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2026 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas

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2026 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas

← 2024
November 3, 2026
2028 →

All 38 Texas seats to the United States House of Representatives
 
Party Republican Democratic
Last election 25 13

The 2026 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas will be held on November 3, 2026, to elect the thirty-eight U.S. representatives from the State of Texas, one from each of the state's thirty-eight congressional districts. The elections will coincide with other elections to the House of Representatives, elections to the United States Senate, and various state and local elections. The primary elections took place on March 3, 2026, and in races where no candidate receives over 50% in a primary, runoff elections took place on May 26.[1]

Redistricting

[edit]

On July 9, 2025, the Texas state government announced that during a planned special session on July 21 of this year, it would tackle mid-decade redistricting. This had been pushed privately by the White House to help Republicans keep control of the House in 2026, and critics have labeled it a gerrymander.[2][3]

On August 20, 2025, the Texas House passed congressional maps that would target five Democratic-held seats. The vote was 88–52, a party-line vote. The new map changes the territory of Democratic representatives Marc Veasey, Vicente Gonzalez, Lloyd Doggett, Julie Johnson, and Al Green.[4] On August 23, 2025, the Texas Senate passed the map with a vote 18–8. Governor Greg Abbott has signed the map into law, and therefore will be the active map used in the 2026 House elections in Texas.

On November 18, 2025, a federal court blocked Texas from using its newly drawn congressional map in next year's midterms, ruling that the map is likely an unconstitutional "racial gerrymander".[5] Three days later on November 21, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito granted the request by the state to pause the court's ruling that reverts the election back to using the maps drawn in 2021 until the full Supreme Court of the United States could make a decision.[6][7] On December 4, the Supreme Court ruled that Texas can use the new map in the 2026 midterm elections, striking down the lower court's ruling.[8]

Map of Texas's congressional districts, as passed by the governor of Texas on August 29, 2025
Interactive map version

Retirements

[edit]

Summary

[edit]
Retiring incumbents by district
     Democratic incumbent ran
     Democratic incumbent retired or lost renomination
     Republican incumbent ran
     Republican incumbent retired or lost renomination
     Vacant or no incumbent ran

As of February 2026, 9 representatives (3 Democrats and 6 Republicans) have announced their retirement, 3 of whom (1 Democrat and 2 Republicans) are retiring to run for other offices.

Democratic

[edit]
  1. Texas 30: Jasmine Crockett is retiring to run for the U.S. Senate.[9]
  2. Texas 33: Marc Veasey is retiring.[10]
  3. Texas 37: Lloyd Doggett is retiring due to redistricting.[11]

Republican

[edit]

Statewide polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Republican Democratic Other Undecided
SoCal Strategies(R)[18] June 21, 2026 800 (LV) 49% 42% 9%
Texas A&M University/ReconMR[19] June 1–4, 2026 807 (LV) ± 4% 49% 43% 1% 7%
University of Texas/Texas Politics Project[20] April 10–20, 2026 1,200 (RV) ± 2.83%[b] 43% 41% 3% 13%
University of Texas/Texas Politics Project[21] February 2–16, 2026 1,300 (RV) ± 5.1% 42% 42% 3% 13%

District 1

[edit]
2026 Texas's 1st congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Nathaniel Moran Yolanda Prince
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Nathaniel Moran
Republican



Texas's 1st congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 1st district encompasses much of East Texas, including Tyler, Longview, Nacogdoches and Texarkana. The incumbent is Republican Nathaniel Moran, who was re-elected unopposed in 2024. Donald Trump and Ted Cruz won the district in 2024 with 74.3% and 72.5% of the vote, respectively, in 2024.[22]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Nathaniel Moran

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Nathaniel Moran (R) $1,138,149 $970,515 $548,580
Source: Federal Election Commission[28]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results[29]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nathaniel Moran (incumbent) 80,547 100.0
Total votes 80,547 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Dax Alexander, software developer[30]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Tracy Andrus, nonprofit founder[31]
  • Masika Ray, realtor[32]

Endorsements

[edit]
Dax Alexander

Organizations

Yolanda Prince

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Dax Alexander (D) $10,766 $8,706 $2,060
Masika Ray (D) $18,843[c] $18,064 $778
Source: Federal Election Commission[28]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Yolanda Prince 15,713 44.5
Democratic Dax Alexander 7,760 22.0
Democratic Tracy Andrus 6,672 18.9
Democratic Masika Ray 5,159 14.6
Total votes 35,304 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Yolanda Prince 5,240 72.3
Democratic Dax Alexander 2,011 27.7
Total votes 7,251 100.0

Independent and third party candidates

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Sonia Canchola (Independent)[35]
  • Michael Morton (Independence Party)[36]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Nathaniel Moran (R) $1,385,301 $1,131,997 $634,251
Yolanda Prince (D) $8,160 $1,002 $2,059
Sonia Canchola (I) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 1st congressional district election results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Nathaniel Moran (incumbent)
Democratic Yolanda Prince
Independent Sonia Canciola
Total votes 100

District 2

[edit]
2026 Texas's 2nd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Steve Toth Shaun Finnie
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Dan Crenshaw
Republican



Texas's 2nd congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 2nd district encompasses most of the northern and northeastern suburbs of Houston, including The Woodlands, Spring, Kingwood, New Caney, Humble, and Atascocita, as well as the Willowbrook area of Houston itself. The incumbent is Republican Dan Crenshaw, who was re-elected with 65.7% of the vote in 2024, will not be on the general election ballot since he was defeated in the primary by State Representative Steve Toth.[22] Donald Trump and Ted Cruz won 60.8% and 58.0% of the vote, respectively, in this district in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Dan Crenshaw, incumbent U.S. representative[23]
  • Martin Etwop, Christian missionary and candidate for this district in 2022[43]
  • Nicholas Lee Plumb, retail manager[23]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]
  • Jameson Ellis, marketing executive and candidate for this district in 2022 and 2024[42]

Endorsements

[edit]
Dan Crenshaw

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Labor unions

Organizations

Newspapers

Steve Toth

U.S. senators

State legislators

Individuals

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Dan Crenshaw (R) $2,138,124 $2,051,280 $556,151
Martin Etwop (R) $13,787 $10,400 $995
Nicholas Lee Plumb (R) $9,244 $6,216 $3,028
Steve Toth (R) $589,340[d] $324,371 $264,968
Source: Federal Election Commission[56]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Dan
Crenshaw
Martin
Etwop
Steve
Toth
Other Undecided
Meeting Street Research (R)[57][A] October 21–23, 2025 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 47% 1% 19% 5%[e] 25%

Results

[edit]
2026 GOP primary results by county:
  Toth
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Steve Toth 36,830 55.8
Republican Dan Crenshaw (incumbent) 26,859 40.7
Republican Martin Etwop 1,216 1.8
Republican Nicholas Lee Plumb 1,106 1.7
Total votes 66,011 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Shaun Finnie, investment banker[58]

Endorsements

[edit]
Shaun Finnie

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Shaun Finnie (D) $2,308,251[f] $756,806 $1,551,445
Source: Federal Election Commission[56]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Shaun Finnie 48,700 100.0
Total votes 48,700 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Likely R April 9, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Steve Toth (R) $698,325 $574,007 $124,318
Shaun Finnie (D) $2,560,873 $1,017,793 $1,543,081
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 2nd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Steve Toth
Democratic Shaun Finnie
Total votes

District 3

[edit]
2026 Texas's 3rd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Keith Self Evan Hunt
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Keith Self
Republican



Texas's 3rd congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 3rd district encompasses much of Collin County and Hunt County in the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex, including eastern Plano, McKinney, Allen, Wylie and Greenville, as well as much of the I-30 corridor to the east including Sulphur Springs and Mount Pleasant. The incumbent is Republican Keith Self, who was re-elected with 62.5% of the vote in 2024.[22] Donald Trump and Ted Cruz each respectively won 60.3% and 57.7% of the vote here in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Keith Self

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Mark Newgent (R) $128,343[g] $100,983 $27,359
Keith Self (R) $406,033 $260,292 $255,081
Source: Federal Election Commission[61]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Keith Self (incumbent) 63,747 80.2
Republican Mark Newgent 15,761 19.8
Total votes 79,508 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Jordan Wheatley, behavior health technician[63]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Evan Hunt (D) $279,905[h] $259,484 $20,420
Source: Federal Election Commission[61]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Evan Hunt 48,800 100.0
Total votes 48,800 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Keith Self (R) $504,420 $482,950 $130,812
Evan Hunt (D) $336,981 $305,935 $31,046
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 3rd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Keith Self (incumbent)
Democratic Evan Hunt
Total votes

District 4

[edit]
2026 Texas's 4th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Pat Fallon Jason Pearce
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Pat Fallon
Republican



Texas's 4th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 4th district encompasses most of the counties in the eastern part of the Texoma region along the Red River, including the communities of Sherman and Paris, as well as some sections of the suburban and exurban DFW Metroplex including Frisco, most of Plano and the Collin County portion of Dallas. The incumbent is Republican Pat Fallon, who was re-elected with 68.4% of the vote in 2024.[22] Donald Trump and Ted Cruz each respectively won 61.2% and 59.0% of the vote here in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Don Horn, farmer and candidate for this seat in 2024[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Pat Fallon

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Pat Fallon (R) $594,809 $254,577 $1,000,309
Source: Federal Election Commission[65]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pat Fallon (incumbent) 59,828 80.6
Republican Don Horn 14,383 19.4
Total votes 74,211 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Jason Pearce, construction project manager[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Andrew Rubell, teacher[23]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jason Pearce (D) $9,294[i] $7,320 $1,974
Andrew Rubell (D)[j] $3,715 $3,658 $56
Source: Federal Election Commission[65]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jason Pearce 23,552 52.0
Democratic Andrew Rubell 21,779 48.0
Total votes 45,331 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Pat Fallon (R) $685,489 $283,212 $1,062,356
Jason Pearce (D) $11,783 $10,906 $877
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 4th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Pat Fallon (incumbent)
Democratic Jason Pearce
Total votes

District 5

[edit]
2026 Texas's 5th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Lance Gooden Chelsey Hockett
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Lance Gooden
Republican



Texas's 5th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 5th district encompasses the southeastern parts of the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex, including Mesquite, Terrell, Palestine, Athens, Canton, Kaufman, the southern halves of Garland and Rowlett, and the Lakewood and Lake Highlands portions of Dallas. The incumbent is Republican Lance Gooden, who was re-elected with 64.1% of the vote in 2024.[22] Donald Trump and Ted Cruz each respectively won 60.1% and 56.9% of the vote in this district in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Disqualified

[edit]
  • Travis Edwards, teacher[23]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • James Ussery, telecom technician (running in the 32nd district)[66]

Endorsements

[edit]
Lance Gooden

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Travis Edwards (R)[j] $17,628 $17,883 $27
Lance Gooden (R) $860,024 $509,492 $1,067,888
Source: Federal Election Commission[67]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Lance Gooden (incumbent) 52,424 100.0
Total votes 52,424 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Chelsey Hockett, stay-at-home mom[23]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Ruth Torres, HR consultant and nominee for this district in 2024[23]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Forrest Lumpkin, aerospace engineer[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Chelsey Hockett

Labor unions

Organizations

  • Asian American Democrats of Texas (AADT)[68]
  • Courage for Democracy[69]
  • Dallas County Young Democrats[70]
  • East Dallas County Democrats[71]
  • Northeast Texas National Organization for Women (NETNOW)[72]
  • Progressive Victory[73]
  • Stonewall Democrats of Dallas[74]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Chelsey Hockett (D) $7,816 -$6,459 $5,970
Ruth Torres (D) $10,625[k] $9,387 $1,512
Source: Federal Election Commission[67]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Chelsey Hockett 23,972 45.9
Democratic Ruth Torres 21,721 41.6
Democratic Forrest Lumpkin 6,569 12.6
Total votes 52,262 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Chelsey Hockett 5,665 53.0
Democratic Ruth Torres 5,023 47.0
Total votes 10,688 100.0

Independents

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Deadra Marsh-Foy[75]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Lance Gooden (R) $1,170,230 $554,887 $1,337,500
Chelsey Hockett (D) $11,105 $-9,690 $1,056
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 5th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Lance Gooden (incumbent)
Democratic Chelsey Hockett
Total votes

District 6

[edit]
2026 Texas's 6th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Jake Ellzey Danny Minton
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Jake Ellzey
Republican



Texas's 6th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 6th district encompasses most of the southern parts of the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex, including most or all of the suburbs of Midlothian, Mansfield, Burleson, Waxahachie and Corsicana, as well as most of the west side of Arlington and south and central Irving. The incumbent is Republican Jake Ellzey, who was re-elected with 66.4% of the vote in 2024.[22] Donald Trump and Ted Cruz won 60.4% and 57.4%, respectively, in this district in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Jake Ellzey

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
James Buford (R) $66,861 $65,733 $1,161
Jake Ellzey (R) $3,101,985 $2,295,098 $1,902,334
Brian Stahl (R) $179,439 $145,069 $34,369
Source: Federal Election Commission[76]

