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2020 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas

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2020 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas

← 2018 November 3, 2020 2022 →

All 36 Texas seats to the United States House of Representatives
  Majority party Minority party
 
Party Republican Democratic
Last election 23 13
Seats won 23 13
Seat change Steady Steady
Popular vote 5,926,712 4,896,383
Percentage 53.43% 44.14%
Swing Increase 3.03% Decrease 2.86%

The 2020 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas were held on November 3, 2020, to elect the 36 U.S. representatives from the state of Texas, one from each of the state's 36 congressional districts. The elections coincided with the 2020 U.S. presidential election, as well as other elections to the House of Representatives, elections to the U.S. Senate and various state and local elections. Primaries were held on March 3 and run-offs were held on July 14.

During the election cycle, a number of House races were considered vulnerable by Democrats and polls. However, in the wake of the election, Republicans were able to retain control over all of those seats. Democratic-held 15th district also became unexpectedly competitive, with incumbent representative Vicente Gonzalez attaining a narrow win over the Republican challenger. Republican wins were attributed to President Donald Trump appearing on the ballot and his unexpectedly strong support from Latino voters.[1][2][3]

Ballot litigation

[edit]

Some Green Party candidates were removed from the ballot due to a failure to pay filing fees. However, in September 2020, the Texas Supreme Court rejected a Republican attempt to remove 44 Libertarian Party candidates from the November 2020 general election ballot because they failed to pay filing fees. The court ruled that the Republicans had missed the state Election Code's deadline to raise such a challenge.[4]

Overview

[edit]

Statewide

[edit]
Party Candidates Votes Seats
No. % No. +/– %
Republican 36 5,926,712 53.43% 23 Steady 63.9%
Democratic 36 4,896,383 44.14% 13 Steady 36.1%
Libertarian 32 222,388 2.00% 0 Steady 0.0%
Independent 7 41,253 0.37% 0 Steady 0.0%
Green 2 5,135 0.05% 0 Steady 0.0%
Write-in 2 1,453 0.01% 0 Steady 0.0%
Total 115 11,093,324 100% 36 Steady 100%
Popular vote
Republican
53.43%
Democratic
44.14%
Libertarian
2.00%
Independent
0.37%
Green
0.05%
Write-in
0.01%
House seats
Republican
63.9%
Democratic
36.1%

District

[edit]

Results of the 2020 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas by district:[5]

District Republican Democratic Others Total Result
Votes % Votes % Votes % Votes %
District 1 219,726 72.58% 83,016 27.42% 0 0.00% 302,742 100.00% Republican hold
District 2 192,828 55.61% 148,374 42.79% 5,524 1.59% 346,726 100.00% Republican hold
District 3 230,512 55.07% 179,458 42.87% 8,621 2.06% 418,591 100.00% Republican hold
District 4 253,837 75.14% 76,236 22.57% 7,640 2.26% 337,803 100.00% Republican hold
District 5 173,836 61.99% 100,743 35.93% 5,834 2.08% 280,413 100.00% Republican hold
District 6 179,507 52.80% 149,530 43.98% 10,955 3.22% 339,992 100.00% Republican hold
District 7 149,054 47.45% 159,529 50.79% 5,542 1.76% 314,125 100.00% Democratic hold
District 8 277,327 72.51% 97,409 25.47% 7,735 2.02% 382,471 100.00% Republican hold
District 9 49,575 21.64% 172,938 75.48% 6,594 2.88% 229,107 100.00% Democratic hold
District 10 217,216 52.48% 187,686 45.35% 8,992 2.17% 413,894 100.00% Republican hold
District 11 232,568 79.71% 53,394 18.30% 5,811 1.99% 291,773 100.00% Republican hold
District 12 233,853 63.72% 121,250 33.04% 11,918 3.25% 367,021 100.00% Republican hold
District 13 217,124 79.38% 50,477 18.46% 5,907 2.16% 273,508 100.00% Republican hold
District 14 190,541 61.64% 118,574 38.36% 0 0.00% 309,115 100.00% Republican hold
District 15 109,017 47.62% 115,605 50.50% 4,295 1.88% 228,917 100.00% Democratic hold
District 16 84,006 35.28% 154,108 64.72% 0 0.00% 238,114 100.00% Democratic hold
District 17 171,390 55.85% 125,565 40.92% 9,918 3.23% 306,873 100.00% Republican hold
District 18 58,033 23.50% 180,952 73.29% 7,910 3.20% 246,895 100.00% Democratic hold
District 19 198,198 74.78% 60,583 22.86% 6,271 2.37% 265,052 100.00% Republican hold
District 20 89,628 33.11% 175,078 64.67% 6,017 2.22% 270,723 100.00% Democratic hold
District 21 235,740 51.95% 205,780 45.35% 12,230 2.70% 453,750 100.00% Republican hold
District 22 210,259 51.53% 181,998 44.60% 15,791 3.87% 408,048 100.00% Republican hold
District 23 149,395 50.56% 137,693 46.60% 8,369 2.83% 295,457 100.00% Republican hold
District 24 167,910 48.81% 163,326 47.48% 12,785 3.72% 344,021 100.00% Republican hold
District 25 220,088 55.93% 165,697 42.11% 7,738 1.97% 393,523 100.00% Republican hold
District 26 261,963 60.61% 161,009 37.25% 9,243 2.14% 432,215 100.00% Republican hold
District 27 172,305 63.06% 95,446 34.93% 5,482 2.01% 273,253 100.00% Republican hold
District 28 91,925 38.98% 137,494 58.30% 6,425 2.72% 235,844 100.00% Democratic hold
District 29 42,840 27.38% 111,305 71.13% 2,328 1.49% 156,473 100.00% Democratic hold
District 30 48,685 18.41% 204,928 77.49% 10,851 4.10% 264,464 100.00% Democratic hold
District 31 212,695 53.43% 176,293 44.29% 9,069 2.28% 398,057 100.00% Republican hold
District 32 157,867 45.93% 178,542 51.95% 7,278 2.12% 343,687 100.00% Democratic hold
District 33 39,638 25.15% 105,317 66.82% 12,651 8.03% 157,606 100.00% Democratic hold
District 34 84,119 41.85% 111,439 55.43% 5,457 2.72% 201,027 100.00% Democratic hold
District 35 80,795 29.95% 176,373 65.37% 12,629 4.68% 269,797 100.00% Democratic hold
District 36 222,712 73.61% 73,148 24.18% 6,419 2.12% 302,549 100.00% Republican hold
Total 5,926,712 53.42% 4,896,293 44.14% 270,229 2.44% 11,093,626 100.00%

