The Loneliest Democrat in America

AMARILLO, TEXAS—The Democratic candidate for Congress in the most Republican congressional district in America does not stand for the Pledge of Allegiance. Ever. Nor does he wear an American flag lapel pin. Ever. He prefers a small golden pin of the Constitution, etched with the phrase “We The People.” “I don’t have to pledge my allegiance. I’m a Vietnam vet. I’ve already demonstrated it,” he says. “None of these symbols of America mean anything to me any more.”
Greg Sagan is 70 years old. He has the swept-back gray hair and assured, learned manner of a former corporate consultant, which he is. When he campaigns he wears a navy blue suit jacket and a blue name tag that reads: “Greg Sagan. Democrat for U.S. House. District 13.” Even though he had a column in the local newspaper for 14 years, he needs the name tag, because he hasn’t run any television ads. He hasn’t put up any billboards. His opponent, House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mac Thornberry, has raised $1.1 million, and Sagan has raised a little over $20,000. He’s spent most of that money driving around the district for the past year, holding town halls, asking people what they want. His driver is his wife Dianne, who is also his campaign manager. The fact that he is, statistically, the Democrat with the biggest uphill battle in the nation does not appear to bother him a bit.
We’re sitting in a red upholstered booth in a Denny’s in late September, just off I-40 in east Amarillo, TX. We’re in the middle of Texas’ 13th Congressional District, rated as +33 points Republican, which makes it the reddest district you will find anywhere in our 50 states. Beginning just outside of Dallas, TX-13 stretches northwest to encompass the entire 40,000 square miles of the Texas panhandle. It would take you six hours to drive it end to end. The district is home to Wichita Falls, and a lot of little dot-on-the-map towns, and a whole lot of prairie. Mostly, it is home to Amarillo.
From that Denny’s parking lot, you can see a Subway, a McDonald’s, a Burger King, a Wendy’s, a Taco Bell, an IHOP, a Cracker Barrel, a Ford dealership, a Chevy dealership, a Discount Tire, a Red Roof Inn, a Days Inn, a La Quinta Inn, a Quality Inn, a Sleep Inn, a Comfort Inn, and a Chevron. You can see America. Amarillo has nice neighborhoods of ranch houses and picture-perfect lawns on its west side, and the east side is full of shabbier houses that are all just a triangle on top of a rectangle. On the west side is a sprawling medical complex, where pristine hospitals and clinics surround a lovely city park. The city sits on the old Route 66, and a stretch of the road west of downtown has been revitalized with bars, restaurants, and antique stores selling all sorts of Route 66-branded detritus. Vast swaths of the north side of town—what should be the urban core—are boarded up or vacant buildings, dotted with discount used car lots and the type of bars so outwardly grim that you can’t tell if they’re open or not. A 20 minute drive south past nothing but shin-high grass and thin barbed wire fences brings you to Palo Duro Canyon, Texas’ more modest version of the Grand Canyon. In the visitor’s center, a historic plaque describes the “Indian Campaigns 1871-1875” thusly: “Mackenzie’s columns defeated the hostiles in Palo Duro Canyon. By June 1875 all the Southern Plains Indians were on reservations in Oklahoma.”
Greg Sagan grew up in a military family. His dad moved them to Amarillo in 1960. In those pre-Southern Strategy days, it was a solidly Democratic city, though just as conservative as it is now. Sagan went and fought in Vietnam as a young man, did corporate work in the 1970s, then returned to the Navy in 1980, working as an HR consultant before leaving the military for good in 1984. He studied economics in graduate school. He did consulting for nuclear power plants. He moved back to Amarillo in 1996, got married, wrote weekly columns in the local paper, a rare (more or less) liberal voice around town. A few years ago, he retired. Then Donald Trump got elected.
