I want to hear from YOU! Connect with me at www.toniannedashiell.com
I want to sincerely wish you and your family a very Merry Christmas. As you gather with friends and family to celebrate the birth of our Lord I hope you are able to reflect on the joys of life. There has been a lot of adversity this year, but don't forget, the New Year is an election year. So rest up, we'll have a lot of work to do!
 
Enjoy all your favorite traditions, revel in the fellowship with your loved ones and most of all let's give thanks to God for sending his only son to Earth so that we may be saved.
 
MERRY CHRISTMAS!!
TAD Convention Challenge!
Don't forget about the TAD Convention Challenge for 2022! Click below to make the pledge to attend ALL THREE CONVENTIONS (Precinct convention, SD/County convention and the state convention in Houston). After you sign up, I will keep you informed with information regarding the convention process. YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE but only if you participate!
Election Law Training in San Antonio
A reminder that on January 6th, the RNC will be hosting an Election Integrity Training.

We will be recruiting and training election workers, poll watchers, and volunteers to be the front line in our fight to ensure free and fair elections in our state.

January 6th RSVP HERE!
GOP Targets Vulnerable House Democrats in Texas with Increased Latino Outreach
GOP Targets Vulnerable House Democrats in Texas with Increased Latino Outreach
Newsweek
Adrian Carrasquillo
December 16, 2021 – 4:07 PM

A Thanksgiving potluck in McAllen.

A Save the Children carnival and toy drive in Laredo.

A cryptocurrency workshop and ugly sweater Christmas party with Folklorico dancing in San Antonio.

These community events aimed at Latinos in south Texas this holiday season are not being held by a nonprofit, or even by Democrats, but by the Republican National Committee (RNC) in partnership with local Republican groups.

The RNC says its community centers are part of a national, multi-million dollar effort to reach out to minority communities at the local level to engage African-Americans, Hispanics, Asian-Pacific Americans and Indian-Americans.

Of the 10 such community centers the RNC has opened up nationwide, four are in Texas, with more to come in 2022.

The growing Republican footprint in Latino communities in south Texas comes after Donald Trump garnered outsized support along border communities last year, even flipping some counties that went for Hillary Clinton in 2016.

Republicans may be seizing a very real opportunity ahead of the 2022 midterm races. A Wall Street Journal poll last week showed Hispanic voters evenly split between both parties, with 37% saying they would support a Democratic congressional candidate and 37% saying they would support a Republican, with 22% undecided.

"We're really excited about what we're seeing with the movement of Hispanics towards the GOP," Alex Kuehler, the RNC's southwest communications director told Newsweek.

To the Republican Party, 2020 improvements were the impetus for "an opportunity to get down there and make inroads and get to know the people in these communities."

Right now, those inroads include 20 full-time staff members across Texas, 477 Republican leadership trainings, and 408,000 voters contacted, with volunteers making 98% of those calls.

Traditional outreach — phone calls and door knocking — will always be an important part of engaging voters. But Latino Republicans say that what is critical in reaching Latino voters the GOP sees as newly persuadable is taking time to build genuine relationships.
 
Then, and only then, can the conversation turn to politics.

"The secret sauce for the Hispanic community, whether they're Mexican or Puerto Rican, when you watch those countries mobilize voters back home, it's about relationships and trust, the word is confianza," said Artemio Muñiz, chair of the Texas Federation of Hispanic Republicans.

And that means a change of approach from past methods.
 
"The Republican Party's old way of doing things is a guy in a suit and tie who lives on other side of the tracks doing a press conference at the safest country club, but he was never in the community," Muñiz said. "That doesn't work."
 
But now, with canned food drives across the state, events for moms on how to get politically involved, job fairs, and even a Second Amendment gun safety class for beginners, Republicans are increasingly meeting the community where they are, including in urban areas like San Antonio.
 
Daniel Garza, the executive director of the LIBRE Initiative, which has successfully been doing similar work for years, much to the chagrin of Democrats, echoed Muñiz without being prompted.
 
"You show that you care by being part of the community, engaging with the community, and creating that familiarity," he told Newsweek. "It's not just about connecting. The second step is, 'Why are my ideas better?' and to have standing, confianza. Creating that confianza with the community that honestly they have done a horrible job of in the past."
 
Muñiz said that while the GOP has been MIA in the past, their relationship building is now having an impact.
 
"It helps when the other side is dropping the ball," he said, of the feeling the Biden administration is lost at sea and has bumbled the border. "That's why Republicans are having some success in these counties."
 
If the 2020 election and performance in south Texas weren't enough to get Democrats to pay attention, the difficulty of the 2022 midterm landscape should, with Democrats like Representatives Vicente Gonzalez and Henry Cuellar facing reelection.
 
After Republicans redrew his district with an assist by a former Democrat who has since switched parties, Gonzalez decided to not to run in the 15th Congressional District and instead run in the safer 34th, which now includes his residence and hundreds of thousands of his current constituents.
 
He isn't too worried about 2020 election results or increased Hispanic engagement by Republicans.
 
"I really feel it was an anomaly," he told Newsweek. "I see it more and more working crowds in south Texas that they feel they may be getting duped."
 
With the recent Census cutting funding to south Texas and Governor Greg Abbott not expanding Medicaid during the pandemic, his region has been the most medically impacted, Gonzalez said. He called a new restrictive election law a "voter suppression bill" that will effect voters along the border for the first time.
 
Gonzalez isn't running away from being a Democrat. He believes voters will begin to see the tangible benefits of the American Rescue Plan and an infrastructure law he thinks will lead to shovels in the ground by April or May, plenty of time before the election barrels closer.
 
But he did lament having to be identified by party.
 
"I'm one of the most independent members of Congress, a moderate and bipartisan, and I hate that we have to run with a 'D' or 'R' on our lapel."
 
"We should run with an 'A," since we're all Americans," he added.
 
But Gonzalez' fellow moderate, Democrat Representative Henry Cuellar, told Newsweek he has noticed that Republicans have juiced their Latino outreach, including the new office in his district.
 
"They have RNC centers in Laredo and other places," he said, noting that sometimes their outreach is uncontested, and "in phone calls with the Democratic national party I tell them, 'Y'all need to be paying attention to south Texas.'"
She's not getting financial support from the RNC, she told Newsweek, but knows Latinos will be key to winning not only the 34th district, which is 84% Hispanic, but Texas for years to come.
While the RNC's Kuehler wasn't prepared to release budget figures yet, he said the increased outreach is working, and Democrats are in trouble in south Texas.
"Democrats have taken this area for granted for a very long time," he said. "We've been hearing that sentiment for a very long time."
"We haven't seen movement from Democrats, especially national Democrats, to shore up the vote down there, and we're on the offensive, hiring staff," Kuehler said. "A year out, I think we have them on their heels."
Thank you for allowing me to continue to serve you as your Texas Representative to the RNC! As always, feel free to reach out to me
with any questions you might have at tad@toniannedashiell.com,
or follow me on Facebook or Twitter at the links below. Thank you
for being a strong Texas Republican, and together, let us work to
Keep Texas RED!
Paid for by Toni Anne Dashiell RNC National Committeewoman for Texas 
STAY CONNECTED!