Results

[edit]
2026 GOP primary results by county:
  Ellzey
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jake Ellzey (incumbent) 42,230 66.3
Republican James Buford 12,660 19.9
Republican Brian Stahl 8,813 13.8
Total votes 63,703 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Danny Minton, sales representative[23]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Danny Minton (D) $12,840[l] $7,374 $5,465
Source: Federal Election Commission[76]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Danny Minton 45,306 100.0
Total votes 45,306 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jake Ellzey (R) $3,705,546 $2,700,452 $2,100,542
Danny Minton (D) $25,133 $15,752 $9,381
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 6th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Jake Ellzey (incumbent)
Democratic Danny Minton
Total votes

District 7

[edit]
2026 Texas's 7th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Lizzie Fletcher Alexander Hale
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Lizzie Fletcher
Democratic



Texas's 7th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 7th district encompasses a diverse southwestern stretch of the Greater Houston area across Harris and Fort Bend counties, including the Galleria area of Houston and the inner West Loop neighborhoods of Montrose, Meyerland, Rice Military, the Heights and Greenway Plaza, along with such diverse southwest Houston neighborhoods as Westchase, Sharpstown, Gulfton and Alief, and largely Asian and Hispanic portions of western Sugar Land and Mission Bend in Fort Bend County. The incumbent is Democrat Lizzie Fletcher, who was re-elected with 61.2% of the vote in 2024.[22] The diverse district gave 60.3% to Kamala Harris and 63.1% to Colin Allred in 2024.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Lizzie Fletcher (D) $1,030,466 $535,841 $1,811,286
Source: Federal Election Commission[85]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lizzie Fletcher (incumbent) 61,930 100.0
Total votes 61,930 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Alexander Hale, consultant[23]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Tina Blum Cohen, furniture company owner and candidate for this district in 2022 and 2024[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Alexander Kalai, CFO of Amerapex[23]
  • Erin Montgomery, funeral director[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Alexander Hale

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tina Blum Cohen (R) $25 $35,066 $58,842
Alexander Hale (R) $38,560[m] $17,544 $21,016
Alexander Kalai (R) $182,034[n] $156,033 $26,001
Source: Federal Election Commission[85]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Alexander Hale 10,028 45.3
Republican Tina Blum Cohen 5,940 26.8
Republican Erin Montgomery 3,423 15.5
Republican Alexander Kalai 2,761 12.5
Total votes 22,152 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Alexander Hale 11,164 64.3
Republican Tina Blum Cohen 6,195 35.7
Total votes 17,359 100.0

Green convention

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Espoir Ngabo, IT analyst[87]

General election

[edit]

Post-primary endorsements

[edit]
Lizzie Fletcher (D)

Organizations

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of May 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Lizzie Fletcher (D) $1,229,657 $795,425 $1,750,894
Alexander Hale (R) $61,761 $55,729 $6,031
Ngabo Espoir (G) $3,133 $3,125 $8
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 7th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Lizzie Fletcher (incumbent)
Republican Alexander Hale
Green Ngabo Espoir
Total votes

District 8

[edit]
2026 Texas's 8th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Jessica Steinmann Laura Jones
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Morgan Luttrell
Republican



Texas's 8th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The 8th district includes most of the northern and northwestern exurbs of Houston, including Conroe, part of Huntsville, Willis, Magnolia, Brookshire and Hempstead, along with parts of west Houston including Briar Forest, the western end of the Energy Corridor and most of the Bear Creek and Addicks areas in west Harris County. The incumbent is Republican Morgan Luttrell, who was elected with 68.2% of the vote in 2024.[22] Luttrell is not seeking reelection in the heavily Republican district, which gave Donald Trump 63.2% and Ted Cruz 60.1% of the vote in 2024 and is a plurality White district with a 31.3% Hispanic voting age population.[89]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Jessica Steinmann, attorney[90]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Jay Fondren, nonprofit official[23]
  • Stephen Long[23]
  • Nick Tran, businessman (previously ran in the 2nd district)[23]
  • Deddrick Wilmer, mortage broker[23] (previously ran in the 9th district)[91]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Brett Jensen, businessman (remained on ballot)[92]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Jessica Steinmann

Executive branch officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Individuals

Organizations

Nick Tran

U.S. representatives

Organizations

Deddrick Wilmer

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jessica Steinmann (R) $1,432,342[o] $1,003,015 $429,326
Nick Tran (R) $235,702[p] $195,679 $40,023
Deddrick Wilmer (R) $46,032 $38,214 $7,817
Source: Federal Election Commission[100]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jessica Steinmann 42,636 68.0
Republican Brett Jensen (withdrawn) 7,936 12.6
Republican Nick Tran 7,663 12.2
Republican Stephen Long 2,069 3.3
Republican Jay Fondren 1,553 2.5
Republican Deddrick Wilmer 883 1.4
Total votes 62,740 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Keith Coleman, retired USMC officer[101]

Endorsements

[edit]
Laura Jones

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Keith Coleman (D) $11,315 $6,729 $4,586
Laura Jones (D) $8,910 $7,783 $3,627
Source: Federal Election Commission[100]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Laura Jones 27,865 65.7
Democratic Keith Coleman 14,560 34.3
Total votes 42,425 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R April 28, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jessica Steinmann (R) $1,824,372 $1,693,236 $131,136
Laura Jones (D) $13,394 $9,682 $6,213
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 8th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Jessica Steinmann
Democratic Laura Jones
Total votes

District 9

[edit]
2026 Texas's 9th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Leticia Gutierrez Alex Mealer
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

None
(New seat)



Texas's 9th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 9th district, which previously encompassed southern portions of Houston and such suburbs as Missouri City and was represented by incumbent Democrat Al Green, has been relocated to the eastern portions of the Houston area as a result of redistricting; Green ran for reelection in the newly redrawn 18th district.[22]

The new district, which has a 58.6% Hispanic voting age population, covers such east and southeast Houston neighborhoods as Denver Harbor, Magnolia Park, Park Place and Edgebrook, as well as most of the suburbs of Pasadena, Baytown, Deer Park, La Porte, Galena Park, Channelview and Crosby, and exurban Liberty County including Cleveland, Liberty and Dayton. Donald Trump carried the district in all three of his elections - a 49.8% plurality in 2016, 53.7% in 2020, and 59.5% in 2024, and the district also gave Ted Cruz 54.4% of the vote in 2024.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Leticia Gutierrez, environmental justice advocate[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Earnest Clayton
Todd Ivey

Labor unions

Terry Virts

U.S. representatives

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Peter Filler (D) $4,143 $4,002 $198
Leticia Gutierrez (D) $18,423[q] $10,111 $8,311
Todd Ivey (D) $168,026 $72,713 $95,312
Terry Virts (D) $621,046[r] $576,157 $44,888
Source: Federal Election Commission[106]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Earnest
Clayton
Peter
Filler
Leticia
Gutierrez
Todd
Ivey
Marty
Rocha
Terry
Virts
Undecided
University of Houston[107] February 3–10, 2026 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 5% 1% 24% 2% 2% 5% 61%

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Leticia Gutierrez 18,703 53.6
Democratic Earnest Clayton 5,673 16.3
Democratic Terry Virts 5,095 14.6
Democratic Todd Ivey 2,462 7.1
Democratic Marty Rocha 2,374 6.8
Democratic Peter Filler 558 1.6
Total votes 34,865 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Briscoe Cain

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

State legislators

  • 34 state representatives[s]

Local officials

Party officials

Individuals

Labor unions

Organizations

Newspapers

Alex Mealer

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Individuals

Labor unions

Organizations

Dan Mims

Individuals

  • Dwayne Stovall, business owner and former candidate for this district[92]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jaimy Blanco (R) $112,048 $109,941 $3,125
Briscoe Cain (R) $430,919[t] $273,639 $157,280
Alex Mealer (R) $1,224,831 $752,647 $472,183
Dan Mims (R) $353,414[u] $283,052 $70,361
Crystal Sarmiento (R) $78,009[v] $48,281 $29,727
Steve Stockman (R) $180,608[w] $151,816 $28,791
Terry Thain (R)[j] $5,250[x] $3,397 $1,858
Source: Federal Election Commission[106]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Briscoe
Cain
Alex
Mealer
Dan
Mims
Steve
Stockman
Other Undecided
Pulse Decision Science (R)[122][B] February 9–11, 2026 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 25% 29% 6% 6% 9%[y] 25%
University of Houston[123] February 3–10, 2026 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 26% 34% 10% 4% 7%[z] 19%
Pulse Decision Science (R)[122][B] December 15–17, 2025 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 25% 19% 2% 6% 17%[aa] 31%
McLaughlin & Associates (R)[124][C] October 21–23, 2025 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 37% 16% 3% 5%[ab] 40%

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Alex Mealer 11,343 35.8
Republican Briscoe Cain 9,886 31.2
Republican Steve Stockman 5,196 16.4
Republican Dan Mims 2,608 8.2
Republican Crystal DeLeon-Sarmiento 788 2.5
Republican Dwayne Stovall (withdrawn) 724 2.3
Republican Jaimy Blanco 498 1.6
Republican Michael Curran 351 1.1
Republican Terry Thain 291 0.9
Total votes 31,685 100.0

Runoff polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Briscoe
Cain
Alex
Mealer
Undecided
University of Houston[125] May 5–9, 2026 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 41% 50% 9%

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Alex Mealer 15,625 68.3
Republican Briscoe Cain 7,257 31.7
Total votes 22,882 100.0

Independents

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Roy Morales, retired USAF lieutenant colonel[126]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R (flip) August 23, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R (flip) August 28, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R (flip) August 29, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Likely R (flip) March 12, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of May 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Leticia Gutierrez (D) $40,024 $34,062 $5,962
Alex Mealer (R) $1,770,301 $1,355,775 $414,526
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 9th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Leticia Gutierrez
Republican Alex Mealer
Total votes

District 10

[edit]
2026 Texas's 10th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Chris Gober Caitlin Rourk
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Michael McCaul
Republican



Texas's 10th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 10th district stretches from downtown and western Austin (including Lake Travis) through the Bryan–College Station area, to a rural stretch of east central Texas between Houston, Dallas and Tyler, including Crockett, Livingston and Madisonville. The incumbent is Republican Michael McCaul, who was re-elected in 2024 with 63.6% of the vote. McCaul is not seeking reelection in the winding district, which gave 60.5% of the vote to Donald Trump and 58.4% to Ted Cruz in 2024.[22]

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Chris Gober, attorney[110]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Philip Suarez, realtor[130]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Rob Altman
Chris Gober

Executive branch officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Organizations

Jessica Karlsruher

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Rob Altman (R) $193,487[ac] $35,004 $158,483
Ben Bius (R) $459,535[ad] $49,114 $299,483
Rob Brown (R) $7,753 $6,302 $1,307
Chris Gober (R) $1,151,762[ae] $1,047,102 $104,660
Brandon Hawbraker (R) $6,702[af] $6,286 $416
Jessica Karlsruher (R) $165,533[ag] $106,081 $59,452
Kara King (R)[j] $230,097[ah] $70,414 $159,683
Scott MacLeod (R) $166,390[ai] $87,096 $79,294.
Jenny Garcia Sharon (R) $19,272[aj] $10,216 $9,055
Jeremy Story (R) $25,624[ak] $10,065 $15,559
Source: Federal Election Commission[137]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Chris Gober 38,541 51.2
Republican Ben Bius 10,507 14.0
Republican Rob Altman 5,660 7.5
Republican Jessica Karlsruher 5,352 7.1
Republican Scott MacLeod 5,051 6.7
Republican Jeremy Story 3,401 4.5
Republican Kara King 2,147 2.9
Republican Jenny Garcia Sharon 1,790 2.4
Republican Rob Brown 1,778 2.4
Republican Brandon Hawbraker 977 1.3
Total votes 75,204 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Caitlin Rourk, marketing employee[23] (previously filed in the 31st district)[138]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Dawn Marshall, college professor[23]
  • Bernardo Reyna, veterinary technician[23]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Caitlin Rourk

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Dawn Marshall (D) $11,466 $10,271 $1,195
Bernardo Reyna (D)[j] $3,182[al] $3,239 $0
Caitlin Rourk (D) $179,189 $168,204 $10,984
Source: Federal Election Commission[137]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Caitlin Rourk 32,716 60.8
Democratic Dawn Marshall 12,184 22.6
Democratic Bernardo Reyna 8,893 16.5
Total votes 53,793 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Likely R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 28, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Chris Gober (R) $2,271,919 $2,009,119 $262,800
Caitlin Rourk (D) $243,994 $188,134 $55,860
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 10th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Chris Gober
Democratic Caitlin Rourk
Total votes

District 11

[edit]
2026 Texas's 11th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee August Pfluger Claire Reynolds
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

August Pfluger
Republican



Texas's 11th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 11th district is based in midwestern Texas, including Midland, Odessa, San Angelo and Brownwood, and also includes a thin stretch of the Austin area along the Travis and Williamson county lines including Pflugerville and Horseshoe Bay. The incumbent is Republican August Pfluger, who was re-elected unopposed in 2024.[22] The majority White district has a voting age population that is 35.3% Hispanic, and in 2024 gave Donald Trump 66.5% of the vote and Ted Cruz 64%.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
August Pfluger