Sagan had never thought of going into politics before. He is not exactly the activist type. He has the sort of strong but silent moral code that builds up in families that serve in the military for generation after generation. “The people I feel an affinity for are people like me who, out of the best intentions, went off to a terrible war, did their best in that war, and came off feeling guilty about it,” he says. His entire career path—military, strategic consulting, economics—has led him to value precision, competency, and dependability. It is not hard to see how a man like Donald Trump offends virtually every sensibility that he possesses. “There’s been nobody more dangerous in the White House in my lifetime,” he says. “And the Republican Party, as I feared they would, turned into a bunch of facilitators of his conduct.”
Sagan more or less unilaterally decided to run for Congress, informed the state Democratic Party, and was essentially told: great, good luck. Neither the state nor the national party are giving him money. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has offered nothing. The most outside support he’s gotten was from Joe Biden, who wished him well. This laissez-faire approach by the party is just fine with Sagan. He has a plan. He is ceding the political money and advertising fight to his opponent in favor of a grassroots (read: he and Dianne) effort to turn out the vote, by targeting young people and black people, LGBTQ people and Latinos and women and people who work hard and don’t make enough money. These are the people he sees as his base. They are not served by the Republican Party; they constitute a majority of the residents of the district; and, by and large, they do not vote. Sagan is encouraged by statewide polls that show Texans in general becoming more friendly to Democrats over the past year; but since no one has bothered to conduct real up-to-date polling in his hopelessly one-sided district, the efficacy of his bare-bones campaign strategy can only be judged when the votes are tallied.
It is not as though Mac Thornberry is an unassailable foe. He is a native Texan who has by now spent more time in Washington than in the family ranching business that features prominently in his biography. He was elected to Congress in 1994, in the “Contract With America” days, promising to serve no more than 12 years in office. That was 24 years ago. This fact is much grumbled about in the district. Still, Thornberry is comfortable in his seat. In 2016, running only against a Libertarian and a Green Party candidate, he won with nearly 90 percent of the vote. But Sagan points out that given the area’s low voter turnout, even that margin means that far less than half of the potential voters in the district actually voted for Thornberry. “If I can get half of the people who didn’t vote last time to come out and vote for me, I win,” Sagan says. It sounds so straightforward, in the same way that a pledge to climb Mount Everest does.
Notwithstanding the daunting party numbers in the district, there are things to be learned here. It’s not unreasonable to see Greg Sagan as a Frankenstein’s-monster type of Democratic candidate, assembled out of the ideal pieces of many different constituencies in the party. On one hand, he’s an old white man with a background in the corporate world; on the other, he uses that technical expertise to argue in detail for single-payer healthcare and leftist pro-worker economic policies to fight inequality. He carries a handgun, but he favors gun control. He’s a military veteran with a decorated family history, but he calls the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq “two magnificently myopic disastrous decisions.” He discusses the dangers of climate change with ranchers. He speaks Spanish. He dismisses Trump’s border wall as the idea of a “dope.” And he is zealous on the topic of good government, with specific plans to do away with gerrymandering, roll back Citizens United, and expand voter registration. He is not a California Democrat or a Chicago Democrat or a New York Democrat. He is an Amarillo Democrat. To a degree remarkable for an aspiring politician but unremarkable for a Texan, he truly seems to be guided only by his own logic and convictions to the stubborn exclusion of all other concerns. If the Democratic Party ever decided to really try and compete in the reddest part of this country, it might consider getting behind a man like him.