District 1

[edit]
2020 Texas's 1st congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Louie Gohmert Hank Gilbert
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 219,726 83,016
Percentage 72.6% 27.4%

U.S. Representative before election

Louie Gohmert
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Louie Gohmert
Republican

The 1st district encompasses Deep East Texas, taking in Tyler, Lufkin, Nacogdoches, Longview, and Marshall. The incumbent was Republican Louie Gohmert, who was re-elected with 72.3% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Johnathan Davidson, data architect[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Louie Gohmert (incumbent) 83,887 89.7
Republican Johnathan Davidson 9,659 10.3
Total votes 93,546 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Hank Gilbert, rancher and businessman[10]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Hank Gilbert 25,037 100.0
Total votes 25,037 100.0

Endorsements

[edit]
Hank Gilbert (D)

Labor unions

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 16, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R July 21, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 1st congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Louie Gohmert (incumbent) 219,726 72.6
Democratic Hank Gilbert 83,016 27.4
Total votes 302,742 100.0
Republican hold

District 2

[edit]
2020 Texas's 2nd congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Dan Crenshaw Sima Ladjevardian
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 192,828 148,374
Percentage 55.6% 42.8%

County results
Crenshaw:      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Dan Crenshaw
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Dan Crenshaw
Republican

The 2nd district is based in northern and western Houston. The incumbent was Republican Dan Crenshaw, who was elected with 52.8% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dan Crenshaw (incumbent) 53,938 100.0
Total votes 53,938 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Withdrew before runoff
[edit]
  • Elisa Cardnell, U.S. Navy veteran and science teacher[24]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sima Ladjevardian 26,536 47.6
Democratic Elisa Cardnell 17,279 31.0
Democratic Travis Olsen 11,881 21.4
Total votes 55,696 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]

No runoff was held after runoff-advanced candidate Elisa Cardnell suspended her campaign and supported Ladjevardian.[26]

Endorsements

[edit]
Dan Crenshaw (R)

Publications

Sima Ladjevardian (D)

U.S. presidents

U.S. vice presidents

Federal officials

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Likely R October 21, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 25, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R October 28, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Likely R October 20, 2020
Politico[16] Lean R October 11, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Likely R April 29, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R October 25, 2020
270toWin[19] Likely R October 21, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 2nd congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Dan Crenshaw (incumbent) 192,828 55.6
Democratic Sima Ladjevardian 148,374 42.8
Libertarian Elliott Scheirman 5,524 1.6
Total votes 346,726 100.0
Republican hold

District 3

[edit]
2020 Texas's 3rd congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Van Taylor Lulu Seikaly
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 230,512 179,458
Percentage 55.1% 42.9%

U.S. Representative before election

Van Taylor
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Van Taylor
Republican