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
August Pfluger (R) $2,221,032 $1,854,062 $2,691,075
Source: Federal Election Commission[142]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican August Pfluger (incumbent) 59,885 100.0
Total votes 59,885 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Claire Reynolds, attorney[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Claire Reynolds (D) $29,741 $19,246 $10,494
Source: Federal Election Commission[142]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Claire Reynolds 21,787 57.6
Democratic Pedro Ruiz 16,054 42.4
Total votes 37,841 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 28, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
August Pfluger (R) $2,649,050 $2,201,577 $2,771,579
Claire Reynolds (D) $42,201 $31,165 $11,036
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 11th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican August Pfluger (incumbent)
Democratic Claire Reynolds
Total votes

District 12

[edit]
2026 Texas's 12th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Craig Goldman Angela Rodriguez Prilliman
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Craig Goldman
Republican



Texas's 12th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 12th district is in the western part of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, and takes in most of Parker County and western Tarrant County, including most of the western half of Fort Worth and such inner suburbs as Benbrook, Saginaw, and Haltom City, as well as Weatherford in Parker County. The incumbent is Republican Craig Goldman, who was elected with 63.5% of the vote in 2024.[22] Donald Trump won 61.3% and Ted Cruz 57.9% in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Craig Goldman

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Craig Goldman (R) $1,046,254 $612,576 $969,575
Source: Federal Election Commission[145]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Craig Goldman (incumbent) 54,931 100.0
Total votes 54,931 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Angela Rodriguez Prilliman, entrepreneur[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Kenneth Morgan-Aguilera, nonprofit executive director and U.S. Army veteran[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kenneth Morgan-Aguilera

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Kenneth Morgan-Aguilera (D) $10,350 $10,056 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[145]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Angela Rodriguez Prilliman 30,878 59.8
Democratic Kenneth Morgan-Aguilera 20,770 40.2
Total votes 51,648 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 28, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Craig Goldman (R) $1,516,552 $659,713 $1,392,735
Angela Rodriguez Prilliman (D) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 12th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Craig Goldman (incumbent)
Democratic Angela Rodriguez Prilliman
Total votes

District 13

[edit]
2026 Texas's 13th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Ronny Jackson Mark Nair
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Ronny Jackson
Republican



Texas's 13th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 13th district encompasses most of the Texas Panhandle and the western part of the Texoma region, containing the cities of Amarillo and Wichita Falls, as well as the college town of Denton in Denton County. The incumbent is Republican Ronny Jackson, who was re-elected unopposed in 2024.[22] Donald Trump won 72.5% of the vote and Ted Cruz 70.3% in this district.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Chasity Wedgeworth, business owner[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Ronny Jackson

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ronny Jackson (R) $2,549,763 $1,311,886 $4,639,824
Source: Federal Election Commission[147]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ronny Jackson (incumbent) 71,554 89.5
Republican Chasity Wedgeworth 8,414 10.5
Total votes 79,968 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Mark Nair

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Mark Nair (D) $29,816 $23,824 $6,092
Source: Federal Election Commission[147]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mark Nair 28,198 100.0
Total votes 28,198 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 28, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ronny Jackson (R) $2,792,675 $1,515,301 $4,679,322
Mark Nair (D) $48,606 $44,605 $4,100
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 13th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Ronny Jackson (incumbent)
Democratic Mark Nair
Total votes

District 14

[edit]
2026 Texas's 14th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Randy Weber Thurman Bartie
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Randy Weber
Republican



Texas's 14th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 14th district remains anchored in Galveston County in the southeast corner of Greater Houston, including Galveston, League City, Friendswood and Texas City, and also now extends westward to Manvel and Alvin in north central Brazoria County and southern Missouri City in Fort Bend County, as well east across Bolivar Peninsula to Port Arthur and Orange in the Golden Triangle area. The incumbent is Republican Randy Weber, who was re-elected with 68.7% of the vote in 2024.[22] Donald Trump won 61.5 percent of the vote and Ted Cruz 58.6 in this district in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Jessica Forgy, preschool teacher[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Randy Weber

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jessica Forgy (R)[am] $3,000 $380 $3,619
Randy Weber (R) $703,866 $371,818 $952,620
Source: Federal Election Commission[149]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Randy Weber (incumbent) 55,800 88.6
Republican Jessica Forgy 7,215 11.4
Total votes 63,015 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Richard Davis, small business owner[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Konstantinos Vogiatzis, certified public accountant[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Konstantinos Vogiatzis

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Konstantinos Vogiatzis (D)[j] $12,879[an] $9,052 $2,095
Source: Federal Election Commission[149]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Richard Davis 22,705 44.3
Democratic Thurman Bartie 16,015 31.3
Democratic Konstantinos Vogiatzis 12,514 24.4
Total votes 51,234 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Thurman Bartie 7,148 51.0
Democratic Richard Davis 6,881 49.0
Total votes 14,029 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 28, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Randy Weber (R) $824,082 $576,878 $876,776
Thurman Bartie (D) $14,423 $13,016 $957
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 14th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Randy Weber (incumbent)
Democratic Thurman Bartie
Total votes

District 15

[edit]
2026 Texas's 15th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Monica De La Cruz Bobby Pulido
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Monica De La Cruz
Republican



Texas's 15th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 15th district stretches from Hidalgo County in the Rio Grande Valley (including Edinburg and Weslaco), and now extends northeasterly into several rural counties between Corpus Christi, San Antonio and Victoria, including such communities as Falfurrias, Alice, Sinton, Beeville, Cuero and Gonzales. The incumbent is Republican Monica De La Cruz, who was re-elected with 57.1% of the vote in 2024.[22]

In 2024, Donald Trump won 58.5% in this overwhelmingly Hispanic district, which gave Ted Cruz 53.5% in the same election (six years after Cruz lost to Beto O'Rourke, who won 55.4% in the 2018 election for the same Senate seat). Hillary Clinton won the district with 55% in 2016 before it flipped to Trump (who won 50.7%) in 2020.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Monica De La Cruz

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Monica De La Cruz (R) $3,518,456 $2,229,043 $1,903,383
Source: Federal Election Commission[152]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results[29]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Monica De La Cruz (incumbent) 30,083 100.0
Total votes 30,083 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Ada Cuellar, physician[154]

Endorsements

[edit]
Ada Cuellar

U.S. representatives

Bobby Pulido

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Organizations

Declined to endorse

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ada Cuellar (D) $980,567[ao] $943,433 $37,134
Bobby Pulido (D) $1,044,744 $761,442 $283,302
Source: Federal Election Commission[152]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Ada
Cuellar
Bobby
Pulido
Undecided
GBAO (D)[164][D] January 24–27, 2026 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 19% 68% 13%

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[165]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Bobby Pulido 36,957 67.5
Democratic Ada Cuellar 17,757 32.5
Total votes 54,714 100.0

General election

[edit]

Post-primary endorsements

[edit]
Bobby Pulido (D)

Organizations

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Likely R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Likely R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Likely R November 19, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Likely R March 12, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 25, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Monica De La Cruz (R) $4,240,747 $2,520,271 $1,720,476
Bobby Pulido (D) $1,620,305 $1,217,311 $402,994
Source: Federal Election Commission[167]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Monica De
La Cruz (R)
Bobby
Pulido (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[168][E] September 10–11, 2025 533 (LV) 41% 38% 21%

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 15th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Monica De La Cruz (incumbent)
Democratic Bobby Pulido
Total votes

District 16

[edit]
2026 Texas's 16th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Veronica Escobar Adam Bauman
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Veronica Escobar
Democratic



Texas's 16th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 16th district is entirely within El Paso County, taking in El Paso and such surrounding suburbs as Socorro, Horizon City, and Anthony. The incumbent is Democrat Veronica Escobar, who was re-elected with 59.5% of the vote in 2024.[22] In 2024, Kamala Harris won 57.4% of the vote in this heavily Hispanic district, where Colin Allred also won with 58.4% of the vote.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Not on ballot

[edit]
  • Arturo Andujo, college physics graduate[170]

Endorsements

[edit]
Veronica Escobar

Labor unions

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Veronica Escobar (D) $617,320 $488,080 $245,085
Source: Federal Election Commission[171]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Veronica Escobar (incumbent) 54,031 100.0
Total votes 54,031 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Adam Bauman, business owner[23]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Manuel Barraza, paralegal[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Hector Cabildo, entrepreneur [23]
  • Raul Castaneda, retiree[23]
  • Marisela Chavez, retiree[23]
  • Deliris Montanez Berrios, retired medical worker and Democratic candidate for this district in 2022[23]
  • Ruben Rios, teacher[23]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Hector Cabildo (R) $10,964[ap] $5,702 $5,282
Deliris Montanez Berrios (R) $6,580[aq] $6,583 $1,220
Source: Federal Election Commission[171]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Adam Bauman 4,738 27.9
Republican Manuel Barraza 3,577 21.1
Republican Ruben Rios 2,868 16.9
Republican Raul Castaneda 2,337 13.8
Republican Marisela Chavez 1,860 11.0
Republican Deliris Montanez Berrios 1,591 9.4
Total votes 16,971 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Adam Bauman 7,752 68.5
Republican Manuel Barraza 3,557 31.5
Total votes 11,309 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Veronica Escobar (D) $730,213 $557,795 $288,263
Adam Bauman (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 16th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Veronica Escobar (incumbent)
Republican Adam Bauman
Total votes

District 17

[edit]
2026 Texas's 17th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Pete Sessions Casey Shepard
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Pete Sessions
Republican



Texas's 17th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 17th district is anchored in Waco and its surrounding metropolitan area, with a small sliver of the district extending into the east side of Temple and a southern sliver of Williamson County, with the Austin suburb of Cedar Park connected to the rest of the district via a small sliver of Round Rock. The incumbent is Republican Pete Sessions, who was re-elected with 66.4% of the vote in 2024.[22] The new district gave 60% of the vote to Donald Trump and 57.5% to Ted Cruz in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Rob Brown, pastor (running in the 10th district)[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Pete Sessions

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Pete Sessions (R) $816,844 $407,485 $850,294
Source: Federal Election Commission[172]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pete Sessions (incumbent) 59,724 100.0
Total votes 59,724 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Casey Shepard, attorney[23]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Milah Flores, nonprofit professional[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • James Gordon Mitchell, former school board trustee[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Milah Flores

Labor unions

Casey Shepard
Declined to endorse

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
James Gordon Mitchell (D) $16,692[ar] $12,540 $3,792
Casey Shepard (D) $5,707[as] $1,631 $4,076
Source: Federal Election Commission[172]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Milah Flores 20,420 42.6
Democratic Casey Shepard 15,552 32.4
Democratic James Gordon Mitchell 12,000 25.0
Total votes 47,972 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Casey Shepard 5,122 59.9
Democratic Milah Flores 3,432 40.1
Total votes 8,554 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Pete Sessions (R) $901,426 $454,306 $888,055
Casey Shepard (D) $8,004 $5,620 $2,384
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 17th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Pete Sessions (incumbent)
Democratic Casey Shepard
Total votes

District 18

[edit]
2026 Texas's 18th congressional district election

2028 →
 
Nominee Christian Menefee Ronald Whitfield
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Al Green (Democratic)
Christian Menefee (Democratic)



Texas's 18th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 18th district has two incumbents: Democrat Al Green, who was re-elected unopposed in 2024 for the 9th district, and Christian Menefee who succeeded Sylvester Turner, who died unexpectedly in March 2025, in a special election runoff held in January 2026.[22]

The new district, which has a voting age population that is 45% Black and 32.2% Hispanic, includes the Downtown, EaDo, Midtown, Third Ward and Fifth Ward portions of Houston as well as the Texas Medical Center, the Museum District and NRG Stadium, and extends northeast to Settegast and Fall Creek in northeast Houston, Sunnyside and Brays Oaks in south and southwest Houston, and northern Missouri City, Stafford and Fresno in Fort Bend County. In 2024, the district gave Kamala Harris 76.7% of the vote and 78.5% to Colin Allred.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Al Green, incumbent U.S. representative from the 9th district[175]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Gretchen Brown, defense analyst[23]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Al Green

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Local officials

Labor unions

Organizations

Christian Menefee
Declined to endorse

Local officials

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Gretchen Brown (D)[j] $11,937 $1,400 $10,537
Al Green (D) $940,155[at] $620,451 $538,789
Christian Menefee (D) $2,668,708 $2,538,382 $130,326
Source: Federal Election Commission[183]

Polling

[edit]

Amanda Edwards vs. Al Green vs. Christian Menefee

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Amanda
Edwards
Al
Green
Christian
Menefee
Other Undecided
February 9, 2026 Edwards withdraws from the race
University of Houston[107] February 3–8, 2026 1,000 (LV) ± 3.1% 9% 28% 52% 1%[au] 10%
Lake Research Partners (D)[184][F] February 2–8, 2026 430 (LV) ± 4.7% 7% 29% 49% 0%[av] 15%
34% 52% 14%
Lake Research Partners (D)[185][F] December 15–21, 2025 455 (LV) ± 4.6% 42% 47% 9%
13% 35% 41% 7%
36%[aw] 51% 11%