-
big-story Pre-Sputnik "Star-Like" Study Finds Peer-Reviewed “Empirical Support for the UAP Phenomenon” By Jacob Weindling October 24, 2025 | 4:25pm
-
congress, elections Feckless Democratic Leader Finally Endorses Popular Democratic Candidate for Mayor of America’s Largest City By Jacob Weindling October 24, 2025 | 1:50pm
-
immigration, trump-administration Do ICE Recruits Know How to Read? By Jacob Weindling October 23, 2025 | 2:24pm
-
trump-administration, sports Sports Embraced the Devil, and Now the Devil Is At their Doorstep By Jacob Weindling October 23, 2025 | 12:16pm
-
trump-administration, economy Trump Attacks American Ranchers in More Ways Than One By Jacob Weindling October 22, 2025 | 4:04pm
-
supreme-court Federal Judges Are Mad at the Supreme Court By Thor Benson October 22, 2025 | 10:06am
-
healthcare Trump's Attacks On Healthcare Hit the Poorest the Hardest By Roqayah Chamseddine October 22, 2025 | 9:44am
-
economy The Texas State Fair Suggests the Economy Is At a Turning Point By Jacob Weindling October 21, 2025 | 2:46pm
-
elections Why Would You Run for Senate Before Knowing You Have a Nazi Tattoo? By Jacob Weindling October 21, 2025 | 12:31pm
-
trump-administration, big-story No Kings Was America’s Largest Protest Since 1970 By Jacob Weindling October 20, 2025 | 12:11pm
-
international-affairs Great Hunger: Failed Interventions Have Inflamed Mali’s Food Crisis By Tiernan Cannon October 20, 2025 | 11:53am
-
media Weekly Reader: Stories From Across Paste Media By Jacob Weindling October 17, 2025 | 4:08pm
-
trump-administration, economy Trump Says His Favorite Idea Is “Not Sustainable” But “It Could Stand” By Jacob Weindling October 17, 2025 | 3:21pm
-
international-affairs The Mystery "Drones" Are Back By Jacob Weindling October 17, 2025 | 12:40pm
-
economy I Will Never Talk to Microsoft’s AI PC By Jacob Weindling October 16, 2025 | 1:31pm
-
healthcare, trump-administration Five Explanations for Rising Autism Rates That Aren’t Vaccines or Tylenol By Ross Pomeroy October 16, 2025 | 10:42am
-
palestine How American Academia Supports Israel's Genocide in Gaza By Roqayah Chamseddine October 16, 2025 | 9:35am
-
trump-administration, economy Trump Bankrupted Tons of Crypto Bros and Caused Its Biggest Wipeout Ever With One TruthSocial Post By Jacob Weindling October 13, 2025 | 12:05pm
-
trump-administration The Trump Administration Is Terrified of No Kings Protests By Jacob Weindling October 13, 2025 | 11:11am
-
climate, economy Trump Is Immiserating His Own Voters With His War on Renewable Energy By Jacob Weindling October 10, 2025 | 2:27pm
-
technology A Mars Probe Snapped a Photo of 3I/ATLAS — Very Likely a Comet, Not a Spaceship By Jacob Weindling October 10, 2025 | 12:06pm
-
trump-administration, big-story Nobel Committee Snubs Trump for an Ostensible Trump Ally By Jacob Weindling October 10, 2025 | 10:25am
-
trump-administration Republican Governor Slams Texas National Guard Deployment to Chicago By Jacob Weindling October 9, 2025 | 4:05pm
-
immigration, economy Trump’s Immigration Policies Are Creating a Lasting Drag on Jobs and the Economy By Jacob Weindling October 9, 2025 | 2:36pm
-
congress, trump-administration Democrats Have Played This Government Shutdown Fairly Well—So Far By Jacob Weindling October 9, 2025 | 11:52am
-
trump-administration The Legal Battle Over Trump Defunding Democratic States By Thor Benson October 9, 2025 | 10:11am
-
trump-administration Trump: ‘We Took the Freedom of Speech Away’ By Jacob Weindling October 8, 2025 | 3:40pm
-