The 3rd district is based in the suburbs north and northeast of Dallas, encompassing a large portion of Collin County including McKinney, Plano, and Frisco, as well as Collin County's share of Dallas itself. The incumbent was Republican Van Taylor, who was elected with 54.2% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Van Taylor (incumbent) 53,938 100.0
Total votes 53,938 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Lulu Seikaly, attorney[37]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • Sean McCaffity, trial attorney[38]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Tanner Do, activist and insurance adjuster[8]
Withdrawn
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lulu Seikaly 28,250 44.6
Democratic Sean McCaffity 27,736 43.7
Democratic Tanner Do 7,433 11.7
Total votes 63,419 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lulu Seikaly 20,617 60.7
Democratic Sean McCaffity 13,339 39.3
Total votes 33,956 100.0

Libertarian primary

[edit]

Nominee

[edit]
  • Christopher Claytor

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Lean R November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Likely R November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Lean R November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Likely R November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean R November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Likely R November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Lean R November 2, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Van
Taylor (R)
Lulu
Seikaly (D)
Christopher
Claytor (L)
Undecided
DCCC Targeting & Analytics Department (D)[41][A] October 19–22, 2020 432 (LV) ± 4.2% 42% 44% 8% 6%[b]
Global Strategy Group (D)[42][B] September 10–15, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 44% 43%
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[43][C] August 1–5, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.9% 48% 35% 8% 9%
Global Strategy Group (D)[44][D] July 17–20, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 43% 37% 5% 5%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Republican and Generic Democrat

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Global Strategy Group (D)[45][D] July 17–20, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 45% 42%

Results

[edit]
Texas's 3rd congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Van Taylor (incumbent) 230,512 55.1
Democratic Lulu Seikaly 179,458 42.9
Libertarian Christopher Claytor 8,621 2.1
Total votes 418,591 100.0
Republican hold

District 4

[edit]
2020 Texas's 4th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Pat Fallon Russell Foster
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 253,837 76,326
Percentage 75.1% 22.6%

U.S. Representative before election

John Ratcliffe
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Pat Fallon
Republican

The 4th district encompasses Northeastern Texas taking in counties along the Red River and spreading to the parts of the northeastern exurbs of the Dallas–Fort Worth metro area. The incumbent was Republican John Ratcliffe, who was elected with 75.7% of the vote in 2018.[6]

President Trump nominated Ratcliffe to succeed Dan Coats as the Director of National Intelligence in February 2020. The Senate confirmed his nomination in May, and Ratcliffe resigned from the House.[46] Republicans selected a new nominee on August 8.[47]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated at convention
[edit]

Withdrawn

[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Ratcliffe (incumbent) 92,373 100.0
Total votes 92,373 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Russell Foster, IT technician[54]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Russell Foster 24,970 100.0
Total votes 24,970 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 4th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pat Fallon 253,837 75.1
Democratic Russell Foster 76,326 22.6
Libertarian Lou Antonelli 6,334 1.9
Independent Tracy Jones (write-in) 1,306 0.4
Total votes 337,803 100.0
Republican hold

District 5

[edit]
2020 Texas's 5th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Lance Gooden Carolyn Salter
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 173,836 100,743
Percentage 62.0% 35.9%

U.S. Representative before election

Lance Gooden
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Lance Gooden
Republican

The 5th district takes in the eastern edge of Dallas, as well as the surrounding rural areas. The incumbent was Republican Lance Gooden, who was elected with 62.3% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Don Hill, U.S. Army veteran[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Lance Gooden (incumbent) 57,253 83.4
Republican Don Hill 11,372 16.6
Total votes 68,625 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carolyn Salter 34,641 100.0
Total votes 34,641 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 5th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Lance Gooden (incumbent) 173,836 62.0
Democratic Carolyn Salter 100,743 35.9
Libertarian Kevin Hale 5,834 2.1
Total votes 280,413 100.0
Republican hold

District 6

[edit]
2020 Texas's 6th congressional district election

 
Nominee Ron Wright Stephen Daniel
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 179,507 149,530
Percentage 52.8% 44.0%

County results
Wright:      60–70%      70–80%
Daniel:      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Ron Wright
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Ron Wright
Republican

The 6th district takes in parts of Arlington and rural areas south of Dallas including Ellis County. The incumbent was Republican Ron Wright, who was elected with 53.1% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ron Wright (incumbent) 55,759 100.0
Total votes 55,759 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Stephen Daniel, attorney[57]

Endorsements

[edit]
Stephen Daniel

State officials

Local officials

Organizations

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Stephen Daniel 47,996 100.0
Total votes 47,996 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Likely R November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Likely R November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Likely R November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Likely R November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean R November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Likely R November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Likely R November 2, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Ron
Wright (R)
Stephen
Daniel (D)
Undecided
GBAO Strategies (D)[61][E] October 13–17, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 45% 41%
DCCC Targeting & Analytics (D)[62][F] June 24–28, 2020 376 (LV) ± 4.8% 45% 41% 15%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Republican and Generic Democrat

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Other
GBAO Strategies/Stephen Daniel[63][E] October 13–17, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 46% 44%
DCCC[64][F] June 24–28, 2020 376 (LV) 45% 46% 9%[c]