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Christian Menefee (incumbent) 43,750 46.0
Democratic Al Green (incumbent) 42,009 44.2
Democratic Amanda Edwards (withdrawn) 7,339 7.7
Democratic Gretchen Brown 1,941 2.0
Total votes 95,039 100.0

Runoff polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Al
Green
Christian
Menefee
Undecided
University of Houston[125] May 5–8, 2026 800 (LV) ± 3.46% 43% 50% 7%

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Christian Menefee (incumbent) 34,090 69.3
Democratic Al Green (incumbent) 15,101 30.7
Total votes 49,191 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Ronald Whitfield, landscaping contractor and candidate for this district in 2025[186]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Elizabeth Vences, accountant[186]

Endorsements

[edit]
Elizabeth Vences

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ronald Whitfield 5,280 55.1
Republican Elizabeth Vences 4,301 44.9
Total votes 9,581 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Christian Menefee (D) $3,463,829 $3,145,794 $318,035
Ronald Whitfield (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 18th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Christian Menefee (incumbent)
Republican Ronald Whitfield
Total votes

District 19

[edit]
2026 Texas's 19th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Tom Sell Kyle Rable
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Jodey Arrington
Republican



Texas's 19th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 19th district, then as now, encompasses much of West Texas including Lubbock and Abilene along with Big Spring. The incumbent is Republican Jodey Arrington, who was re-elected with 80.7% of the vote in 2024.[22] Arrington is not seeking reelection to a sixth term in the heavily Republican district, which gave 75.3% of the vote to Donald Trump and 73% to Ted Cruz in 2024, and is a majority White district with a voting age population that is 34.7% Hispanic.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Tom Sell, businessman[188]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Abraham Enriquez, outreach group founder[189]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Abraham Enriquez
Tom Sell

U.S. representatives

Organizations

Jodey Arrington (withdrawn)

Executive branch officials

Declined to endorse

U.S. representatives

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
James Barbee (R) $16,000 $14,156 $1,843
Jason Corley (R) $37,240 $23,328 $13,911
Abraham Enriquez (R) $434,048[ax] $281,897 $152,151
Donald May (R) $102,445[ay] $67,369 $35,075
Tom Sell (R) $1,226,626 $471,929 $754,696
Matt Smith (R) $354,064[az] $338,594 $15,470
Source: Federal Election Commission[200]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Abraham
Enriquez
Matt
Smith
Tom
Sell
Other Undecided
Harper Polling (R)[201][G] February 10, 2026 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 8% 9% 28% 4%[ba] 51%

Results

[edit]
Primary results by county:
  Sell
  •   20–30%
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Enriquez
  •   40–50%
  Smith
  •   30–40%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tom Sell 31,447 40.4
Republican Abraham Enriquez 14,585 18.8
Republican Matt Smith 14,399 18.5
Republican Jason Corley 8,123 10.4
Republican Donald May 5,416 7.0
Republican Ryan Zink 1,998 2.6
Republican James Barbee 1,826 2.3
Total votes 77,794 100.0

Runoff polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Abraham
Enriquez
Tom
Sell
Undecided
Harper Polling (R)[202][G] April 7–8, 2026 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 17% 57% 26%

Runoff results

[edit]
Runoff results by county:
  Sell
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  •   80–90%
  Enriquez
  •   50–60%
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tom Sell 32,243 64.3
Republican Abraham Enriquez 17,939 35.7
Total votes 50,182 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kyle Rable

Labor unions

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Kyle Rable (D) $13,014 $8,672 $4,341
Source: Federal Election Commission[200]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kyle Rable 22,513 100.0
Total votes 22,513 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tom Sell $2,014,494 $1,343,689 $670,805
Kyle Rable $21,086 $12,557 $8,529
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 19th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Tom Sell
Democratic Kyle Rable
Total votes

District 20

[edit]
2026 Texas's 20th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Joaquin Castro Edgardo Baez
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Joaquin Castro
Democratic



Texas's 20th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 20th district encompasses downtown San Antonio and extends eastward to its historically Black east side and the community of Kirby, as well as westward to Leon Valley and several neighborhoods north of Lackland AFB. The incumbent is Democrat Joaquin Castro, who was re-elected unopposed in 2024.[22] Kamala Harris won the two-thirds Hispanic district with 63.5% of the vote and Colin Allred 66.6% in 2024.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Joaquin Castro

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Joaquin Castro (D) $286,270 $343,027 $81,900
Source: Federal Election Commission[207]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Joaquin Castro (incumbent) 58,260 88.2
Democratic Kendra Wilkerson 6,191 9.4
Democratic John Atwood 1,633 2.5
Total votes 66,084 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Edgardo Baez, attorney[23]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Edgardo Baez (R) $31,345[bb] $27,073 $4,272
Source: Federal Election Commission[207]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Edgardo Baez 9,240 100.0
Total votes 9,240 100.0

Independents

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Anthony Tristan, Democratic candidate for the 27th district in 2022 and 2024[208]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Joaquin Castro (D) $397,397 $365,689 $170,365
Edgardo Baez (R) $32,503 $27,073 $5,430
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 20th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Joaquin Castro (incumbent)
Republican Edgardo Baez
Total votes

District 21

[edit]
2026 Texas's 21st congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Mark Teixeira Kristin Hook
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Chip Roy
Republican



Texas's 21st congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 21st district takes in the Texas Hill Country, including Fredericksburg, Boerne, Kerrville and Bandera, along with Comal County including New Braunfels and most of Hays County including San Marcos, Wimberley and Dripping Springs, as well as most of northwest San Antonio along with Alamo Heights, Castle Hills, the eastern half of Stone Oak and Fort Sam Houston in Bexar County. The incumbent is Republican Chip Roy, who was elected with 61.9% of the vote in 2024 and ran for Texas Attorney General in 2026, but lost in the primary.[22] A Republican-held district since 1978, Donald Trump won 60.3% of the vote in this largely exurban district, which also gave Ted Cruz 57.7%, both in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Kyle Sinclair, former vice chair of the Bexar County Republican Party, candidate for the 28th district in 2024 and nominee for the 20th district in 2022 (remained on ballot, endorsed Teixeira)[214]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Daniel Betts

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Newspapers

Zeke Enriquez

U.S. representatives

Weston Martinez

U.S. senators

Mark Teixeira

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Party officials

  • Kyle Sinclair, former vice chair of the Bexar County Republican Party and former candidate for this district[214]

Individuals

Organizations

Trey Trainor

Statewide officials

Party officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Daniel Betts (R) $170,919 $84,775 $86,144
Jason Cahill (R) $348,702[bc] $291,977 $56,724
Zeke Enriquez (R) $104,652[bd] $100,594 $0
Weston Martinez (R) $19,906 $14,126 $5,780
Paul Rojas (R)[j] $165,026[be] $8,164 $156,861
Mark Teixeira (R) $3,466,723[bf] $2,459,292 $1,007,430
Trey Trainor (R) $139,665 $63,348 $76,316
Michael Wheeler (R) $345,600[bg] $262,246 $83,354
Source: Federal Election Commission[224]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Jason
Cahill
Mark
Teixeira
Trey
Trainor
Michael
Wheeler
Other Undecided
Ragnar Research Partners (R)[225][H] February 5–7, 2026 400 (LV) ± 5.0% 7% 38% 3% 5% 6%[bh] 40%

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mark Teixeira 58,180 60.9
Republican Jason Cahill 9,043 9.5
Republican Trey Trainor 8,497 8.9
Republican Michael Wheeler 6,593 6.9
Republican Weston Martinez 2,320 2.4
Republican Kyle Sinclair (withdrawn) 1,947 2.0
Republican Daniel Betts 1,941 2.0
Republican Peggy Wardlaw 1,872 2.0
Republican Heather Tessmer 1,575 1.7
Republican Paul Rojas 1,559 1.6
Republican Zeke Enriquez 1,302 1.4
Republican Jacques DuBose 673 0.7
Total votes 95,502 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Kristin Hook, scientist and nominee for this district in 2024[226]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Gary Taylor, teacher[227]
  • Regina Vanburg, psychologist[227]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kristin Hook
Regina Vanburg

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Kristin Hook (D) $100,800[bi] $28,308 $76,849
Gary Taylor (D) $16,487 $12,591 $3,895
Regina Vanburg (D) $11,872[bj] $9,416 $2,293
Source: Federal Election Commission[224]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kristin Hook 39,779 60.1
Democratic Regina Vanburg 18,614 28.1
Democratic Gary Taylor 7,847 11.8
Total votes 66,240 100.0

Independents

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Likely R March 12, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Mark Teixeira (R) $3,662,596 $3,385,261 $277,335
Kristin Hook (D) $154,023 $106,520 $51,860
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 21st congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Mark Teixeira
Democratic Kristin Hook
Total votes

District 22

[edit]
2026 Texas's 22nd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Trever Nehls Marquette Greene-Scott
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Troy Nehls
Republican



Texas's 22nd congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 22nd district encompasses the southwest suburban corner of the Greater Houston metropolitan area across Harris, Fort Bend and Brazoria counties, including the southern Houston suburbs of Sugar Land, Rosenberg, Lake Jackson and Angleton, as well as the Katy and Fulshear areas in both Harris and Fort Bend counties. The incumbent is Republican Troy Nehls, who is not seeking reelection and was re-elected with 62.1% of the vote in 2024.[22] That same year, Donald Trump won 59.9% and Ted Cruz 56.9% of the vote in the district, which is diverse with double-digit populations of White, Hispanic, Asian and Black residents (both voting age and overall).

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Rebecca Clark, geophysicist[232]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Rebecca Clark
Trever Nehls

Executive branch officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Troy Nehls (declined)

Executive branch officials

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Rebecca Clark (R) $45,994[bk] $33,457 $12,536
Trever Nehls (R) $108,938 $26,747 $82,191
Source: Federal Election Commission[238]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Trever Nehls 47,839 75.7
Republican Rebecca Clark 15,379 24.3
Total votes 63,218 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Chris Fernandez, editor[127]
  • Sterling Gadison, engineer[23]
  • Robert Thomas, aerospace engineer[127]
  • Pearl Vuorinen, healthcare executive[127]

Endorsements

[edit]
Marquette Greene-Scott

Labor unions

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Marquette Greene-Scott (D) $36,570 $31,271 $3,938
Robert Thomas (D)[j] $5,400 $4,800 $600
Pearl Vuorinen (D) $21,500 $14,307 $7,192
Source: Federal Election Commission[238]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Marquette Greene-Scott 26,280 54.6
Democratic Chris Fernandez 8,931 18.5
Democratic Robert Thomas 7,269 15.1
Democratic Pearl Vuorinen 3,093 6.4
Democratic Sterling Gadison 2,574 5.3
Total votes 48,147 100.0

Third-party candidates

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Demile James (American Independent Party), HR recruiter[241]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Likely R March 12, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Trever Nehls (R) $182,538 $146,145 $36,393
Marquette Greene-Scott (D) $41,012 $40,531 $116
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 17th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Trever Nehls
Democratic Marquette Greene-Scott
Total votes

District 23

[edit]
2026 Texas's 23rd congressional district election

2028 →
 
Nominee Brandon Herrera Katy Padilla Stout
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

TBD



Texas's 23rd congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 23rd district covers southwestern Texas, including the Big Bend, and stretches eastward through Del Rio and Uvalde to the northern San Antonio suburbs including the west side of Stone Oak, Shavano Park and Camp Bullis (with a small finger extending eastward to Lackland AFB in southwest San Antonio, and also westward to the eastern fringes of the El Paso suburbs. The incumbent is Republican Tony Gonzales, who was re-elected with 62.3% of the vote in 2024.[22] Democrats are targeting the majority Hispanic district, which has a one-third White minority, and gave Donald Trump and Ted Cruz 56.8% and 52.9% of the vote, respectively, in 2024.

