After a season packed with political drama, legal battles, campaign chaos, and some truly surreal headlines, Party Politics wrapped up Season 4 with a look back at the moments viewers talked about most. Hosts Brandon Rottinghaus and Jeronimo Cortina revisited some of the year’s biggest conversations — from Texas elections and redistricting fights to immigration debates, economic frustrations, and the increasingly unpredictable political messaging coming out of Washington. The finale highlighted what made this season stand out: connecting political science theory to the everyday realities voters experience.
One major discussion focused on Texas politics and whether the state is truly experiencing a long-term political realignment. The hosts break down how campaign organization, fundraising, turnout, and geography continue to shape elections across Texas — especially as both parties battle for suburban and Latino voters.
Another standout moment centered on birthright citizenship and the constitutional questions surrounding executive power. The conversation explored not only the legal implications but also the deeper national identity questions tied to immigration and what it means to be American.
The episode also revisits one of the season’s most talked-about debates online: redistricting. Brandon and Jeronimo examined how aggressive map-drawing efforts could backfire politically, particularly as economic concerns like inflation and rising gas prices continue to dominate voter priorities heading into the midterms.
And, of course, the finale wouldn’t have been complete without revisiting some of the season’s strangest political moments — including viral political messaging, internet-fueled controversies, and the growing challenge political leaders face in staying focused on affordability issues voters care about most.
Throughout the episode, the hosts emphasized a recurring theme from Season 4: voters may tolerate political chaos, but everyday costs — gas, groceries, housing, and economic stability — remain the issues that cut through the noise.
The “Best of Party Politics” special also served as a thank you to viewers and listeners who watched, commented, debated online, and helped make Season 4 one of the show’s biggest yet.
Party Politics returns for Season 5 on August 28.
In addition to the YouTube version, you can also enjoy Party Politics on television every Friday night at 8:00pm on Houston Public Media TV-8 (PBS), or listen to the radio broadcast every Friday at 7:30pm on News 88.7. As always, you can subscribe to the audio podcast on Apple Podcasts (or wherever you get your podcasts). Join the conversation: Tweet us using #PartyPoliticsPod or email partypoliticspod@houstonpublicmedia.org.