This needs to be taken in some additional context. Daily case numbers and deaths in the USA have had weekly fluctuations for the entire duration of this pandemic ... it seems that a lot of those responsible for reporting or accounting for this, don't work weekends. (We have some of that, too, but it's not to the same extent). This can be filtered out by looking at 7-day averages.
Here's Texas:
Texas COVID: 2,901,996 Cases and 50,536 Deaths - Worldometer (On the graphs, click the 7-day moving average button.)
They're at 3102 daily new cases (7-day average) and it has been holding more-or-less steady there for the last 5 weeks (with a decline leading into that). For a population of about 28 million this is around 110 daily new cases per million population. (In Ontario, we're currently around double that.)
Daily new deaths is 51 (7-day average) and it has been +/- steady there for the last couple of weeks. Corrected for population, this is around the same as where Ontario is right now.
They are ahead of us on vaccinations:
Workbook: COVID-19 Vaccine in Texas (Dashboard)
A nuisance is that this map only allows comparisons to the population 16 years old or older as opposed to the whole state population, but we can fish that out. 11,130,000 people vaccinated with at least one dose out of state population 29 million (from Worldometers) gives 38.4% of the total population of Texas with at least one dose.
We are behind but catching up fast:
Coronavirus (COVID-19) Vaccinations - Statistics and Research (Type in Canada and check-mark it and then uncheck some other countries to unclutter the graph)
Note that the slope of the Canada graph is steeper than the USA graph (it appears that "vaccine hesitancy" is starting to become a factor). The USA as a whole is at 43.97% as of 2nd May, we're at 33.64% (so 10.33% behind). A week ago we were 12.63% behind. A week before that, we were 15.22% behind. I am pretty sure that we will overtake the USA on this measurement in the near future.