Republican leaders called on Gonzales to end his re-election campaign after he admitted to having a sexual relationship with a former staff member who later died by suicide, following his earlier denial of the allegations.[242][243] Gonzales ended his campaign on March 5,[244] leading to the cancellation of the runoff and making challenger Brandon Herrera the Republican nominee.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Advanced to runoff

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Keith Barton, veteran, construction equipment manager[247]
  • Quico Canseco, former U.S. representative (2011–2013) and candidate for the 21st district in 2018[248]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]
  • Grant Moody, Bexar County commissioner from the 3rd precinct[250]
  • Kyle Sinclair, former vice chair of the Bexar County Republican Party, candidate for the 28th district in 2024 and nominee for the 20th district in 2022 (ran in the 21st district)[251]

Endorsements

[edit]
Brandon Herrera

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Individuals

Organizations

Tony Gonzales (withdrawn)

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Organizations

Newspapers

Declined to endorse

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Quico Canseco (R)[j] $80,050[bl] $6,250 $201,621
Tony Gonzales (R) $1,949,598 $1,962,043 $1,446,542
Brandon Herrera (R) $868,568[bm] $866,742 $9,866
Source: Federal Election Commission[266]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Tony
Gonzales
Brandon
Herrera
Other Undecided
Political Intelligence[267][I] February 18–20, 2026 543 (LV) 21% 45% 8%[bn] 26%
Political Intelligence[268][I] December 17–22, 2025 422 (LV) 34% 43% 23%
Trafalgar Group (R)[269] October 31 – November 1, 2025 605 (LV) ± 3.9% 40% 35% 24%

Results

[edit]
2026 GOP primary results by county:
  Gonzales
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  Herrera
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Tie
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brandon Herrera 23,932 43.3
Republican Tony Gonzales (incumbent) 23,073 41.8
Republican Keith Barton 4,696 8.5
Republican Quico Canseco 3,562 6.4
Total votes 55,263 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Katy Padilla Stout, attorney[170]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Gretel Enck, community organizer and writer[270]
  • Santos Limon, civil engineer and nominee for this district in 2024[271]
  • Bruce Richardson, accountant[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Katy Padilla Stout

U.S. representatives

Labor unions

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Gretel Enck (D) $64,258[bo] $46,464 $17,793
Santos Limon (D)[bp] $356,755[bq] $6,815 $349,940
Katy Padilla Stout (D) $44,841[br] $36,370 $8,470
Source: Federal Election Commission[266]

Results

[edit]
2026 Democratic primary results by county:
  Stout
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Limon
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  Richardson
  •   50–60%
  Enck
  •   30–40%
  •   40–50%
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Katy Padilla Stout 30,828 52.1
Democratic Santos Limon 16,077 27.1
Democratic Bruce Richardson 6,968 11.8
Democratic Gretel Enck 5,349 9.0
Total votes 59,222 100.0

Independents

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Patti Hale Ashe[273]
  • Veronica Williams, licensed professional counselor[274]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Likely R March 12, 2026
Inside Elections[38] Likely R March 12, 2026
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Likely R May 6, 2026
Race to the WH[40] Tossup April 28, 2026

Post-primary endorsements

[edit]
Brandon Herrera (R)

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Katy Padilla Stout (D)

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Brandon Herrera (R) $1,522,558 $1,225,114 $305,485
Katy Padilla Stout (D) $238,441 $92,430 $145,758
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Brandon
Herrera (R)
Katy
Padilla Stout (D)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[281][E] March 10–11, 2026 521 (V) 42% 40% 18%
Hypothetical polling

Generic Republican vs. generic Democrat

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[281][E] March 10–11, 2026 521 (V) 47% 45% 8%

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 23rd congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Brandon Herrera
Democratic Katy Padilla Stout
Total votes

District 24

[edit]
2026 Texas's 24th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Beth Van Duyne Kevin Burge
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Beth Van Duyne (Republican)
Julie Johnson (Democratic)



Texas's 24th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 24th district, centered on Dallas Fort Worth International Airport in the heart of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, encompasses the suburbs north of Fort Worth and Dallas, including Grapevine, Bedford, North Richland Hills and Southlake in northeast Tarrant County, and the wealthy Park Cities north of downtown Dallas, as well as the neighboring Knox Park and Lower Greenville neighborhoods and most of north Dallas (including Preston Hollow) in Dallas itself and the Dallas County suburbs of Farmers Branch and Coppell.

Due to redistricting, the district has two incumbents, Republican Beth Van Duyne, who was re-elected with 60.3% of the vote in 2024, and Democrat Julie Johnson, who was elected with 61.9% of the vote in 2024 from the old 32nd District.[22] Donald Trump won 57.1% of the vote in this affluent district, which also gave Ted Cruz 54.6% of the vote that same year against Democrat Colin Allred, whom Johnson succeeded in Congress. Johnson has since decided to seek reelection in the newly redrawn 33rd district (see below).

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Beth Van Duyne

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Beth Van Duyne (R) $1,783,552 $1,107,736 $2,636,687
Source: Federal Election Commission[282]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Beth Van Duyne (incumbent) 71,506 100.0
Total votes 71,506 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Kevin Burge, IT security specialist[23]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • TJ Ware, entrepreneur[283]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Jon Buchwald, entrepreneur[23]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kevin Burge

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jon Buchwald (D) $195,319[bs] $150,254 $45,065
Kevin Burge (D) $119,926 $94,380 $25,546
TJ Ware (D) $95,181[bt] $88,744 $831
Source: Federal Election Commission[282]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kevin Burge 28,968 48.0
Democratic TJ Ware 15,774 26.1
Democratic Jon Buchwald 15,612 25.9
Total votes 60,354 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kevin Burge 10,656 78.1
Democratic TJ Ware 2,983 21.9
Total votes 13,639 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Beth Van Duyne (R) $2,226,054 $1,360,432 $2,826,494
Kevin Burge (D) $164,571 $148,875 $17,696
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 24th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Beth Van Duyne (incumbent)
Democratic Kevin Burge
Total votes

District 25

[edit]
2026 Texas's 25th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Roger Williams Dione Sims
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Marc Veasey (Democratic)
Roger Williams (Republican)



Texas's 25th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 25th district runs from northern Arlington and southern and eastern Fort Worth in Tarrant County, whose portion is the only portion of the district considered even remotely competitive (and in fact, favorable) to Democrats, out to several heavily Republican exurban and rural areas south and west of Fort Worth and just east of Abilene, including Cleburne, Granbury, Willow Park, Mineral Wells, Stephenville, Jacksboro and Eastland.

Due to redistricting, the district has two incumbents, Republican Roger Williams, who was re-elected unopposed in 2024, and Democrat Marc Veasey, who was re-elected with 68.7% of the vote in 2024.[22] Veasey, the incumbent from the old 33rd district (see below) decided to not seek reelection, instead pursuing a short-lived bid for Tarrant County judge before dropping out of that race. Donald Trump won 61.4% of the vote in this district in 2024, which also saw Ted Cruz win 58.4% of the vote.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Roger Williams

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Roger Williams (R) $989,054 $690,710 $869,845
Source: Federal Election Commission[285]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roger Williams (incumbent) 60,296 100.0
Total votes 60,296 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Dione Sims, non-profit founder[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
William Marks (D) $70,772[bu] $38,647 $32,125
Source: Federal Election Commission[285]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Dione Sims 32,388 60.5
Democratic William Marks 21,135 39.5
Total votes 53,523 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Roger Williams (R) $1,301,335 $767,016 $1,105,820
Dione Sims (D) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 25th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Roger Williams (incumbent)
Democratic Dione Sims
Total votes

District 26

[edit]
2026 Texas's 26th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Brandon Gill Steven Shook
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Brandon Gill
Republican



Texas's 26th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 26th district is based in the northwestern corner of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, centering on southern and eastern Denton County (including the county's share of Carrollton along with all of Lewisville, Flower Mound and Little Elm) and including Cooke County (Gainesville) and the southern two-thirds of Wise County including Decatur. The incumbent is Republican Brandon Gill, who was elected with 62.1% of the vote in 2024.[22] That same year, the district gave 61.2% of the vote to Donald Trump and 58.4% to Ted Cruz.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Robert Chick, managing director[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Brandon Gill

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Brandon Gill (R) $2,423,547 $1,925,433 $625,937
Source: Federal Election Commission[288]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brandon Gill (incumbent) 73,610 91.1
Republican Robert Chick 7,169 8.9
Total votes 80,779 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Steven Shook, nurse practitioner[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Ernest Lineberger, industrial engineer and nominee for this district in 2024[289]

Endorsements

[edit]
Ernest Lineberger

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ernest Lineberger (D) $114,773[bv] $110,621 $7,644
Steven Shook (D) $10,740 $10,298 $465
Source: Federal Election Commission[288]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Steven Shook 29,172 51.1
Democratic Ernest Lineberger 27,964 48.9
Total votes 57,136 100.0

Libertarian convention

[edit]

Declared

[edit]
  • Phil Gray, perennial candidate[290]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Brandon Gill (R) $3,099,176 $2,216,085 $1,010,914
Steven Shook (D) $12,220 $11,156 $1,239
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 26th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Brandon Gill (incumbent)
Democratic Steven Shook
Total votes

District 27

[edit]
2026 Texas's 27th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Michael Cloud Tanya Lloyd
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Michael Cloud
Republican



Texas's 27th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 27th district stretches across the Coastal Bend, from downtown Corpus Christi and Port Aransas in the south, along with Victoria and the rural fringes of the Greater Houston area including Brenham, Bay City and Sealy, extending westward to La Grange along with the southern and eastern suburbs of Austin including Bastrop, Kyle and Lockhart along with an eastern sliver of Travis County (including the Circuit of the Americas).

The incumbent is Republican Michael Cloud, who was re-elected with 66.0% of the vote in 2024.[22] A plurality White district whose voting age population is more than 40% Hispanic, Donald Trump won 60% of the vote and Ted Cruz 57.1% in 2024.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Michael Cloud

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Michael Cloud (R) $738,192 $649,442 $225,62
Chris Hatley (R)[j] $47,114[bw] $390 $46,724
Source: Federal Election Commission[292]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael Cloud (incumbent) 49,156 73.0
Republican Chris Hatley 18,215 27.0
Total votes 67,371 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Tanya Lloyd, teacher and nominee for this district in 2024[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Eustaquio Castro-Mendoza, U.S. Navy veteran[23]
  • Wayne Raasch, teacher and candidate for the 22nd district in 2024[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Tanya Lloyd

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tanya Lloyd (D) $112,844 $100,987 $12,044
Source: Federal Election Commission[292]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Tanya Lloyd 35,729 63.1
Democratic Eustaquio Castro-Mendoza 16,657 29.4
Democratic Wayne Raasch 4,227 7.5
Total votes 56,613 100.0

Third parties and independents

[edit]

Declared

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Michael Cloud (R) $902,570 $759,611 $279,837
Tanya Lloyd (D) $122,818 $114,770 $8,234
Dan McQueen (I) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 27th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Michael Cloud (incumbent)
Democratic Tanya Lloyd
Independent Dan McQueen
Total votes

District 28

[edit]
2026 Texas's 28th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Henry Cuellar Tano Tijerina
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Henry Cuellar
Democratic



Texas's 28th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 28th district is based in the Laredo area and stretches south to McAllen in the Rio Grande Valley and north to Atascosa County in the San Antonio area. The incumbent is Democrat Henry Cuellar, who was re-elected with 52.8% of the vote in 2024.[22]

Historically a heavily Democratic district, Donald Trump won 54.8% of the vote in this overwhelmingly Hispanic district in 2024, which also saw Ted Cruz win a plurality of 48.8% (and a vote margin of only 228 votes) that same year; the district previously gave Democrats Joe Biden 54.3% in 2020 and Hillary Clinton 66.4% in 2016. In U.S. Senate races, John Cornyn lost the district twice in 2014 and 2020 for his seat, as did Cruz in his seat in 2018 against Beto O'Rourke, who won 65.8% of the vote that year.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Andrew Vantine, businessman[297]
  • Ricardo Villarreal, physician and candidate for the 21st district in 2022[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Henry Cuellar

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Henry Cuellar (D) $1,189,858[bx] $754,500 $483,316
Ricardo Villarreal (D) $64,098[by] $27,174 $36,924
Source: Federal Election Commission[298]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Henry Cuellar (incumbent) 39,228 58.1
Democratic Ricardo Villarreal 24,968 37.0
Democratic Andrew Vantine 3,375 5.0
Total votes 67,571 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Eileen Day, businesswoman[23]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Josh Cortez, former advisor to U.S. representative Monica De La Cruz (running in the 35th district)[91]
  • Mayra Flores, former U.S. representative from the 34th district (2022–2023)[300] (running in the 34th district)[301]
  • Jay Furman, physician and nominee for this district in 2024[302] (running in the 35th district)[194]

Endorsements

[edit]
Tano Tijerina

Executive branch officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Tano Tijerina (R) $303,084 $234,553 $68,531
Source: Federal Election Commission[298]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tano Tijerina 12,514 74.3
Republican Eileen Day 4,319 25.7
Total votes 16,833 100.0

Libertarian convention

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
  • John E Foddrill, candidate for San Antonio City Council in 2015 (nonpartisan)[290]

Green convention

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Lean D December 9, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Tilt D August 28, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball Lean D December 10, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Tilt D March 12, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Henry Cuellar (D) $1,620,505 $904,427 $764,037
Tano Tijerina (R) $937,221 $360,544 $576,676
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 28th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Henry Cuellar (incumbent)
Republican Tano Tijerina
Total votes

District 29

[edit]
2026 Texas's 29th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Sylvia Garcia Martha Fierro
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Sylvia Garcia
Democratic



Texas's 29th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 29th district encompasses much of north Houston, taking in the heavily Latino Lindale Park and Northline areas along with historically Black Acres Homes and Independence Heights, as well as the Garden Oaks, Oak Forest and Fairbanks areas of northwest Houston, and the Aldine and Greenspoint areas of far north Houston including George Bush Intercontinental Airport. The incumbent is Democrat Sylvia Garcia, who was re-elected with 65.2% of the vote in 2024 in the majority Hispanic district, which was won by Kamala Harris (64.5%) and Colin Allred (67.6%) that same year.[22]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Declined to endorse

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Sylvia Garcia (D) $670,674 $815,473 $226,955
Jarvis Johnson (D) $142,143[ca] $47,713 $71,009
Robert Slater (D) $33,892 $17,420 $12,808
Source: Federal Election Commission[311]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Sylvia
Garcia
Jarvis
Johnson
Robert
Slater
Undecided
University of Houston[107] February 3–10, 2026 500 (LV) ± 4.38% 46% 27% 2% 25%

