There’s a moment in every political career where a politician has to decide who they work for — the voters back home or the cocktail circuit in Washington. Dan Crenshaw made his choice a long time ago. On Tuesday night, Texas voters made theirs.
It wasn’t close.
The Numbers
State Representative Steve Toth beat Crenshaw with nearly 57 percent of the vote in the Republican primary for Texas’ 2nd Congressional District. No runoff needed. No recount drama. Just a clean, decisive rejection by the same voters who sent Crenshaw to Washington four times and finally decided they’d had enough.
The margin is embarrassing enough on its own. But the backstory makes it devastating.
Crenshaw’s own internal polling — released just months ago — showed him with a 28-point lead. Twenty-eight points. His campaign was so confident they published it. And when polls closed at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Kalshi betting markets still gave him a 68 percent chance of winning.
Less than two hours later, those odds flipped to 99 percent — in Toth’s favor.
That’s not a loss. That’s a collapse. The kind that happens when a politician’s internal numbers are measuring name recognition while the actual voters are measuring loyalty — and finding the account empty.
The Trump Factor
Crenshaw was the only Texas Republican incumbent who didn’t receive Donald Trump’s endorsement this cycle. Let that sit. Every other Republican in the Texas delegation got the nod. Crenshaw got silence. In Trump’s Republican Party, silence is a verdict.
And the base heard it loud and clear. When Trump doesn’t endorse you in a Texas Republican primary, it’s not an oversight. It’s a signal. The voters who showed up Tuesday understood exactly what that signal meant, and they responded accordingly.
Ted Cruz endorsed Toth. Mark Ivanyo of Republicans for National Renewal called Crenshaw “one of Congress’s biggest RINOs” and a “stalwart of the Liz Cheney wing of the GOP.” When your primary opponent is collecting endorsements from the state’s senior senator while your allies are limited to behind-the-scenes character references, the writing isn’t just on the wall — it’s on the ballot.
How Crenshaw Lost the Room
Crenshaw’s fall didn’t happen overnight. It was a slow-motion drift that started the moment he decided he was smarter than his base and couldn’t resist letting them know it.
He talked down to constituents on social media. He dismissed MAGA priorities with the casual contempt of someone who thought his war-hero biography made him immune to primary challenges. He positioned himself as the “reasonable” Republican — the kind who gets invited on Morning Joe and quoted approvingly by the Washington Post, which is roughly the political equivalent of wearing a “kick me” sign to a Texas Republican primary.
The base didn’t forget. They don’t forget. The same voters who gave him a standing ovation when he first ran in 2018 — the Navy SEAL who lost an eye serving his country — watched him spend four terms slowly migrating toward the establishment center and decided the hero had become just another politician.
Anna Paulina Luna endorsed him last week, praising his behind-the-scenes work on “public corruption in Washington.” That may be true. But Republican primary voters in Texas don’t care what you do behind the scenes. They care what you do on the House floor, on camera, and in the fights that matter. And on those fronts, Crenshaw repeatedly positioned himself against the very movement his voters cared about most.
The Toth Bet
Steve Toth ran a straightforward campaign — school choice, fiscal responsibility, constitutional governance, and full-throated alignment with the MAGA agenda. No equivocation. No “well, actually” moments designed to earn a polite nod from the Sunday show producers.
Cruz’s endorsement framed it perfectly: “Washington needs bold leadership and representatives who will stand up for Texans at every turn.”
“At every turn” is the key phrase. Crenshaw stood up for Texans when it was easy and convenient. When it got hard — when the vote required choosing between the base and the Beltway — he chose the Beltway. Toth promised he wouldn’t, and 57 percent of primary voters decided to give him the chance.
The Bigger Message
This race matters far beyond Texas’ 2nd District. Every Republican sitting in Congress right now who’s been playing the “moderate maverick” game just watched Dan Crenshaw — a decorated veteran, four-term incumbent with massive name recognition and a campaign war chest — get demolished by a state legislator running on loyalty to the movement.
If Crenshaw isn’t safe, nobody running that playbook is safe. The era of Republican incumbents coasting on biography while ignoring their base is over. The voters are paying attention. They’re tracking votes, watching interviews, reading social media exchanges, and remembering every time their representative sided with leadership over the people who knocked doors for them.
Crenshaw had every institutional advantage — money, incumbency, name recognition, media access. Toth had something simpler: alignment with the voters who actually show up on primary day.
In 2026, alignment wins. Everything else is résumé padding.
The Farewell
Dan Crenshaw served his country in uniform with genuine courage. That will always be true and should always be honored. But political careers are judged by political performance, and on that scorecard, Crenshaw lost the trust of the people who hired him.
He had four terms to prove he was one of them. He spent those terms proving he was above them. And on a Tuesday night in March, they told him the difference matters.
Steve Toth is headed to Washington. Dan Crenshaw is headed home. And every RINO who thought they could survive by splitting the difference between Trump’s base and the establishment just lost their best evidence that the strategy works.
It doesn’t. Not anymore. Not in Texas. And come November, probably not anywhere else, either.
