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Fort Worth Campaign Traffic Surges: How Political Events Increase Crash Risks and What Victims Must Do Now When Politics Meets Pavement: The Hidden Dangers of Fort Worth’s Campaign Season North Texas is in the spotlight again. With early voting underway for the first major contest of the 2026 midterms, U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett and State Rep. James Talarico are crisscrossing Dallas and Fort Worth to rally voters. Crowds are gathering at neighborhood meetups, civic centers, and union halls from Oak Cliff and Pleasant Grove to Sundance Square and the Near Southside. That means busier surface streets, more late-evening traffic near event venues, and more pedestrians crossing at night along corridors like West 7th Street, Magnolia Avenue, and around rail stops served by Trinity Metro and DART. In that environment, staying safe and knowing your rights after a crash matters just as much as the politics of the moment. Here’s what most people don’t know: when turnout surges and campaign schedules tighten, our roads and sidewalks feel it. Packed parking lots near community centers off I-35W and I-30, and increased rideshare pickups near Deep Ellum or Bishop Arts, translate into higher collision risks at already busy intersections. If a crash or…