architect of unity.
Which brings us to the title-worthy structure of the story, the one my source captured with the phrase “The Arsonist & The Fireman.” The arsonist act was running in the first place, splitting the Republican vote in a district where unity was the whole ballgame. The firefighter act came immediately afterward, when Huffman moved to recast the aftermath as a problem of everyone else’s disunity.
This is not speculation about tone. It is reported. The Dallas Morning News described Huffman faulting Wambsganss for not unifying the party after the Democrats’ double-digit win, with Wambsganss dismissing the complaint as “sour grapes.” That is the rhetorical inversion at the heart of the SD9 episode. The candidate who chose fragmentation presents himself as the victim of fragmentation. The candidate who forced a runoff blames the party for losing a runoff. The candidate who lit the match offers to sell you the fire extinguisher.
At this point, an attentive reader might ask a fair question. Even if Huffman bears heavy responsibility for forcing the runoff, how do we get from that to the more serious charge, that he is now trying to use the chaos he helped cause as a pretext to knock out county GOP leadership and sideline conservatives? Here is where the story moves from public record to first-hand reporting from within the local apparatus.
In late November 2025, Tarrant County Republicans elected Tim Davis as county party chair. That is not a trivial institutional fact. County chairs control coordination, messaging, party infrastructure, relationships with precinct leadership, and the basic machinery of turnout. If you want to steer the party without persuading its grassroots, you target the machinery.
According to an on-background, first-hand source involved in the events, Huffman did exactly that. The source describes a surreptitious February 4th meeting at the office of Fort Worth power broker, attorney Dee Kelly Jr, attended by Huffman, Rep. Matt Krause, Chandler Crouch, and former Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price, among others. The claim is that this meeting functioned as a staging ground for a “unity” campaign that was really a power play, to orchestrate a plan to force Chair Tim Davis to resign and to pressure for removing Leigh Wambsganss from the ballot, a demand the source says was legally and practically impossible. The point, in other words, was not feasibility; it was leverage to destabilize the current conservative leadership and reopen the question of who runs the county party.
The details, as described to me, are almost too on the nose, which is why they matter. The source says Fort Worth City Council Member Charlie Lauersdorf emerged from the meeting texting people, pushing the line that Davis must resign. Then came the mistake that turned an internal whisper campaign into an evidentiary artifact. Lauersdorf accidentally sent a text to Tim Davis, a text meant for someone else, stating they needed to force Davis to resign. The source claims he other Republican Fort Worth council members, Michael Crain and Alan Blayalock (currently a candidate himself for HD 93, declined to participate in the calls for Davis’ resignation, and the effort has gathered no steam since although uncertainty remained about where Mayor Mattie Parker would land after previous public calls for Bo French’s resignation when he was the TCGOP Chair. At least one source reports that Mayor Parker was not involved in the meeting in any way. If that account is accurate, it is not “party reform.” It is a coup attempt carried out in the language of unity.
Notice how the pieces fit. Huffman helps create a special election structure that exposes Republicans to a runoff in a district Democrats should not win. Republicans lose, spectacularly, and the loss becomes a cudgel. Huffman then poses as the diagnostician of “unity,” even as he is described by first-hand sources as courting the very Fort Worth establishment actors who, in the source’s telling, “hate” the county’s conservative leadership and want it removed. The fire creates smoke. The smoke creates panic. Panic creates cover. Cover creates opportunity. That is the logic of the arsonist who returns with a uniform and a camera crew.
One can steelman this without resorting to mind-reading. You do not have to claim Huffman wakes up each morning plotting melodrama. You only need to recognize a simpler phenomenon, familiar to anyone who has watched institutions up close. Ambitious people seek the path of least resistance to power. When they cannot win power by persuading voters, they seek it by manipulating procedures, coalitions, and gatekeepers. They frame their opponents as “divisive,” not because division is their enemy, but because division is their instrument, a way to redefine the center, marginalize the grassroots, and re-legitimize the old network.
At this point, another reader’s confusion is natural. “Is it really fair,” you might ask, “to say the SD9 mess is 100% Huffman’s fault? Surely Democrats campaigned. Surely Republicans underperformed. Surely turnout in a runoff is volatile.” All true, and still beside the point. We often distinguish background conditions from difference-makers. Oxygen is a background condition for fire. The spark is the difference-maker. Democrats’ campaigning is oxygen. Turnout dynamics are oxygen. The decisive spark was the choice to fracture the Republican vote in the first round, under a legal structure that rewards consolidation and punishes fragmentation. Huffman supplied that spark, then lectured everyone else about the smoke.
Finally, credibility matters, not because politics is about purity, but because politics is about trust. Huffman presents himself as a conservative leader, yet there are photos of him at a BLM rally in a supportive posture. That is not, by itself, a philosophical refutation of his policy preferences. But it is evidence relevant to a different question, whether his public brand is stable conviction or flexible marketing. And his current posture toward Don Huffines follows the same pattern. Huffman is now piling on, suggesting Huffines should not run because of a property transaction tied to Jeffrey Epstein’s former New Mexico ranch. Whatever one thinks of that attack line, it fits the same template. Huffman divides, loses, declines responsibility, then reappears as the moral judge and unity enforcer. A party can survive disagreement. It cannot survive leaders who treat disagreement as a weapon to be used against their own side, whenever it suits their personal trajectory.
So what should Tarrant County Republicans conclude? Not that politics must be genteel. Politics is not genteel. Not that every coalition is corrupt. Coalitions are inevitable. The conclusion is narrower and more practical. When you see the arsonist pick up the hose, do not applaud the performance. Ask who struck the match, who bought the gasoline, and who benefits from the rebuilding contracts.
SD9 was a Republican stronghold. It was lost in a way that should terrify any party that cares about governing. If the lesson conservatives take is “try harder next time,” they will miss the real point. The real point is institutional. Discipline matters. Candidate recruitment matters. Donor incentives matter. And the difference between unity and “unity” matters, because the second is often a word used to dissolve the first.
If Tarrant County wants to avoid repeating SD9, it should refuse the temptation of unity theater. It should reward those who build coalitions before elections rather than those who demand submission after they create chaos. It should defend legitimate county party leadership from backroom maneuvers dressed up as “healing.” And it should tell every future would-be arsonist the same thing: you do not get to burn down the house, then charge admission to the rebuild.
If you enjoy my work, please subscribe https://x.com/amuse/creator-subscriptions/subscribe.
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
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