media, sports Bad Bunny and the Super Bowl Remind Conservative Media They Did Not Win the Culture in the 2024 Election By Jacob Weindling October 8, 2025 | 1:24pm
-
congress, trump-administration Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Now One of the Sanest Republicans By Jacob Weindling October 8, 2025 | 11:13am
-
climate Small Island Tests Big Climate Change Ruling In Court By Jacob Weindling October 7, 2025 | 3:23pm
-
trump-administration, economy Gold Is Telling a Bleak Story About America Right Now By Jacob Weindling October 7, 2025 | 1:35pm
-
elections, trump-administration Trump and the GOP Float a Great Idea to Get Annihilated in Virginia Elections By Jacob Weindling October 7, 2025 | 11:03am
-
trump-administration Tyranny of the Posters By Jacob Weindling October 6, 2025 | 4:00pm
-
media CBS News Further Beclowns Itself With Bari Weiss’ Hire By Jacob Weindling October 6, 2025 | 12:35pm
-
palestine A Majority of U.S. Jews Think Israel Has Committed War Crimes By Jacob Weindling October 6, 2025 | 10:52am
-
sports, billionaires The NBA’s Billionaire Shitstorm They Don’t Want to Talk About Is the Scandal of Our Time By Jacob Weindling October 3, 2025 | 5:14pm
-
media, trump-administration Jeffrey Epstein: Bad Pedophile Lampoons the Crap that Got Us Here By Kenneth Lowe October 3, 2025 | 4:19pm
-
sports, economy Sports Gambling Sees a Sharp Drop In Popularity Among Its Target Demographic By Jacob Weindling October 3, 2025 | 2:21pm
-
trump-administration, economy Stagflation Strengthens While Business Activity Contracts For the First Time Since 2020 By Jacob Weindling October 3, 2025 | 11:50am
-
international-affairs Great Hunger: South Sudan is at Tipping Point By Tiernan Cannon October 3, 2025 | 10:46am
-
climate, economy Tesla’s Sales Spike on the Death of Electric Vehicle Credits By Jacob Weindling October 2, 2025 | 1:47pm
-
trump-administration Trump Pledges To Defend Qatar...Who Was Just Attacked By Israel By Jacob Weindling October 2, 2025 | 12:12pm
-
congress, trump-administration GOP Speaker of the House Doesn’t Deny Allegation That Trump Is 'Unwell' By Jacob Weindling October 2, 2025 | 10:45am
-
congress, elections James Talarico’s Spiritual Bernie-Style Politics Is a Fundraising Force in the Texas Senate Race By Jacob Weindling October 1, 2025 | 3:26pm
-
trump-administration Trump’s Unprecedented Political Prosecutions From a Historical Perspective By Thor Benson October 1, 2025 | 2:05pm
-
supreme-court, trump-administration, economy The Illuminati Prove Again That They Won’t Let Trump Mess With Their Money By Jacob Weindling October 1, 2025 | 12:51pm
-
congress, trump-administration The Democrats’ Bad Political Logic in Trump’s Shutdown By Jacob Weindling October 1, 2025 | 11:39am
-
trump-administration Sleepy Trump Declares War on America By Jacob Weindling September 30, 2025 | 11:49am
-
trump-administration Study: Don’t Give Up Hope By Jacob Weindling September 30, 2025 | 10:12am
-
palestine, international-affairs A Year After the Pager Attacks, Israel’s Assaults on Civilians Continue By Roqayah Chamseddine September 30, 2025 | 9:34am
-
economy Debt Markets Are Making Wall Street Nervous With Their ‘Star Wars Garbage Chute Situation’ By Jacob Weindling September 29, 2025 | 4:09pm
-
sports America Gets Embarrassed On American Soil By Jacob Weindling September 29, 2025 | 1:28pm
-
trump-administration Does Trump Know What’s Going On? By Jacob Weindling September 29, 2025 | 10:21am
-
Epstein Documents: 'Elon Musk to Island Dec. 6' By Jacob Weindling September 26, 2025 | 2:54pm
-