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sylvia Garcia (incumbent) 30,803 58.2
Democratic Jarvis Johnson 18,881 35.7
Democratic Robert Slater 3,200 6.1
Total votes 52,884 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Martha Fierro, director[23]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Martha Fierro 9,633 100.0
Total votes 9,633 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Sylvia Garcia (D) $903,166 $1,099,258 $175,662
Martha Fierro (R) $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 29th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Sylvia Garcia (incumbent)
Republican Martha Fierro
Total votes

District 30

[edit]
2026 Texas's 30th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Frederick Haynes III Everett Jackson
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

None
(New seat)



Texas's 30th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 30th district is anchored in the southern portions of Dallas and encompasses South Dallas and Fair Park, stretching southward to such diverse south Dallas County suburbs as Lancaster, Duncanville, DeSoto, Wilmer, Cedar Hill and southern Grand Prairie. Prior to redistricting, the incumbent was Democrat Jasmine Crockett; however, Crockett was drawn out of the 30th district and into the 33rd and ultimately decided to run for the U.S. Senate. Kamala Harris won 72.7% of the vote in the district in 2024, as did Dallas native Colin Allred who won 75.1% in his losing Senate bid against Ted Cruz.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Frederick Haynes III

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Local officials

Individuals

  • Zeeshan Hafeez, technology executive[320]

Labor unions

Organizations

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Barbara Mallory Caraway (D) $16,536[cb] $11,990 $4,630
Frederick Haynes III (D) $158,563 $23,015 $135,547
Rodney LaBruce (D) $5,115[cc] $4,478 $3,040
Source: Federal Election Commission[327]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Frederick Haynes III 76,701 72.6
Democratic Barbara Mallory Caraway 24,370 23.1
Democratic Rodney LaBruce 4,546 4.3
Total votes 105,617 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Everett Jackson, business owner[23]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Sholdon Daniels, attorney[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Gregorio Heise, veteran[23]
  • Nils Walker, IT project coordinator[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Sholdon Daniels
Declined to endorse

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Sholdon Daniels (R) $353,563[cd] $369,866 $0
Gregor Heise (R) $158,473[ce] $127,309 $31,164
Everett Jackson (R) $14,885[cf] $9,018 $5,866
Source: Federal Election Commission[327]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Everett Jackson 5,414 38.0
Republican Sholdon Daniels 3,463 24.3
Republican Gregor Heise 2,767 19.4
Republican Nils Walker 2,594 18.2
Total votes 14,238 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Everett Jackson 4,960 57.5
Republican Sholdon Daniels 3,664 42.5
Total votes 8,624 100.0

Independents

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Oxford Nordberg, entrepreneur[330]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Frederick Haynes III (D) $347,441 $222,592 $124,849
Everett Jackson $16,948 $14,542 $2,406
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 30th congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Democratic Frederick Haynes III
Republican Everett Jackson
Total votes

District 31

[edit]
2026 Texas's 31st congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee John Carter Justin Early
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

John Carter
Republican



Texas's 31st congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 31st district is anchored in the northern exurbs of Austin (including Georgetown and Burnet) and stretches northward to Killeen and most of Temple along with Fort Hood, going as far north as Hamilton. The incumbent is Republican John Carter, who was re-elected with 64.5% of the vote in 2024.[22] That same year, Donald Trump won 60.1% and Ted Cruz 57.6% of the vote, respectively.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
John Carter

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Steve Dowell

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
William Abel (R) $7,670 $7,550 $0
David Berry (R) $36,800[cg] $36,800 $0
John Carter (R) $1,111,902 $827,394 $325,946
Steve Dowell (R) $46,566 $42,936 $3,629
Abhiram Garapati (R)[j] $55,000[ch] $16,000 $39,000
Valentina Gomez (R) $112,522 $83,707 $0
Raymond Hamden (R) $144,331[ci] $39,444 $146
Elvis Lossa (R) $11,382[cj] $7,526 $3,856
Vince Offer (R) $173,869[ck] $172,609 $1,259
Source: Federal Election Commission[336]

Results

[edit]
2026 GOP primary results by county:
  Carter
  •   40–50%
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Carter (incumbent) 45,834 59.7
Republican Valentina Gomez 8,401 10.9
Republican Abhiram Garapati 5,036 6.6
Republican Steve Dowell 4,729 6.2
Republican Raymond Hamden 4,530 5.9
Republican Vince Offer 3,187 4.2
Republican William Abel 1,931 2.5
Republican David Berry 1,739 2.3
Republican Edward Ewald 790 1.0
Republican Elvis Lossa 571 0.7
Total votes 76,748 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Justin Early, cybersecurity architect[337]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Stuart Whitlow, attorney and nominee for this district in 2024[338]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Caitlin Rourk, marketing employee[138] (running in the 10th district)[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Justin Early

Labor unions

Stuart Whitlow

Labor unions

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Justin Early (D) $79,241[cl] $52,426 $26,814
Stuart Whitlow (D) $168,317[cm] $169,059 $2,907
Source: Federal Election Commission[336]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Justin Early 31,881 57.6
Democratic Stuart Whitlow 23,467 42.4
Total votes 55,348 100.0

Green convention

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
John Carter (R) $1,347,562 $1,142,503 $246,499
Justin Early (D) $89,298 $81,616 $7,682
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 31st congressional district election
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican John Carter (incumbent)
Democratic Justin Early
Total votes

District 32

[edit]
2026 Texas's 32nd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Dan Barrios Jace Yarbrough
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

None
(New seat)



Texas's 32nd congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 32nd district covers several suburban areas directly north and northeast of Dallas, including most of the Dallas County portion of Carrollton and Addison along with all of Richardson (including the Collin County portion) and the northern halves of Garland and Rowlett, as well as the far north side of Dallas itself. The district then stretches eastward and crosses Lake Ray Hubbard to take in suburban Rockwall County and the Lake Tawakoni area, traveling all the way east to such northern Tyler exurbs as Mineola and Gilmer.

Prior to redistricting, the incumbent was Democrat Julie Johnson; however, Johnson was drawn out of the 32nd district and into the 24th, ultimately deciding to seek reelection in the 33rd district (see below) and leaving this district as an open seat.[22] In 2024, the new district gave 57.7% of the vote to Donald Trump and 55.2% to Ted Cruz, with Democrats only considered competitive in the Dallas County and Richardson portion of the otherwise heavily Republican district.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Anthony Bridges, EMT[23]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Dan Barrios

U.S. representatives

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Dan Barrios (D) $44,925 $26,527 $18,397
Source: Federal Election Commission[342]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Dan Barrios 34,759 60.4
Democratic Anthony Bridges 22,762 39.6
Total votes 57,521 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Advanced to runoff

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Ryan Binkley

U.S. representatives

Individuals

Gordon Heslop
Jace Yarbrough

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ryan Binkley (R) $1,933,131[cn] $1,645,449 $287,682
Paul Bondar (R) $1,908,969[co] $1,898,014 $10,955
Aimee Carrasco (R) $34,575[cp] $33,951 $623
Darrell Day (R) $102,105[cq] $57,618 $133,820
Monty Montanez (R)[j] $39,224[cr] $39,966 $0
Abteen Vaziri (R) $63,461[cs] $64,785 $0
Jace Yarbrough (R) $424,554[ct] $226,219 $198,334
Source: Federal Election Commission[342]

Polling

[edit]
Hypothetical polling
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Ryan
Binkley
Darrell
Day
Katrina
Pierson
Will
Douglas
Undecided
Stratus Intellegence (R)[355] September 24–26, 2025 411 (LV) 4% 9% 15% 5% 68%

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jace Yarbrough 33,874 49.0
Republican Ryan Binkley 15,028 21.7
Republican Paul Bondar 9,586 13.9
Republican Darrell Day 4,030 5.8
Republican James Ussery 1,959 2.8
Republican Aimee Carrasco 1,834 2.7
Republican Gordon Heslop 1,470 2.1
Republican Monty Montanez 867 1.3
Republican Abteen Vaziri 541 0.8
Total votes 69,189 100.0

Independents

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R (flip) August 23, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R (flip) August 28, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball Safe R (flip) August 29, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Likely R (flip) March 12, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Dan Barrios (D) $67,436 $62,266 $5,170
Jace Yarbrough (R) $612,504 $526,446 $86,057
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 32nd congressional district election results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Dan Barrios
Republican Jace Yarbrough
Total votes 100

District 33

[edit]
2026 Texas's 33rd congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Colin Allred Patrick Gillespie
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Jasmine Crockett (Democratic)



Texas's 33rd congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 33rd district, previously encompassing mostly Hispanic parts of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex including Downtown Fort Worth, western Dallas, and parts of Grand Prairie, Irving, Carrollton, and Farmers Branch, has since been redrawn to be exclusively within Dallas County. Prior to redistricting, the incumbent was Fort Worth-based Democrat Marc Veasey. However, Veasey was drawn out of the 33rd district and into the 25th, and ultimately chose to pursue a short-lived bid for Tarrant County judge before abandoning that bid. The new incumbent is Democrat Jasmine Crockett, who was elected with 84.9% of the vote in 2024, in her previous District 30; however, Crockett chose to pursue a run for the United States Senate seat currently held by John Cornyn.[22]

Former congressman and 2024 U.S. Senate nominee Colin Allred (who lost in the general election that year to Ted Cruz) and current 32nd District incumbent Julie Johnson ran for the Democratic nomination to represent this district, which is centered in Downtown and Uptown Dallas and also extends in four separate directions - northwest to Love Field and a northern section of Irving centered on the Valley Ranch area, northeast to the Swiss Avenue and Buckner Boulevard (east of White Rock Lake) corridors in east Dallas, southeast to southeast Dallas (including Pleasant Grove) and Balch Springs, and southwest to West Dallas as well as Cockrell Hill and central Grand Prairie. The new district gave 65.2% of the vote to Kamala Harris and 68.7% to Allred in 2024, and is over 50 percent Hispanic. Allred defeated Johnson in the runoff with 55% of the vote.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Zeeshan Hafeez, technology executive[23]
  • Carlos Quintanilla, perennial candidate[23]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Colin Allred

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Local officials

Newspapers

Organizations

Zeeshan Hafeez

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Individuals

Organizations

Julie Johnson

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Organizations

Declined to endorse

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Colin Allred (D) $5,412,502 $4,554,472 $858,029
Zeeshan Hafeez (D) $409,934 $324,472 $85,462
Julie Johnson (D) $1,554,059 $1,235,596 $549,366
Source: Federal Election Commission[377]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Colin
Allred
Julie
Johnson
Undecided
GBAO (D)[378][J] December 14–17, 2025 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 58% 30% 12%

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Colin Allred 31,482 44.0
Democratic Julie Johnson (incumbent) 23,770 33.2
Democratic Carlos Quintanilla 10,276 14.3
Democratic Zeeshan Hafeez 6,083 8.5
Total votes 71,611 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Colin Allred 11,354 54.0
Democratic Julie Johnson (incumbent) 9,677 46.0
Total votes 21,031 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Patrick Gillespie, customs broker[379]

Eliminated runoff

[edit]
  • John Sims, retired police officer[380]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Monte Mitchell, physician[23]
  • Kurt Schwab, marketing consultant[23]

Not on ballot

  • Payton Jackson, credit specialist[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kurt Schwab

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of December 31, 2025
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Kurt Schwab (R) $10,130[cu] $9,539 $590
Source: Federal Election Commission[377]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Patrick Gillespie 4,654 35.5
Republican John Sims 2,922 22.3
Republican Monte Mitchell 2,850 21.7
Republican Kurt Schwab 2,692 20.5
Total votes 13,118 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Patrick Gillespie 5,020 57.1
Republican John Sims 3,771 42.9
Total votes 8,791 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Colin Allred $6,842,416 $6,175,185 $667,231
Patrick Gillespie $0 $0 $0
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 33rd congressional district election results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Colin Allred
Republican Patrick Gillespie
Total votes 100

District 34

[edit]
2026 Texas's 34th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Vicente Gonzalez Eric Flores
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Vicente Gonzalez
Democratic



Texas's 34th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 34th district stretches from Brownsville in the Rio Grande Valley, northward along the Gulf Coast to most of Corpus Christi, covering all of Cameron, Willacy, Kenedy, Kleberg and most of Nueces counties, essentially a recreation of the old 27th district from its establishment in 1982 until the 2010 election. The incumbent is Democrat Vicente Gonzalez, who was re-elected with 51.3% of the vote in 2024.[22]

Donald Trump won the district with 54.6% of the vote in 2024, having previously lost the district to Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden in 2016 and 2020, respectively, with Barack Obama winning the district twice in 2008 and 2012. Also, Ted Cruz won the district with a 49.7% plurality in 2024, even though the district gave 55% of the vote to Beto O'Rourke over Cruz in 2018.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Etienne Rosas, public policy analyst[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Etienne Rosas
Declined to endorse