Results

[edit]
Texas's 6th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ron Wright (incumbent) 179,507 52.8
Democratic Stephen Daniel 149,530 44.0
Libertarian Melanie Black 10,955 3.2
Total votes 339,992 100.0
Republican hold

District 7

[edit]
2020 Texas's 7th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Lizzie Fletcher Wesley Hunt
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 159,529 149,054
Percentage 50.8% 47.4%

County results
Fletcher:      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Lizzie Fletcher
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Lizzie Fletcher
Democratic

The 7th district covers western Houston and its suburbs. The incumbent was Democrat Lizzie Fletcher, who flipped the district and was elected with 52.5% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lizzie Fletcher (incumbent) 55,253 100.0
Total votes 55,253 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Wesley Hunt, U.S. Army veteran[66]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Declined
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Wesley Hunt 28,060 61.0
Republican Cindy Siegel 12,497 27.2
Republican Maria Espinoza 2,716 5.9
Republican Kyle Preston 1,363 3.0
Republican Jim Noteware 937 2.0
Republican Laique Rehman 424 0.9
Total votes 45,997 100.0

General election

[edit]

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Lizzie
Pannill Fletcher (D)
Wesley
Hunt (R)
Shawn
Kelly (L)
Undecided
GS Strategy Group (R)[71][G] October 13–15, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 46% 44% 3% 7%
Remington Research Group (R)[72][G] March 4–5, 2020 1,044 (LV) ± 3% 45% 45% 10%
TargetPoint Consulting (R)[73][H] August 10–11, 2019 336 (LV) ± 5.3% 43% 45%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Opponent

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Lizzie
Pannill Fletcher (D)
Generic Opponent Undecided
Remington Research Group (R)[72] Mar 4–5, 2020 1,044 (LV) ± 3% 42% 41%[d] 17%

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Likely D November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Lean D November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Likely D November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Likely D November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean D November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Likely D November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Lean D November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Likely D November 2, 2020

Endorsements

[edit]
Wesley Hunt (R)

Federal officials

  • Ted Cruz, U.S. senator from Texas; former 2016 presidential candidate[85]

Individuals

Organizations

Results

[edit]
Texas's 7th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lizzie Fletcher (incumbent) 159,529 50.8
Republican Wesley Hunt 149,054 47.4
Libertarian Shawn Kelly 5,542 1.8
Total votes 314,125 100.0
Democratic hold

District 8

[edit]
2020 Texas's 8th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Kevin Brady Elizabeth Hernandez
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 277,327 97,409
Percentage 72.5% 25.5%

U.S. Representative before election

Kevin Brady
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Kevin Brady
Republican

The 8th district encompasses the suburbs and exurbs north of Houston, taking in Spring, The Woodlands, Conroe, and Huntsville. The incumbent was Republican Kevin Brady, who was re-elected with 73.4% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Melissa Esparza-Mathis, U.S. Army veteran[89]
  • Kirk Osborn, consultant[8]

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 8th congressional district Republican primary results by county
Brady
  •   Brady—80–90%
  •   Brady—70–80%
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Brady (incumbent) 75,044 80.7
Republican Kirk Osborn 15,048 16.2
Republican Melissa Esparza-Mathis 2,860 3.1
Total votes 92,952 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Elizabeth Hernandez, accounts payable associate[90]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Laura Jones, realtor[90]

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 8th congressional district Democratic primary results by county
Hernandez
  •   Hernandez—60–70%
  •   Hernandez—50–60%
Jones
  •   Jones—50–60%
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Elizabeth Hernandez 18,660 59.8
Democratic Laura Jones 12,519 40.2
Total votes 31,179 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 8th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kevin Brady (incumbent) 277,327 72.5
Democratic Elizabeth Hernandez 97,409 25.5
Libertarian Chris Duncan 7,735 2.0
Total votes 382,471 100.0
Republican hold

District 9

[edit]
2020 Texas's 9th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Al Green Johnny Teague
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 172,938 49,575
Percentage 75.5% 21.6%

U.S. Representative before election

Al Green
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Al Green
Democratic

The 9th district encompasses southwestern Houston. The incumbent was Democrat Al Green, who was re-elected with 89.1% of the vote in 2018, without major-party opposition.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Melissa Wilson-Williams, real estate broker[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Al Green (incumbent) 48,387 83.6
Democratic Melissa Wilson-Williams 9,511 16.4
Total votes 57,898 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Johnny Teague, rancher[8]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Julian Martinez, auto repairman[8]
  • Jon Menefee, IT consultant[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Johnny Teague 6,149 58.7
Republican Jon Menefee 2,519 24.0
Republican Julian Martinez 1,809 17.3
Total votes 10,477 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 9th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Al Green (incumbent) 172,938 75.5
Republican Johnny Teague 49,575 21.6
Libertarian Joe Sosa 6,594 2.9
Total votes 229,107 100.0
Democratic hold