immigration, trump-administration, economy Trump Is Annihilating America’s Soybean Farmers and Betraying Them for Argentina By Jacob Weindling September 26, 2025 | 12:46pm
-
international-affairs The Prodigious Incompetence of Britain’s Would-Be Left Party By Tiernan Cannon September 26, 2025 | 12:09pm
-
trump-administration Trump Is Weaponizing the DOJ Against James Comey and Other Political Enemies Most People Don’t Care About By Jacob Weindling September 26, 2025 | 11:18am
-
economy, palestine Microsoft Cuts Israel’s Cloud Access Over Their Surveillance of Gaza By Jacob Weindling September 25, 2025 | 3:27pm
-
sports I Welcome Baseball’s New Robot Overlords By Jacob Weindling September 25, 2025 | 1:33pm
-
trump-administration Can You Trust Donald Trump’s FBI? By Jacob Weindling September 25, 2025 | 11:47am
-
healthcare, trump-administration President Trump’s Top Tips for Lifelong Health By Ross Pomeroy September 25, 2025 | 10:15am
-
economy The Stock Market and Crypto Are Becoming Increasingly Similar to Disturbing Degrees By Jacob Weindling September 24, 2025 | 4:11pm
-
media, sports, economy Sinclair and Nexstar Are Playing a Very Dangerous Game With Disney By Pre-Empting Jimmy Kimmel By Jacob Weindling September 24, 2025 | 12:37pm
-
media, trump-administration Last Night Was The Night That Jimmy Kimmel Became President By Jason Tabrys September 24, 2025 | 11:31am
-
big-story, international-affairs Great Hunger: Sudan’s Suffering and the “Norm of Indifference” By Tiernan Cannon September 24, 2025 | 10:51am
-
elections Kamala Harris Shows How Easy it Is For Real Democrats to Endorse Zohran Mamdani, New York City's Next Mayor By Jacob Weindling September 23, 2025 | 2:43pm
-
trump-administration Trump Embarrassed America in Front of the Whole World at the UN, and We Deserve It By Jacob Weindling September 23, 2025 | 12:16pm
-
media, trump-administration Trump Wants to Impose a State-Sanctioned Echo Chamber on America By Roqayah Chamseddine September 23, 2025 | 11:15am
-
congress, elections What Democrats Should Do if They Take the House Next Year By Thor Benson September 23, 2025 | 10:05am
-
media, economy Disney Reinstates Jimmy Kimmel And Demonstrates the Downside of Corporate Consolidation By Jacob Weindling September 22, 2025 | 3:48pm
-
climate, economy Why Trump May Bail Out Argentina and How Climate Investment Could Help Him By Jacob Weindling September 22, 2025 | 2:49pm
-
trump-administration Why Are We Bombing Drug Boats? By Jen Kirby September 22, 2025 | 1:16pm
-
elections, healthcare Spineless Democrats Stuck in 1996 Like Ezra Klein Should Just Admit They’re Anti-Abortion By Jacob Weindling September 22, 2025 | 12:13pm
-
media Weekly Reader: Stories From Across Paste Media By Jacob Weindling September 19, 2025 | 3:52pm
-
trump-administration, sports Trump Doesn’t Know Ball, the NFL’s New Kickoff Rule Is Great By Jacob Weindling September 19, 2025 | 2:01pm
-
trump-administration, economy Trump’s Polls Are Slipping as Non-MAGA Republicans Split From MAGA on the Economy By Jacob Weindling September 19, 2025 | 11:51am
-
palestine Israel’s Campaign in Gaza Is Structured to Maximize Human Suffering By Roqayah Chamseddine September 19, 2025 | 9:30am
-
media Vanity Fair Hires RFK Jr.’s Boo Olivia Nuzzi Because Journalism Is Dead By Jacob Weindling September 18, 2025 | 3:49pm
-
supreme-court, economy Trump Asks Supreme Court to Let Him Crash the Economy By Jacob Weindling September 18, 2025 | 2:07pm
-
media, trump-administration No Actual Strong Man Is Intimidated by Jimmy Freaking Kimmel By Jacob Weindling September 18, 2025 | 11:38am
-