Labor unions

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Vicente Gonzalez (D) $1,916,885 $930,093 $1,268,851
Etienne Rosas (D)[j] $33,160 $22,411 $7,931
Source: Federal Election Commission[385]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Vicente Gonzalez (incumbent) 35,342 62.7
Democratic Etienne Rosas 20,993 37.3
Total votes 56,335 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Keith Allen, retail manager[91]
  • Luis Buentello, lobbyist[23]
  • Mayra Flores, former U.S. representative (2022–2023)[301] (previously ran in the 28th district)[300]
  • Gregory Kunkle, musician and candidate for this district in 2022 and 2024[91]

Withdrawn

[edit]
  • Fred Hinojosa, activist and brother of state senator Adam Hinojosa (endorsed Eric Flores, remained on ballot)[387]
  • Scott Mandel, businessman and candidate for the 27th district in 2024 (endorsed Eric Flores, remained on ballot)[388]
  • Jay Nagy, engineer (endorsed Eric Flores, remained on ballot)[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Eric Flores

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Organizations

Mayra Flores

U.S. representatives

Organizations

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Keith Allen (R) $152,475[cv] $145,304 $8,115
Luis Buentello (R) $40,104 $29,399 $10,704
Eric Flores (R) $1,294,218[cw] $1,123,672 $170,546
Mayra Flores (R) $1,367,938 $1,228,999 $141,767
Gregory Kunkle (R)[j] $9,155 $7,853 $1,301
Source: Federal Election Commission[385]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Eric
Flores
Mayra
Flores
Other Undecided
1892 Polling (R)[392] 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 5% 38% 7%[cx] 51%

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Eric Flores 20,726 56.7
Republican Mayra Flores 8,652 23.7
Republican Luis Buentello 1,943 5.3
Republican Scott Mandel 1,638 4.5
Republican Fred Hinojosa 1,395 3.8
Republican Keith Allen 1,378 3.8
Republican Gregory Kunkle 690 1.9
Republican Jay Nagy 159 0.4
Total votes 36,581 100.0

Libertarian convention

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Chris Royal, independent candidate for this seat in 2020 and 2022, and withdrawn independent candidate for this seat in 2024[290]

Green convention

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
  • Eddie Espinoza, teacher and nominee for railroad commission in 2024[393]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Tossup January 15, 2026
Inside Elections[38] Tossup August 28, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Tossup November 19, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Tossup March 12, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Vicente Gonzalez (D) $2,907,549 $1,293,623 $1,895,986
Eric Flores (R) $2,157,799 $1,711,974 $446,800
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Vicente
Gonzalez (D)
Eric
Flores (R)
Undecided
co/efficient (R)[394][K] April 25–29, 2026 777 (LV) ± 3.5% 40% 41% 19%
Hypothetical polling

Generic Democrat vs generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Undecided
co/efficient (R)[394][K] April 25–29, 2026 777 (LV) ± 3.5% 44% 48% 8%

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 34th congressional district election results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Vicente Gonzalez (incumbent)
Republican Eric Flores
Total votes 100

District 35

[edit]
2026 Texas's 35th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Johnny Garcia Carlos De La Cruz
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

None
(New seat)



Texas's 35th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 35th district previously connected eastern San Antonio to southeastern Austin, through the I-35 corridor. However, with the new redistricting the 35th has been moved significantly to the south and east; it now covers much of south and northeast San Antonio, plus such suburbs as Live Oak, Converse and Elmendorf along with Guadalupe (including Seguin and Schertz), Wilson and Karnes counties.

Prior to redistricting, the incumbent was Democrat Greg Casar; however, Casar was drawn out of the 35th district and into the 37th.[22] The new district remains majority Hispanic, albeit with over 53.7% of the voting age population being Hispanic, and 34.6% of the voting age population being White. Donald Trump won 54.6% of the vote in this district in 2024, having won by single-digit margins here in both 2016 and 2020, while Ted Cruz won 50.6% of the vote in this district in 2024.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Campaign

[edit]

The Democratic runoff race for this district gained national attention in May 2026 after multiple comments made by candidate Maureen Galindo, who led the first round of the primary, were condemned by state and national Democrats for antisemitism. On social media, Galindo pledged to turn an ICE Detention Center into a "prison for American Zionists", and later suggested on a radio broadcast that primary rival Johnny Garcia should be tried for treason due to his alleged support from Israel.[405][406]

Following the remarks, John Lira, a former primary opponent who had previously endorsed Galindo, rescinded his endorsement.[407] Prominent Democrats directly rebuked Galindo's candidacy or endorsed Garcia, including U.S. Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Suzan DelBene and Hakeem Jeffries, alongside Texas state representatives James Talarico and Gina Hinojosa, who are the Democratic nominees in the concurrent Senate and the gubernatorial elections respectively.[406][407][408]

Endorsements

[edit]

Organizations

Johnny Garcia

Executive branch officials

U.S. representatives

State legislators

Labor unions

Organizations

Newspapers

John Lira

Labor unions

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Maureen Galindo (D)[j] $4,107 $8,214 $0
Johnny Garcia (D) $159,289 $140,036 $19,253
John Lira (D) $132,806 $127,786 $5,020
Whitney Masterson-Moyes (D) $61,733[cz] $50,925 $10,808
Source: Federal Election Commission[420]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Maureen Galindo 16,009 29.2
Democratic Johnny Garcia 14,836 27.0
Democratic Whitney Masterson-Moyes 12,825 23.4
Democratic John Lira 11,186 20.4
Total votes 54,856 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Johnny Garcia 13,017 63.8
Democratic Maureen Galindo 7,374 36.2
Total votes 20,391 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Randy Adams, car dealership owner[91]
  • Josh Cortez, former advisor to U.S. representative Monica De La Cruz (previously ran in the 28th district)[403]
  • Mark Eberwine, home inspector[91]
  • Jay Furman, physician and nominee for the 28th district in 2024[194] (previously ran in the 28th district)[302]
  • Vanessa Hicks-Callaway[91]
  • Ryan Krause, executive coach[91]
  • Larry LaRose, veteran[91]
  • Rod Lingsch, retired pilot[91]
  • Steven Wright, retired deputy sheriff and nominee for this district in 2024[91]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Carlos De La Cruz

Executive branch officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

John Lujan

U.S. representatives

Statewide officials

Local officials

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Randy Adams (R) $22,957[da] $2,327 $20,630
Josh Cortez (R) $246,954[db] $169,477 $77,476
Carlos De La Cruz (R) $294,169[dc] $230,963 $63,205
Jay Furman (R) $396,414[dd] $354,020 $47,315
Vanessa Hicks-Callaway (R) $6,394 $5,114 $3,514
Ryan Krause (R) $237,646[de] $89,055 $148,590
John Lujan (R) $370,118[df] $282,690 $87,428
Steven Wright (R) $25,375[dg] $16,944 $26,079
Source: Federal Election Commission[420]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Lujan 15,530 33.0
Republican Carlos De La Cruz 12,637 26.8
Republican Jay Furman 6,182 13.1
Republican Ryan Krause 3,986 8.5
Republican Josh Cortez 2,052 4.4
Republican Steven Wright 1,889 4.0
Republican Randy Adams 1,754 3.7
Republican Vanessa Hicks-Callaway 1,676 3.6
Republican Mark Eberwine 752 1.6
Republican Rod Lindsch 365 0.8
Republican Larry La Rose 306 0.6
Total votes 47,129 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Carlos De La Cruz 18,927 57.6
Republican John Lujan 13,925 42.4
Total votes 32,852 100.0

General election

[edit]

Post-primary endorsements

[edit]
Johnny Garcia (D)

Organizations

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Likely R (flip) August 23, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Likely R (flip) August 28, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Lean R (flip) May 27, 2026
Race to the WH[40] Tilt R (flip) March 12, 2026

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Johnny Garcia (D) $328,307 $267,020 $61,287
Carlos de la Cruz (R) $671,448 $538,556 $132,892
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 35th congressional district election results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Johnny Garcia
Republican Carlos De La Cruz
Total votes 100

District 36

[edit]
2026 Texas's 36th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Brian Babin Rhonda Hart
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Brian Babin
Republican



Texas's 36th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 36th district encompasses parts of Southeast Texas, including the Harris County side of the Clear Lake region of Houston. While largely unchanged from its previous iteration, the new iteration includes Lufkin and the surrounding Piney Woods region as well as Silsbee, Jasper and most of Beaumont, and also extends to almost all of Chambers County (including Mont Belvieu) east of Houston) before extending into southeast Houston (including Hobby Airport and Ellington Field, as well as Glenbrook Valley and the aforementioned Clear Lake City development) along with the southeast Harris County communities of Seabrook, Webster and Harris County's portion of Friendswood, and a small sliver of northern Brazoria County centered on most of Pearland.

The incumbent is Republican Brian Babin, who was re-elected with 69.4% of the vote in 2024.[22] Donald Trump won 61.8% of the vote in the new district in 2024, as did Ted Cruz with 59.1% of the vote.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Jonathan Mitchell, pipeline worker and candidate for this district in 2024[23]

Endorsements

[edit]
Brian Babin

Executive branch officials

Statewide officials

Organizations

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Brian Babin (R) $749,136 $525,433 $869,905
Source: Federal Election Commission[429]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brian Babin (incumbent) 51,074 81.1
Republican Jonathan Mitchell 11,896 18.9
Total votes 62,970 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Rhonda Hart, homemaker and nominee for the 14th district in 2024[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Doug Rogers, accountant[430]

Endorsements

[edit]
Doug Rogers

Labor unions

Newspapers

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Rhonda Hart (D) $6,125 [dh] $0 $6,250
Doug Rogers (D)[j] $211,955 [di] $18,651 $204,348
Source: Federal Election Commission[429]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Rhonda Hart 30,587 64.2
Democratic Doug Rogers 17,041 35.8
Total votes 47,628 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Brian Babin (R) $916,868 $632,559 $930,512
Rhonda Hart (D) $6,550 $0 $3,937
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 36th congressional district election results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brian Babin (incumbent)
Democratic Rhonda Hart
Total votes 100

District 37

[edit]
2026 Texas's 37th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Greg Casar Lauren Peña
Party Democratic Republican

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Greg Casar (Democratic)
Lloyd Doggett (Democratic)



Texas's 37th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 37th district is based in all but the westernmost parts of Austin, with virtually all of the precincts of the exclusively Travis County-based district favoring Democrats to varying degrees; the new district has a White plurality with a 34% Hispanic voting age population. The incumbent is Democrat Lloyd Doggett, who was re-elected with 75.9% of the vote in 2024.[22] On August 21, 2025, Doggett announced that he would not seek re-election due to mid-decade redistricting, and fellow Democratic Rep. Greg Casar being moved into the 37th district.[432] On August 25, 2025, Casar announced his bid for re-election from this district.[402] Kamala Harris won 76.8% of the vote in the new 37th District, which also gave 79.2% of the vote to Colin Allred; in both cases, the highest of any district amongst the state's new congressional districts.

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Esther Fleharty, program manager[23]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Greg Casar (D) $929,283 $648,443 $651,678
Source: Federal Election Commission[438]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Greg Casar (incumbent) 105,917 80.7
Democratic Esther Fleharty 25,252 19.3
Total votes 131,169 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Lauren Peña, paralegal[23]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]
  • Ge'Neill Gary, former Albany city councilwoman[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]
  • Janet Malzahn, attorney[23]

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Ge'Neill Gary (R) $3,929[dj] $3,697 $232
Janet Malzahn (R) $5,254[dk] $1,509 $3,744
Lauren Peña (R) $98,697 $94,240 $4,456
Source: Federal Election Commission[438]

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ge'Neill Gary 5,382 35.3
Republican Lauren Peña 5,328 35.0
Republican Janet Malzahn 4,529 29.7
Total votes 15,239 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Lauren Peña 6,567 58.2
Republican Ge'Neill Gary 4,724 41.8
Total votes 11,291 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid D February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid D March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe D September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Safe D October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Greg Casar (D) $1,057,596 $705,499 $722,936
Lauren Peña (R) $112,442 $111,242 $1,200
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 37th congressional district election results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Greg Casar (incumbent)
Republican Lauren Peña
Total votes 100

District 38

[edit]
2026 Texas's 38th congressional district election

← 2024
2028 →
 
Nominee Jon Bonck Melissa McDonough
Party Republican Democratic

Incumbent U.S. Representative

Wesley Hunt
Republican



Texas's 38th congressional district boundary from the 2026 elections
Interactive map version

The new 38th district, much like its original iteration first used in the 2022 election (and historically the base of the original Houston-based iteration of the 7th district from 1966 until the 2022 redistricting), is based in west Houston and northwest Harris County, including all or parts of the west Houston neighborhoods of River Oaks, Tanglewood, Memorial City, Spring Branch and the Energy Corridor, as well as the communities of Jersey Village, Copperfield, Cypress, Champion Forest, Klein and Tomball in northwest Harris County.

The incumbent is Republican Wesley Hunt, who was re-elected with 62.9% of the vote in 2024 and ran for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in 2026.[22] Donald Trump won the district in 2024 with 59.5% of the vote, as did Ted Cruz (who resides in the district) with 56.6% of the vote.