District 10

[edit]
2020 Texas's 10th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Michael McCaul Mike Siegel
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 217,216 187,686
Percentage 52.5% 45.3%

County results
McCaul:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Siegel:      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

Michael McCaul
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Michael McCaul
Republican

Early voter in Harris County, Texas

The 10th district stretches from northwest Harris County to northern Austin and Pflugerville. The incumbent was Republican Michael McCaul, who was re-elected in 2018 with 51.1% of the vote to Democrat Mike Siegel's 47.8%,[6] the closest contest McCaul had faced.[91]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael McCaul (incumbent) 60,323 100.0
Total votes 60,323 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • Pritesh Gandhi, physician
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Shannon Hutcheson, attorney

Endorsements

[edit]
Pritesh Gandhi

Federal officials

  • Kamala Harris, U.S. senator from California and 2020 Democratic presidential candidate[104]

Newspapers

Organizations

Shannon Hutcheson (eliminated)

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mike Siegel 35,651 44.0
Democratic Pritesh Gandhi 26,818 33.1
Democratic Shannon Hutcheson 18,578 22.9
Total votes 81,047 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Mike Siegel 26,799 54.2
Democratic Pritesh Gandhi 22,629 45.8
Total votes 49,428 100.0

General election

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Michael McCaul (R)
Mike Siegel (D)

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Organizations

Unions

Newspapers and publications

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Michael
McCaul (R)
Mike
Siegel (D)
Roy
Eriksen (L)
Undecided
GBAO Strategies (D)[123][I] October 8–11, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 47% 45%
GBAO Strategies (D)[124][I] September 21–24, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 45% 43% 6%
RMG Research[125] July 28 – August 3, 2020 500 (RV) ± 4.5% 46% 39% 15%
Hypothetical polling

with Shannon Hutcheson

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Michael
McCaul (R)
Shannon
Hutcheson (D)
Undecided
Remington Research (R)[126][H] November 6–7, 2019 848 (LV) ± 3.4% 50% 41% 9%

with Generic Democrat and Generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[127][J] September 19–21, 2019 523 (LV) – 656 (LV) ± 3.8% – ± 4.2% 49% 46%

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Tossup November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Likely R November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Lean R November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Lean R November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean R November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Lean R November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Tossup November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Lean R November 2, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 10th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael McCaul (incumbent) 217,216 52.5
Democratic Mike Siegel 187,686 45.3
Libertarian Roy Eriksen 8,992 2.2
Total votes 413,894 100.0
Republican hold

District 11

[edit]
2020 Texas's 11th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee August Pfluger Jon Mark Hogg
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 232,568 53,394
Percentage 79.7% 18.3%

U.S. Representative before election

Mike Conaway
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

August Pfluger
Republican

The 11th district is based in midwestern Texas, including Lamesa, Midland, Odessa, San Angelo, Granbury, and Brownwood. The incumbent was Republican Mike Conaway, who was re-elected with 80.1% of the vote in 2018,[6] subsequently announced he would not seek re-election on July 31, 2019.[128]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Gene Barber, U.S. Army veteran[8]
  • Brandon Batch, businessman[130]
  • Jamie Berryhill, businessman and founder of Mission Messiah Women & Children's Program[131]
  • Cynthia J. Breyman, banker[90]
  • J.D. Faircloth, former mayor of Midland[132]
  • Casey Gray, U.S. Navy veteran[8]
  • J. Ross Lacy, Midland city councilman[133]
  • Ned Luscombe, registered nurse[8]
  • Robert Tucker, retiree[8]
  • Wesley Virdell, Air Force veteran, former trucking company owner[134]
Declined
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican August Pfluger 56,093 52.2
Republican Brandon Batch 16,224 15.1
Republican Wesley W. Virdell 7,672 7.1
Republican Jamie Berryhill 7,496 7.0
Republican J. Ross Lacy 4,785 4.4
Republican J.D. Faircloth 4,257 4.0
Republican Casey Gray 4,064 3.8
Republican Robert Tucker 3,137 2.9
Republican Ned Luscombe 2,066 1.9
Republican Gene Barber 1,641 1.5
Total votes 107,435 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Jon Mark Hogg, lawyer[137]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jon Mark Hogg 16,644 100.0
Total votes 16,644 100.0

Third parties

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]
  • Wacey Alpha Cody (Libertarian), competitive horse rider[139]

Endorsements

[edit]
August Pfluger (R)

U.S. presidents

U.S. federal executive officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

State and local officials

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 11th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican August Pfluger 232,568 79.7
Democratic Jon Mark Hogg 53,394 18.3
Libertarian Wacey Alpha Cody 5,811 2.0
Total votes 291,773 100.0
Republican hold

District 12

[edit]
2020 Texas's 12th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Kay Granger Lisa Welch
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 233,853 121,250
Percentage 63.7% 33.0%