immigration, economy Trump’s Immigration Crackdown Is Hurting Job Growth More than His Tariffs Are By Jacob Weindling September 17, 2025 | 3:45pm
-
congress, economy What If It’s All Bullshit? By Jacob Weindling September 17, 2025 | 1:59pm
-
trump-administration, economy Trump Has Dropped the Price of One Thing: Cocaine By Jacob Weindling September 17, 2025 | 12:47pm
-
elections Democrats Assemble A New Band of Centrist Dimwits to Help Them Lose Elections and Insult Harry Reid's Legacy By Jacob Weindling September 17, 2025 | 11:48am
-
climate The Environment Lost One of Its Greatest Champions In Robert Redford By Jacob Weindling September 16, 2025 | 3:45pm
-
congress, trump-administration Trump’s FBI Says There’s ‘No Credible Information’ That Epstein ‘Trafficked to Other Individuals’ By Jacob Weindling September 16, 2025 | 12:36pm
-
media, trump-administration Trump Files $15 Billion Farcical Lawsuit Against The New York Times By Jacob Weindling September 16, 2025 | 11:13am
-
trump-administration Trump Continues to Be a Massive Threat to Free Speech By Thor Benson September 16, 2025 | 10:07am
-
economy Uh, How Bad Is the Economy? By Jacob Weindling September 15, 2025 | 3:35pm
-
immigration, economy Trump Voting Farmers Are Mad They’re Getting What They Voted For By Jacob Weindling September 15, 2025 | 12:23pm
-
media Switch Your Straight News Diet from Political Media to Financial Media By Jacob Weindling September 15, 2025 | 11:17am
-
labor, economy The Death of the Office By Roqayah Chamseddine September 15, 2025 | 9:31am
-
sports A Reasoned Overreaction to the First Week of the NFL Season By Jacob Weindling September 12, 2025 | 4:31pm
-
media Flying the Guantanamo Bay McDonald’s Flag at Half-Staff on 9/11 for Charlie Kirk Is the Most dril Thing to Ever Happen By Jacob Weindling September 12, 2025 | 1:27pm
-
big-story America’s Gun Violence Epidemic Doesn’t Map Neatly On to Our Politics By Jacob Weindling September 12, 2025 | 11:52am
-
healthcare If Parents Are Free Not to Vaccinate Their Kids, Then I Should Be Free to Sue Them By Ross Pomeroy September 12, 2025 | 9:55am
-
climate Companies Called ‘Carbon Majors’ Are Responsible for Half the Intensity of Recent Heat Waves By Jacob Weindling September 11, 2025 | 2:59pm
-
media Ezra Klein Is a Mark By Jacob Weindling September 11, 2025 | 1:37pm
-
congress Congress’ Latest UAP Hearing Was About People By Jacob Weindling September 11, 2025 | 11:06am
-
trump-administration, big-story Right-Wing Commentator Charlie Kirk Shot and Killed at Utah Event By Jacob Weindling September 10, 2025 | 2:17pm
-
palestine On the Ground at London’s Latest Mass-Arrest Spectacle By Tiernan Cannon September 10, 2025 | 11:08am
-
elections, trump-administration The Numerous Threats Facing the 2026 Elections By Thor Benson September 10, 2025 | 10:12am
-
trump-administration How Many Gross Cryptic Epstein Birthday Books Are There? By Jacob Weindling September 9, 2025 | 2:49pm
-
economy Capitalism Has Likely Never Been Less Popular in America By Jacob Weindling September 9, 2025 | 12:18pm
-
palestine, international-affairs Great Hunger: Israel Restricting Gaza’s Food Supplies Isn’t New By Tiernan Cannon September 9, 2025 | 10:31am
-
congress, trump-administration Congress Revealed Trump’s Lewd Birthday Letter to Epstein By Jacob Weindling September 8, 2025 | 3:34pm
-
sports Sports Are About Friends and Family By Jacob Weindling September 8, 2025 | 2:44pm
-
media, sports The New Dallas Cowboys Docuseries Is About America’s Faded Team and Living Under Elder Rule By Jason Tabrys September 8, 2025 | 11:14am