Republican primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Jon Bonck, mortgage broker (previously ran in the 2nd district)[44]

Eliminated in runoff

[edit]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Declined

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Jon Bonck

Executive branch officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Organizations

Shelley deZevallos

U.S. representatives

Larry Rubin

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jon Bonck (R) $1,075,937[dl] $679,301 $396,635
Shelly deZevallos (R) $765,098[dm] $421,910 $343,187
Barrett McNabb (R) $348,059[dn] $325,625 $22,433
Carmen Maria Montiel (R) $105,265 $90,093 $15,614
Michael Pratt (R) $371,358[do] $68,294 $303,063
Larry Rubin (R) $349,646[dp] $272,196 $77,449
Jeff Yuna (R) $85,738[dq] $32,523 $4,008
Source: Federal Election Commission[443]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
John
Bonck
Shelley
deZavallos
Michael
Pratt
Larry
Rubin
Other Undecided
University of Houston[123] February 03–10, 2026 800 (LV) ± 3.5% 22% 10% 8% 3% 7%[dr] 50%

Results

[edit]
Republican primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jon Bonck 28,762 46.8
Republican Shelly deZevallos 11,575 18.8
Republican Michael Pratt 6,561 10.7
Republican Larry Rubin 4,316 7.0
Republican Barrett McNabb 3,929 6.4
Republican Jennifer Sundt 1,492 2.4
Republican Carmen María Montiel 1,455 2.4
Republican Jeff Yuna 1,422 2.3
Republican Craig Goralski 967 1.6
Republican Avery Ayers 930 1.5
Total votes 61,409 100.0

Runoff polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
John
Bonck
Shelley
deZavallos
Undecided
Pulse Decision Science[444][L] May 5–6, 2026 402 (LV) ± 4.9% 47% 16% 37%

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jon Bonck 31,855 64.8
Republican Shelly deZevallos 17,340 35.3
Total votes 49,195 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Melissa McDonough, realtor and nominee for this district in 2024[23]

Eliminated in primary

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Marvalette Hunter

U.S. representatives

Labor unions

Melissa McDonough

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of February 11, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Theresa Courts (D) $4,435 $4,241 $96
Marvalette Hunter (D) $128,389 $98,446 $29,942
Melissa McDonough (D) $41,932 $29,009 $35,623
Source: Federal Election Commission[443]

Results

[edit]
Democratic primary results
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Melissa McDonough 27,073 51.6
Democratic Marvalette Hunter 14,828 28.3
Democratic Theresa Courts 10,517 20.1
Total votes 52,418 100.0

Independents and third-party candidates

[edit]

Filed paperwork

[edit]
  • Alex McMenemy (Green)[447]
  • William Taggart (Independent), engineer and author[448]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[37] Solid R February 6, 2025
Inside Elections[38] Solid R March 7, 2025
Sabato's Crystal Ball[39] Safe R September 18, 2025
Race to the WH[40] Likely R October 11, 2025

Fundraising

[edit]
Campaign finance reports as of April 26, 2026
Candidate Raised Spent Cash on hand
Jon Bonck (R) $1,524,375 $1,224,750 $299,625
Melissa McDonough (D) $47,898 $33,295 $37,303
Source: Federal Election Commission[41]

Results

[edit]
2026 Texas's 38th congressional district election results
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jon Bonck
Democratic Melissa McDonough
Total votes 100

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  2. ^ ±3.35% adjusted for weighting
  3. ^ $13,484 of this total was self-funded Ray
  4. ^ $13,000 of this total was self-funded by Toth
  5. ^ Manning and Zolari with 2%; Plumb with 1%
  6. ^ $1,718,000 of this total was self-funded by Finnie
  7. ^ $109 of this total was self-funded by Newgent
  8. ^ $75,000 of this total was self-funded by Hunt
  9. ^ $8,609 of this total was self-funded by Pearce
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Did not file pre-primary report
  11. ^ $10,000 of this total was self-funded by Torres
  12. ^ $3,125 of this total was self-funded by Minton
  13. ^ $3,610 of this total was self-funded by Hale
  14. ^ $134,294 of this total was self-funded by Kalai
  15. ^ $500,000 of this total was self-funded by Steinmann
  16. ^ $1,500 of this total was self-funded by Tran
  17. ^ $500 of this total was self-funded by Gutierrez
  18. ^ $53,125 of this total was self-funded by Virts
  19. ^
  20. ^ $100,000 of this total was self-funded by Cain.
  21. ^ $300,000 of this total was self-funded by Mims.
  22. ^ $12,000 of this total was self-funded by Sarmiento.
  23. ^ $153,932 of this total was self-funded by Stockman.
  24. ^ $5,200 of this total was self-funded by Thain.
  25. ^ Stovall with 3%; Others with 6%
  26. ^ Stovall with 4%; "Other Four Candidates Combined" with 3%
  27. ^ Stovall with 3%; "Other Four Candidates Combined" with 14%
  28. ^ Stovall with 3%; Butler and Van Emmert with 1%; Wilmer with 0%
  29. ^ $175,000 of this total was self-funded by Altman
  30. ^ $428,750 of this total was self-funded by Bius
  31. ^ $500,000 of this total was self-funded by Gober
  32. ^ $4,587 of this total was self-funded by Hawbraker
  33. ^ $9,911 of this total was self-funded by Karlsruher
  34. ^ $100,000 of this total was self-funded by King
  35. ^ $106,000 of this total was self-funded by MacLeod
  36. ^ $17,000 of this total was self-funded by Sharon
  37. ^ $5,674 of this total was self-funded by Story
  38. ^ $3,125 of this total was self-funded by Reyna
  39. ^ Has not filed since Q1 2025
  40. ^ $10,784 of this total was self-funded by Vogiatzis
  41. ^ $824,000 of this total was self-funded by Cuellar
  42. ^ $5,581 of this total was self-funded by Cabildo
  43. ^ $2,887 of this total was self-funded by Montanez Berrios
  44. ^ $9,786 of this total was self-funded by Mitchell
  45. ^ $5,000 of this total was self-funded by Shepard
  46. ^ $100,000 of this total was self-funded by Green
  47. ^ Gretchen Brown with 1%
  48. ^ Gretchen Brown with 0%
  49. ^ If Menefee wins the special election
  50. ^ $100,000 of this total was self-funded by Enriquez
  51. ^ $100,000 of this total was self-funded by May
  52. ^ $320,000 of this total was self-funded by Smith
  53. ^ Corley with 2%; May and Zink with 1%; Barbee and Adams with 0%
  54. ^ $15,135 of this total was self-funded by Baez
  55. ^ $260,000 of this total was self-funded by Cahill
  56. ^ $36,152 of this total was self-funded by Enriquez
  57. ^ $130,000 of this total was self-funded by Rojas
  58. ^ $2,750,000 of this total was self-funded by Teixeira
  59. ^ $224,891 of this total was self-funded by Wheeler
  60. ^ Daniel Betts, Jacques DuBose, Zeke Enriquez, Weston Martinez, Paul Rojas, Kyle Sinclair, Heather Tessmer, and Peggy Wardlaw with a combined 6%
  61. ^ $1,417 of this total was self-funded by Hook
  62. ^ $2,750 of this total was self-funded by Vanburg
  63. ^ $15,000 of this total was self-funded by Clark
  64. ^ $48,050 of this total was self-funded by Canseco
  65. ^ $100,000 of this total was self-funded by Herrera
  66. ^ Barton and Canseco with 4%
  67. ^ $20,000 of this total was self-funded by Enck
  68. ^ Has not filed since Q2 2025
  69. ^ $354,400 of this total was self-funded by Limon
  70. ^ $7,392 of this total was self-funded by Stout
  71. ^ $175,867 of this total was self-funded by Buchwald
  72. ^ $60,170 of this total was self-funded by Ware
  73. ^ $30,000 of this total was self-funded by Marks
  74. ^ $5,000 of this total was self-funded by Lineberger
  75. ^ $41,067 of this total was self-funded by Hatley
  76. ^ $238,000 of this total was self-funded by Cuellar
  77. ^ $56,906 of this total was self-funded by Villarreal
  78. ^ County executive
  79. ^ $100,000 of this total was self-funded by Johnson
  80. ^ $2,010 of this total was self-funded by Mallory Caraway
  81. ^ $3,125 of this total was self-funded by LaBruce
  82. ^ $700 of this total was self-funded by Daniels
  83. ^ $40,000 of this total was self-funded by Heise
  84. ^ $200 of this total was self-funded by Jackson
  85. ^ $25,100 of this total was self-funded by Berry
  86. ^ $55,000 of this total was self-funded by Garapati
  87. ^ $110,000 of this total was self-funded by Hamden
  88. ^ $5,331 of this total was self-funded by Lossa
  89. ^ $156,100 of this total was self-funded by Offer
  90. ^ $32,800 of this total was self-funded by Early
  91. ^ $155,855 of this total was self-funded by Whitlow
  92. ^ $1,504,000 of this total was self-funded by Binkley
  93. ^ $1,902,663 of this total was self-funded by Bondar
  94. ^ $33,000 of this total was self-funded by Carrasco
  95. ^ $63,000 of this total was self-funded by Day
  96. ^ $22,286 of this total was self-funded by Montanez
  97. ^ $3,125 of this total was self-funded by Vaziri
  98. ^ $207,000 of this total was self-funded by Yarbrough
  99. ^ $100 of this total was self-funded by Schwab
  100. ^ $90,363 of this total was self-funded by Allen
  101. ^ $487,500 of this total was self-funded by Flores
  102. ^ Morales with 4%; Allen with 2%; Cortez with 1%
  103. ^ Initially endorsed Galindo in the runoff, before rescinding his support in May 2026.[398][399]
  104. ^ $30,000 of this total was self-funded by Masterson-Moyes
  105. ^ $20,000 of this total was self-funded by Adams
  106. ^ $12,000 of this total was self-funded by Cortez
  107. ^ $50,000 of this total was self-funded by De La Cruz
  108. ^ $240,000 of this total was self-funded by Furman
  109. ^ $185,282 of this total was self-funded by Krause
  110. ^ $32,000 of this total was self-funded by Lujan
  111. ^ $25,375 of this total was self-funded by Wright
  112. ^ $3,125 of this total was self-funded by Hart
  113. ^ $200,000 of this total was self-funded by Rogers
  114. ^ $250 of this total was self-funded by Gary
  115. ^ $2,000 of this total was self-funded by Malzahn
  116. ^ $330,000 of this total was self-funded by Bonck
  117. ^ $350,000 of this total was self-funded by deZevallos
  118. ^ $225,100 of this total was self-funded by McNabb
  119. ^ $280,000 of this total was self-funded by Pratt
  120. ^ $164,000 of this total was self-funded by Pratt
  121. ^ $72,480 of this total was self-funded by Yuna
  122. ^ Montiel with 3%; Others with 4%

Partisan clients

  1. ^ Poll sponsored by Crenshaw's campaign
  2. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Club for Growth, which has endorsed Mealer's campaign
  3. ^ Poll sponsored by Cain's campaign
  4. ^ Poll sponsored by Pulido's campaign
  5. ^ a b c Poll sponsored by House Majority PAC, which is focused on electing Democrats to the U.S. House of Representatives
  6. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Menefee's campaign
  7. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Sell's campaign
  8. ^ Poll sponsored by Teixeira's campaign
  9. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Herrera's campaign
  10. ^ Poll sponsored by Allred's campaign
  11. ^ a b Poll commissioned by the National Republican Congressional Committee
  12. ^ Poll sponsored by the Club for Growth, which supports Bonck

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2026 State Primary Election Dates". NCSL. May 9, 2025. Retrieved August 5, 2025.
  2. ^ "White House Pushes Texas to Redistrict, Hoping to Blunt Democratic Gains". The New York Times. June 9, 2025.
  3. ^ "Governor Abbott Announces Special Session Agenda".
  4. ^ Oren Oppenheim; Monica Madden; Brittany Shepherd; Ivan Pereira (August 21, 2025). "Texas House passes new GOP-friendly congressional maps". ABC News – via MSN.
  5. ^ Corasaniti, Nick; Goodman, J. David (November 18, 2025). "Federal Court Blocks Texas' Republican-Friendly Congressional Map". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 18, 2025.
  6. ^ Klibanoff, Eleanor (November 21, 2025). "Supreme Court temporarily restores Texas' new congressional map". Texas Tribune. Retrieved November 21, 2025.
  7. ^ Walsh, Joe (November 21, 2025). "Supreme Court halts ruling that tossed out Texas' House maps — for now". CBS News. Retrieved November 21, 2025.
  8. ^ Hurley, Lawrence (December 4, 2025). "Supreme Court allows Texas to use new congressional district map drawn to favor Republicans". NBC News. Retrieved December 4, 2025.
  9. ^ Fink, Jack (December 8, 2025). "Jasmine Crockett launches campaign for Texas Democratic Senate primary after Colin Allred drops out". CBS News. CBS. Retrieved December 8, 2025.
  10. ^ a b c Birenbaum, Gabby (December 15, 2025). "Rep. Marc Veasey drops bid for Tarrant County judge". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
  11. ^ Venkat, Surina (December 5, 2025). "Lloyd Doggett won't seek reelection in light of Supreme Court's Texas redistricting ruling". The Hill. Retrieved December 5, 2025.
  12. ^ Mueller, Julia (September 11, 2025). "Texas GOP Rep. Morgan Luttrell not seeking reelection". The Hill. Retrieved September 11, 2025.
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