U.S. Representative before election

Kay Granger
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Kay Granger
Republican

The 12th district is located in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, and takes in Parker County and western Tarrant County, including parts of Fort Worth and its inner suburbs of North Richland Hills, Saginaw, and Haltom City. The incumbent was Republican Kay Granger, who was re-elected with 64.3% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Endorsements
[edit]
Chris Putnam

Organizations

Polling
[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Kay
Granger
Chris
Putnam
Undecided
Remington Research Group (R)[145][H] December 17–18, 2019 686 (LV) ± 3.7% 62% 16% 22%

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kay Granger (incumbent) 43,240 58.0
Republican Chris Putnam 31,420 42.0
Total votes 74,840 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Lisa Welch, college professor[146]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Danny Anderson, aircraft assembler[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lisa Welch 36,750 81.1
Democratic Danny Anderson 8,588 18.9
Total votes 45,338 100.0

Third parties

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]
  • Trey Holcomb (Libertarian), conservative activist, educator and former high school football and baseball coach

Endorsements

[edit]
Lisa Welch (D)

Labor unions

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 12th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Kay Granger (incumbent) 233,853 63.7
Democratic Lisa Welch 121,250 33.0
Libertarian Trey Holcomb 11,918 3.3
Total votes 367,021 100.0
Republican hold

District 13

[edit]
2020 Texas's 13th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Ronny Jackson Gus Trujillo
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 217,124 50,477
Percentage 79.4% 18.5%

U.S. Representative before election

Mac Thornberry
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Ronny Jackson
Republican

The 13th district encompasses most of the Texas Panhandle, containing the cities of Amarillo, Gainesville and Wichita Falls. The incumbent was Republican Mac Thornberry, who was re-elected with 81.5% of the vote in 2018.[6] On September 30, 2019, Thornberry announced he would not seek re-election.[150]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • Josh Winegarner, director of governmental relations for the Texas Cattle Feeders Association and former aide to U.S. Senator John Cornyn and former U.S. Senator Phil Gramm[152]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Withdrew
[edit]
  • Kevin McInturff, non-profit worker[164]
Declined
[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Chris Ekstrom (eliminated)

Organizations

Elaine Hays (eliminated)

Organizations

Ronny Jackson

Federal officials

State officials

Organizations

Individuals

Josh Winegarner

Federal officials

State officials

Organizations

Individuals

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 13th congressional district Republican primary results by county
Winegarner
  •   Winegarner—70–80%
  •   Winegarner—60–70%
  •   Winegarner—50–60%
  •   Winegarner—40–50%
  •   Winegarner—30–40%
  •   Winegarner—<30%
Hays
  •   Hays—<30%
Neese
  •   Neese—<30%
Harvey
  •   Harvey—40–50%
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Josh Winegarner 39,130 39.0
Republican Ronny Jackson 20,048 20.0
Republican Chris Ekstrom 15,387 15.3
Republican Elaine Hays 7,701 7.7
Republican Lee Harvey 3,841 3.8
Republican Vance Snider II 3,506 3.5
Republican Mark Neese 2,984 3.0
Republican Matt McArthur 1,816 1.8
Republican Diane Knowlton 1,464 1.5
Republican Richard Herman 915 0.9
Republican Asusena Reséndiz 818 0.8
Republican Jamie Culley 779 0.8
Republican Monique Worthy 748 0.7
Republican Catherine "I Swear" Carr 707 0.7
Republican Jason Foglesong 579 0.6
Total votes 100,423 100.0

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Ronny
Jackson
Josh
Winegarner
Undecided
Fabrizio, Lee & Associates (R)[181][K] June 27–28, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 46% 29%
WPA Intelligence (R)[182][L] June 17–18, 2020 408 (LV) ± 4.9% 49% 41% 10%
WPA Intelligence (R)[182][L] May 11–12, 2020 – (V)[e] 36% 47% 17%

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ronny Jackson 36,684 55.6
Republican Josh Winegarner 29,327 44.4
Total votes 66,011 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Gus Trujillo, office manager[183]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Timothy W. Gassaway, retiree[183]

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 13th congressional district Democratic primary initial round results by county
Trujillo
  •   Trujillo—60–70%
  •   Trujillo—50–60%
  •   Trujillo—40–50%
  •   Trujillo—30–40%
Tie
  •   Trujillo/Sagan tie—30–40%
  •   Trujillo/Sagan tie—40–50%
  •   Trujillo/Sagan tie—50–60%
  •   Trujillo/Gassaway tie—40–50%
Sagan
  •   Sagan—30–40%
  •   Sagan—40–50%
  •   Sagan—60–70%
Gassaway
  •   Gassaway—30–40%
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Gus Trujillo 6,998 42.1
Democratic Greg Sagan 5,773 34.7
Democratic Timothy W. Gassaway 3,854 23.2
Total votes 16,625 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]

