
An Unlikely Prosecutor Is Now the Law in Texas Oil Country
An assistant district attorney who used to shoulder some of the load for the elected prosecutor is now the area's only judge. A court reporter was fired for passing out drunk at the courthouse after a lunch break — and then was snapped up by a neighboring district.
So when Republicans needed a candidate to take on the Democratic district attorney in a deeply conservative stretch of the Permian Basin that's more than half the size of New Jersey, they had to settle on Sarah Stogner. She disliked President Trump, made a name for herself by once posing nearly naked on an oil pumpjack for a campaign ad and had never tried a criminal case in her life, but at least she had an active law license.
Then, in November, she won.
'I didn't really have time to process,' she said of her victory. 'I had to go into that office and walk into a whole bunch of pending felony criminal cases, and I had zero experience.'
It hasn't been easy. Locals may enjoy the storied tales of the Wild West justice west of the Pecos River (and, for Ms. Stogner's district, a little east of the Pecos as well) and profess strict beliefs in law and order. But they frequently give the benefit of the doubt to the accused, who might be a friend, or a cousin, or the friend of a cousin.
Ms. Stogner, 40, lost the first three cases she tried, including a seemingly slam-dunk drunk-driving trial where jurors improbably decided that the avuncular older defendant, who was drunk when officers found him in his car on a roadside, may not have driven there.
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CNN
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Analysis: Do Democrats have a Zohran Mamdani problem?
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Mamdani has also in the past supported the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel. But polls suggest relatively few Americans are familiar with these subjects. A 2022 Pew Research Center poll, for instance, showed 84% of Americans said they'd heard 'not much' or 'nothing at all' about the BDS movement. The polls also suggest Americans writ large are adopting an increasingly skeptical posture toward Israel and its prosecution of the war against Hamas in Gaza. That doesn't mean people will be okay with 'globalize the intifada' or Mamdani's comments about the phrase, but it suggests his criticisms of Israel might be less of an issue than they once could have been. Mamdani was also once an outspoken supporter of the Defund the Police movement, which was prominent among some corners of the left amid racial justice protests years ago. He called the NYPD 'racist, anti-queer & a major threat to public safety' and once mocked an image of a crying police officer. Those comments could be a problem for his party, given it's been relatively rare to see a high-profile Democrat who espoused defunding the police. Polling from 2021 showed as much as 70% of Americans opposed that movement. But Mamdani's now sought to distance himself from those past comments and said he doesn't support defunding the police anymore. And finally is the s-word: socialist. Americans' views on socialism have improved somewhat in recent years, owing in large part to the rise of self-described 'democratic socialist' Bernie Sanders, the Independent Vermont senator. But socialism as a whole has remained an unpopular ideology. Gallup polling in 2021 showed Americans viewed it unfavorably, 59%-38%. A Pew poll showed they opposed socialism by a similar margin, 60%-36%. And a Fox News poll in 2022 showed voters said that the country moving toward socialism would be a bad thing, 60%-32%. But just because they don't like socialism doesn't mean they're not open to candidates who use that label. Sanders, for one, remains popular even as he's embraced the 'democratic socialist' label. A Gallup poll last month showed he actually had the best numbers of 10 US political figures tested. And in second place? Another self-described democratic socialist, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York. She, like Sanders, beat out a series of Trump administration figures tested by Gallup. All of which could suggest Mamdani might not be the pariah Republicans envision him as — depending on how he adjusts to his newfound prominence. Republicans certainly have material to work with here, but time will tell.