What a Texas border county flipping red after a century means for American politics
RIO GRANDE CITY — Efrain Garcia points to the large Donald Trump flag waving outside his Rio Grande City home in South Texas, not far from the United States border with Mexico.
The 84-year-old flashes a knowing smile. He was part of a red wave that ended a 132-year streak of Starr County backing Democrats for president. This year, the county went for Trump.
“I feel pretty good about it,” Garcia says.
In the overwhelming Republican state of Texas, the southern counties along the border used to be an anomaly — a blue wall that voted consistently Democrat for generations.