Greg Sagan withdrew from the race on March 12, 2020, but remained on the ballot in the runoff.[185]

Democratic primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Gus Trujillo 4,988 66.4
Democratic Greg Sagan 2,529 33.6
Total votes 7,517 100.0

Libertarian primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 13th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Ronny Jackson 217,124 79.4
Democratic Gus Trujillo 50,477 18.5
Libertarian Jack B. Westbrook 5,907 2.1
Total votes 273,508 100.0
Republican hold

District 14

[edit]
2020 Texas's 14th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Randy Weber Adrienne Bell
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 190,541 118,574
Percentage 61.6% 38.4%

U.S. Representative before election

Randy Weber
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Randy Weber
Republican

The 14th district takes in the southern and southeastern region of Greater Houston, including Galveston, Jefferson County and southern Brazoria County. The incumbent was Republican Randy Weber, who was re-elected with 59.2% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Joshua Foxworth, businessman[187]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Randy Weber (incumbent) 51,837 85.4
Republican Joshua Foxworth 8,856 14.6
Total votes 60,693 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Adrienne Bell 26,152 61.8
Democratic Eddie Fisher 4,967 11.7
Democratic Sanjanetta Barnes 4,482 10.6
Democratic Mikal Williams 4,055 9.6
Democratic Robert Thomas 2,640 6.2
Total votes 42,296 100.0

General election

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Adrienne Bell (D)

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 14th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Randy Weber (incumbent) 190,541 61.6
Democratic Adrienne Bell 118,574 38.4
Total votes 309,115 100.0
Republican hold

District 15

[edit]
2020 Texas's 15th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Vicente Gonzalez Monica De La Cruz
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 115,605 109,017
Percentage 50.5% 47.6%

County results
Gonzalez:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
De La Cruz:      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

U.S. Representative before election

Vicente Gonzalez
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Vicente Gonzalez
Democratic

The 15th district stretches from McAllen in the Rio Grande Valley, northward into rural counties in the Greater San Antonio area. The incumbent was Democrat Vicente Gonzalez, who was re-elected with 59.7% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Vicente Gonzalez (incumbent) 44,444 100.0
Total votes 44,444 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Monica de la Cruz-Hernandez, insurance agent[8]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Tim Westley, university instructor and nominee for Texas's 15th congressional district in 2016 and 2018[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Monica De La Cruz 11,338 43.1
Republican Ryan Krause 10,452 39.7
Republican Tim Westley 4,539 17.2
Total votes 26,329 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Monica De La Cruz 7,423 76.0
Republican Ryan Krause 2,350 24.0
Total votes 9,773 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 15th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Vicente Gonzalez (incumbent) 115,605 50.5
Republican Monica De La Cruz 109,017 47.6
Libertarian Ross Lynn Leone 4,295 1.9
Total votes 228,917 100.0
Democratic hold

District 16

[edit]
2020 Texas's 16th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Veronica Escobar Irene Armendariz-Jackson
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 154,108 84,006
Percentage 64.7% 35.3%

U.S. Representative before election

Veronica Escobar
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Veronica Escobar
Democratic

The 16th district is located entirely within El Paso County, taking in El Paso, Horizon City, and Anthony. The incumbent was Democrat Veronica Escobar, who was elected with 68.5% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Veronica Escobar (incumbent) 54,910 100.0
Total votes 54,910 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Irene Armendariz-Jackson, realtor[192]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • Samuel Williams, U.S. Army veteran[192]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Anthony Aguero, videographer[192]
  • Jaime Arriola Jr., nurse[192]
  • Patrick Cigarruista, financial advisor[192]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Samuel Williams 5,097 31.3
Republican Irene Armendariz-Jackson 4,147 25.4
Republican Anthony Aguero 2,184 13.4
Republican Jaime Arriola Jr. 2,115 13.0
Republican Patrick Cigarruista 1,100 6.8
Total votes 16,305 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Irene Armendariz-Jackson 5,170 65.4
Republican Samuel Williams 2,731 34.6
Total votes 7,901 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 16th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Veronica Escobar (incumbent) 154,108 64.7
Republican Irene Armendariz-Jackson 84,006 35.3
Total votes 238,114 100.0
Democratic hold

District 17

[edit]
2020 Texas's 17th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Pete Sessions Rick Kennedy
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 171,390 125,565
Percentage 55.9% 40.9%

County results
Sessions:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Kennedy:      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

Bill Flores
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Pete Sessions
Republican

The 17th district covers parts of suburban north Austin stretching to rural central Texas, including Waco and Bryan-College Station. The incumbent was Republican Bill Flores, who was re-elected with 56.8% of the vote in 2018.[6] On September 4, 2019, Flores announced that he would not be running for re-election in order to spend more time with his family.[193]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • Renée Swann, healthcare executive[195]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Declined
[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Pete Sessions
Renée Swann

