A gigantic volunteer program
Thousands of trained volunteers knocking doors and making calls on behalf of every candidate — not just the top of the ticket.
Texas Together is the Democrats' statewide coordinated campaign for 2026 — one shared, $30 million organizing operation built to win statewide office for the first time since the early 1990s, with a Democrat on the ballot for every state and federal seat.
Texas Together is the Democrats' 2026 statewide coordinated campaign — built by four organizations working as one team: the Texas Democratic Party, Texas Majority PAC, the Texas House Democratic Campaign Committee, and Powered by People. Together they're committing at least $30 million in resources to candidates across the state the moment the primary ends.
It launches with 75 staff on the ground and 30,000 volunteers already engaged — the most well-funded coordinated campaign in recent Texas Democratic history, behind a Democrat running for every state and federal office for the first time since 1974.
Texas hasn't elected a Democrat statewide since the early 1990s — and going it alone is part of why. Every cycle, hundreds of campaigns rebuild the same machine from scratch: separate vendors, isolated volunteer lists, the same donors called over and over. The waste falls hardest on the down-ballot and first-time candidates who can least afford it.
Winning statewide also takes more than likely voters. It means registering and turning out the communities campaigns usually write off — young people, minority neighborhoods, lower-income areas — and persuading Republicans to cross over. That's the lesson of Taylor Rehmet's flip of Senate District 9: target a broad spectrum of voters, and never assume who will vote for a Democrat.
Thousands of trained volunteers knocking doors and making calls on behalf of every candidate — not just the top of the ticket.
Registering new voters and turning out the low-propensity communities other campaigns write off — young, minority, and lower-income Texans.
A common voter roll and shared targeting, so every campaign runs on evidence — not 254 separate versions of guesswork.
Coordinated fundraising support, so every candidate isn't calling the same donors asking for the same dollars.
Cost-shared polling, message testing, and focus groups — tools down-ballot candidates have never been able to afford on their own.
Staffed offices in 13 counties — from Harris, Dallas, and Tarrant to Hidalgo, Maverick, and El Paso — organizing all 254.
After the 2024 cycle, organizers across the state mapped where effort duplicated, where turnout fell short, and how much capacity was lost to campaigns building everything alone.
The Texas Democratic Party, Texas Majority PAC, the House Democratic Campaign Committee, and Powered by People agreed on a single coordinated framework any campaign could plug into.
Taylor Rehmet flipped Senate District 9 — a GOP stronghold — in a special election. The broad-spectrum voter targeting behind that win became the Texas Together playbook.
75 staff, 30,000 volunteers, and at least $30 million committed — with field offices open in 13 counties and a Democrat filed for every state and federal office for the first time since 1974.
Every door knocked, call made, and text sent through one program — pointed at the same goal across the whole ballot, and at the first statewide wins since the early 1990s.
Candidates, volunteers, and county parties all start here.
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