Jasmine Crockett has been running for Senate for two months without telling voters where she stands.
That finally changed this week.
And Jasmine Crockett's website just exposed one embarrassing truth Texas voters can't ignore.
Crockett's Policy Page Drops With Template Instructions Still Visible
Two months into her long-shot Senate campaign, Jasmine Crockett finally added a policy section to her website.
Early voting in the Texas Democrat primary starts February 17.
But when voters clicked to see what Crockett believes in, they found something stunning.
Her mental health policy page included this gem under insurance requirements: "Write out your bullet points here. Anything from a sentence to a paragraph works."
Crockett's campaign literally published the template instructions instead of actual policy positions.
CNN senior reporter Edward-Isaac Dovere broke the story on X, posting a screenshot that went viral instantly.
The blunder got even worse.
Crockett's gun control section appeared on her Social Security page.
Her campaign mixed up entire policy sections like a college student copying the wrong notes before an exam.
Democrats Immediately Started Damage Control
Crockett's defenders rushed to explain away the disaster.
One supporter claimed "every website has issues when it launches" and blamed server caching, while another dismissed the embarrassments as mere "typos."
That's like calling the Titanic a minor leak.
Crockett's team used a website template and forgot to fill in the blanks before hitting publish.
For a candidate who went on The View last month saying she was ready to "get it done," this proved she can't even get her own website done.
The campaign quietly fixed the mistakes after getting caught.
But screenshots live forever on the internet.
Texas Republicans couldn't believe their luck.
Pattern Of Incompetence Keeps Getting Worse
This fits Crockett's track record perfectly.
She made national headlines in November 2025 for claiming Republicans took donations from "a Jeffrey Epstein."
Turned out it wasn't that Jeffrey Epstein.
Just some random donor who happened to share the same name.
Crockett tried cleaning up that mess by saying she was "just trying to make a point."
The point she made was that she doesn't bother checking basic facts before making serious accusations.
In March 2025, Crockett called handicapped Governor Greg Abbott "Governor Hot Wheels" and a "Hot Ass Mess" during a speech.
She denied the comment had anything to do with Abbott being in a wheelchair.
Nobody believed that excuse either.
House Democrats told Axios in December they had serious concerns about Crockett's electability.
They're watching her turn what was already an uphill battle into Mission Impossible.
Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick said Crockett was "the gift that keeps on giving" for Republicans.
"She will turn out the Republican vote at a higher level than any Democrat to ever run for office in the history of Texas," Patrick stated.
Texas Deserves Better Than This Amateur Hour
Crockett's only been in her Senate race for 60 days.
She still hasn't explained to voters what she actually believes beyond vague platitudes about fighting Trump.
When she finally tried publishing policy positions, her team couldn't even finish filling out the website template.
Crockett raised $6.5 million for this campaign.
None of that money apparently went to hiring someone who knows how to use a website builder.
State Representative James Talarico is running against Crockett in the Democrat primary on March 3.
Recent polling shows them essentially tied.
But Crockett's campaign keeps stepping on rakes like a bad comedy sketch.
Republicans currently hold a 53-47 advantage in the Senate.
Democrats need every seat they can get.
Texas hasn't elected a Democrat to statewide office since 1994.
The last thing Democrats need is a candidate who can't manage her own campaign website running against battle-tested Republicans like Senator John Cornyn, Attorney General Ken Paxton, or Representative Wesley Hunt.
Crockett's website disaster confirmed what critics have said all along.
She's not ready for prime time.
Texas voters checking her website before early voting starts just got all the evidence they need.
Sources:
- Edward-Isaac Dovere, Twitter post, February 7, 2026.
- Rusty Weiss, "Jasmine Crockett's Policy Page Finally Drops—and It's a Hilarious Trainwreck," RedState, February 8, 2026.
- "Crockett's campaign page riddled with blunders: 'Write out your bullet points,'" New York Post, February 8, 2026.
- "House Democrats voice concerns over Jasmine Crockett's Texas Senate campaign viability: report," Fox News, December 14, 2025.
- "Jasmine Crockett's campaign launch for U.S. Senate in Texas and the political dominoes that followed," CBS Texas, December 17, 2025.









