AUSTIN, Texas (AP) โ Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson announced Friday that he is switching to the Republican Party, making the city the largest in the U.S. to be led by a GOP mayor.
Although mayoral offices in Texas are nonpartisan, the switch is a boost for Texas Republicans who have been losing ground around the state’s major cities for more than a decade. Johnson was elected mayor in 2019 after serving more than a decade as a Democrat in the Texas House of Representatives.
Making the announcement in an editorial in theย Wall Street Journal, Johnson said he was never a favorite of Democrats in the Capitol and called on mayors to champion โlaw and orderโ and fiscal conservatism.
โThis is hardly a red wave. But it is clear that the nation and its cities have reached a time for choosing,โ Johnson wrote. โAnd the overwhelming majority of Americans who call our cities home deserve to have real choicesโnot โprogressiveโ echo chambersโat city hall.โ
Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott quickly welcomed Johnson into the party. The mayor of neighboring Fort Worth, Mattie Parker, is also a Republican, giving Texas two of the nation’s largest cities with GOP leaders.
โTexas is getting more Red every day,โ Abbott posted on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter.
Johnson is in his second and final term as mayor, which runs through 2027. As a state lawmaker, Johnson made headlines over his successful effortsย to remove a plaque in the Texas Capitolย that rejected slavery as an underlying cause of the Civil War. His push at the time occasionally put Johnson and Abbott in conflict over discussions to remove the marker.
Texas Democratic Party expressed a lack of surprise in the switch.
โBut the voters of Dallas deserved to know where he stood before he ran for reelection as Mayor,โ the party said in a statement. โHe wasnโt honest with his constituents, and knew he would lose to a Democrat if he flipped before the election.โ
During his mayoral run, Johnson has embraced policies denounced by Democrats elsewhere in Texas, including using state troopers to police cities.
โ Written by Acacia Coronada of the Associated Press
