Meet The Candidates: Danny Minton For Texas Congressional District 06
The candidate, the district, and what it will take to win.
This series is called Meet The Candidates. Over the next eight months, I’ll spotlight a handful of Democratic races each month, mainly in the Legislature and in Congress. These aren’t endorsements. They’re introductions, a way to understand who’s running, the districts they hope to represent, and what’s at stake for people across Texas.
Who is Danny Minton?
Danny Minton is a working-class candidate with a story that tracks a familiar Texas shift. Raised in a conservative Oklahoma household, he grew up on faith, responsibility, and neighbor-first values. For years, that pointed him toward the Republican Party. Then, by his own account, the party moved, and he didn’t follow.
Instead, he reframed those same values through a different lens. Care for the vulnerable. Dignity. Service. And landed with Democrats.
His background is in healthcare. With a degree in zoology and advanced study in epidemiology, he spent years working alongside physicians and patients, especially in serious illness. That experience shows up clearly in his campaign. His central argument is that the system is broken, and it’s breaking people.
From there, his platform stays rooted in that same lane. Lower healthcare costs. Strong public schools. Support for small businesses over corporate monopolies. Voting rights framed as access and fairness, not restriction.
Minton lives in Arlington with his wife, a veterinarian, and their two sons. And like a lot of candidates in this cycle, he’s trying to position himself in that space between working-class frustration and institutional failure.
The district.
The new TX06 is competitive. Another Republican dummymander. It’s about 50.7% white and 49.3% non-white by voting-age population. It’s not overwhelmingly Republican demographically. It’s not a safe Democratic seat either. It’s right on the edge. The GOP will rely on low voter turnout to win in this district.
But here’s where it gets more interesting.
The district is a patchwork. A slice of Dallas County that is heavily non-white, with nearly 80% minority in that portion alone. Then you move out into Ellis, Johnson, and Navarro, where the electorate gets whiter, more conservative, and more reliable. And finally, a smaller piece of Tarrant was layered in.
What you end up with is a district that looks competitive on a spreadsheet, but behaves Republican on Election Day. You can see it in the numbers. Even with that demographic balance, recent partisan performance still leans right, with Republicans holding a consistent advantage. The coalition exists for Democrats. It just hasn’t shown up at the same rate.
So what would it take to flip it? Two things, and both have to happen at the same time.
First, turnout. Not just higher turnout, but targeted turnout. The Dallas County portion of this district is the key. It is younger, more diverse, and more Democratic, but it underperforms compared to the suburban and exurban counties that make up the rest of the district. If Democrats are going to win here, that gap has to close. Not a little. Significantly.
Second, margin control in the outer counties. You’re not winning Ellis or Johnson outright. That’s not the path. The path is losing them by less. Shaving points. Turning 30-point losses into 20. That’s how the math starts to work.
And that’s the challenge.
This is the kind of seat Democrats say they want to compete in. Diverse. Suburban. Within reach.
Now they have to prove it.
The incumbent.
Congressman Jake Ellzey is a rank-and-file Republican. The only thing special about him is that he avoids the usual plague of scandals and Fox News appearances, but he openly embraces the culture war as dutifully as the next one.
The Center for American Progress included Ellzey in its 2024 analysis of congressional climate deniers and obstructionists.
Ellzey represents a diverse district with politics that look nothing like the people who live in it.
In Danny Minton’s own words.
Below are some questions I asked Minton, based on previous reader polls, along with his answers.
Q: Do you support a Green New Deal or similar large-scale federal climate action plan?
Yes.
My wife and I both drive union-built Ford EVs made right here in Arlington, so we live these issues every day. Climate action should empower working families, through tax incentives for rooftop solar in fast-growing communities like Mansfield and Midlothian, resilient energy options when the grid fails, and support for farmers and rural landowners so they don’t have to sell their water rights to West Texas billionaires. Instead of telling people what they can’t do, we should focus on practical solutions that protect our environment and lower costs for Texans.
Q: Should Congress pass a federal $17/hour minimum wage, indexed to inflation?
Yes. If tax policy adjusts for inflation, workers’ wages should too. Ellis and Johnson Counties are booming because families are getting priced out of places like Irving and Arlington, while hedge funds buy up starter homes in cash. Two parents working full-time minimum-wage jobs can’t compete with billionaires getting corporate tax breaks. Instead of endless giveaways to people who don’t work, we should help small businesses pay a real living wage, including healthcare subsidies, so workers can build stable lives here in North Texas.
Q: Would you support major tax reform, including raising taxes on billionaires and large corporations?
Yes. Tax policy should support working families, like expanding the Child Tax Credit, helping people start small businesses, and making first-time homeownership possible. We don’t need more corporate welfare for West Texas billionaires. We need a tax code that rewards work, not wealth.
Q: Should the U.S. demilitarize the southern border and repeal harmful immigration policies?
Yes. I would go further: ICE should be abolished or significantly reduced, and its budget redirected to local and state law enforcement and, where appropriate, to Border Patrol. Our immigration system must be humane, constitutional, and reflective of our values as a nation of immigrants
Q: Do you support DC statehood, Puerto Rico self-determination, and expanding voting rights through federal law?
Yes. Our nation was founded on “no taxation without representation.” DC and Puerto Rico deserve the right to full representation. I strongly support passing the John Lewis Voting Rights Act and expanding protections for every voter.
Bonus Question: What does being a Democrat mean to you in 2026?
Being a Texas Democrat means fighting for big, bold programs, like the Voting Rights Act, Civil Rights Act, Social Security, and Medicare. It means following the legacy of leaders like LBJ and FDR. And it means something else: we don’t take orders from DC consultants or big-money donors. Texas Democrats listen to our communities.
TX06 is a district where the math works, the coalition exists, and the path is clear.
A district that’s nearly evenly split. A Republican incumbent out of step with the people he represents. A Democratic candidate running on issues that actually match what voters say they want.
If Democrats are serious about flipping Texas, this is is the type of seat they fight for. Not the easy wins. Not the safe seats. This.
Now they have to prove it.
You can learn more about Danny Minton on his website, Facebook, and Instagram.
April 2, 2026: Last day to register to vote (City elections/SD04 Special Election)
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May 2, 2026: Election day! (City elections/SD04 Special Election)
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May 18, 2026: First day of early voting (Democratic primary runoff elections)
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May 26, 2026: Last day to receive ballot by mail (Democratic primary runoff elections)
May 26, 2026: Election day! (Democratic primary runoff elections)
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You know that CD 6 is my baby! And Danny is built for this race! A father, a healthcare worker, supporting his wife in her small business. He gives back to the community and this district will flip. His turnout margins in the rural areas were amazing! In an area that has never really had a democratic candidate! He has been visiting all of the county, understanding everything about each community, and you saw it. Record Democratic turnout:
Ellis: 7.54%
Navarro: 5.62 %
Johnson: 2.9%
Tarrant 1.3%
But you are right the Dallas portion was terrible. Only .68% turnout. We have a lot to do. But he wowed everyone in Dallas, and even our biggest sponsor Ben Abbot came and listened to him (and Amy Martinez-Salas) so if we can get some money behind us, we can flip this seat. Because the vote to vote head match with Jake, Danny won this race by 3.2% on Primary numbers alone. And Republicans stayed home in Irving, as anemic as the vote was for Dems compared to the rest of the county, it was worse for Republicans. But, what is supper important to all the CD 33 voters stuck now in CD 6, NO AIPAC money, And Danny isn't taking it.
Thanks, Michelle! I received this & will share to bsky shortly. Great info!!!