Federal officials

State officials

Organizations

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 17th congressional district Republican primary initial round results by county
Sessions
  •   Sessions—50–60%
  •   Sessions—40–50%
  •   Sessions—30–40%
  •   Sessions—<30%
Swann
  •   Swann—30–40%
Hindman
  •   Hindman—<30%
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pete Sessions 21,706 31.6
Republican Renée Swann 13,072 19.0
Republican George W. Hindman 12,405 18.1
Republican Elianor Vessali 6,286 9.2
Republican Scott Bland 4,947 7.2
Republican Trent Sutton 3,662 5.3
Republican Todd Kent 2,367 3.5
Republican Kristen Alamo Rowin 1,183 1.7
Republican Laurie Godfrey McReynolds 1,105 1.6
Republican David Saucedo 975 1.4
Republican Jeff Oppenheim 483 0.7
Republican Ahmad Adnan 477 0.7
Total votes 68,668 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Results by county
  Sessions
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Swann
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Tie
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pete Sessions 18,524 53.5
Republican Renée Swann 16,096 46.5
Total votes 34,620 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • William Foster III, educator and former NASA employee[195]

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 17th congressional district Democratic primary initial round results by county
Kennedy
  •   Kennedy—60–70%
  •   Kennedy—50–60%
  •   Kennedy—40–50%
Foster
  •   Foster—50–60%
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Rick Kennedy 22,148 47.9
Democratic David Anthony Jaramillo 16,170 35.0
Democratic William Foster III 7,887 17.1
Total votes 46,205 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Rick Kennedy 13,496 57.3
Democratic David Anthony Jaramillo 10,054 42.7
Total votes 23,550 100.0

Third parties

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]
  • Ted Brown (Libertarian), small business owner and insurance claims adjuster

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R October 21, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 30, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R October 28, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R October 20, 2020
Politico[16] Likely R October 11, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R April 29, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R October 30, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R October 29, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Pete
Sessions (R)
Rick
Kennedy (D)
Undecided
Lincoln Park Strategies (D)[209][1][M] August 22–23, 2020 1,160 (LV) ± 4.38% 45% 42% 13%

Results

[edit]
Texas's 17th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Pete Sessions 171,390 55.9
Democratic Rick Kennedy 125,565 40.9
Libertarian Ted Brown 9,918 3.2
Total votes 306,873 100.0
Republican hold

District 18

[edit]
2020 Texas's 18th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Sheila Jackson Lee Wendell Champion
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 180,952 58,033
Percentage 73.3% 23.5%

U.S. Representative before election

Sheila Jackson Lee
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Sheila Jackson Lee
Democratic

The 18th district is based in Downtown Houston and takes in the heavily black areas of Central Houston. The incumbent was Democrat Sheila Jackson Lee, who was re-elected with 75.3% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Michael Allen, landscape architect[8]
  • Donovan Boson, public administrator[8]
  • Marc Flores, construction manager[8]
  • Jerry Ford Sr., businessman[8]
  • Stevens Orozco, teacher[210]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sheila Jackson Lee (incumbent) 49,729 77.1
Democratic Marc Flores 5,353 8.3
Democratic Bimal Patel 2,456 3.8
Democratic Jerry Ford Sr. 2,417 3.7
Democratic Stevens Orozco 2,180 3.4
Democratic Michael Allen 1,672 2.6
Democratic Donovan Boson 709 1.1
Total votes 64,516 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Wendell Champion, attorney and U.S. Army veteran[8]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • Robert Cadena, businessman[8]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Nellie Heiksell, minister[8]
  • T.C. Manning, service technician[8]
  • Nathan Milliron, attorney[8]
  • Ava Reynero Pate, candidate for Texas's 18th congressional district in 2016 and 2018[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Wendell Champion 3,428 35.1
Republican Robert Cadena 2,005 20.5
Republican T.C. Manning 1,823 18.7
Republican Nathan Milliron 1,076 11.0
Republican Ava Reynero Pate 794 8.1
Republican Nellie Heiksell 638 6.5
Total votes 9,764 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Wendell Champion 4,000 71.8
Republican Robert Cadena 1,570 28.2
Total votes 5,570 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 18th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sheila Jackson Lee (incumbent) 180,952 73.3
Republican Wendell Champion 58,033 23.5
Libertarian Luke Spencer 4,514 1.8
Independent Vince Duncan 3,396 1.4
Total votes 246,895 100.0
Democratic hold

District 19

[edit]
2020 Texas's 19th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Jodey Arrington Tom Watson
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 198,198 60,583
Percentage 74.8% 22.9%

U.S. Representative before election

Jodey Arrington
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Jodey Arrington
Republican

The 19th district encompasses rural West Texas, taking in Lubbock. The incumbent was Republican Jodey Arrington, who was re-elected with 75.2% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Vance Boyd, stuntman[211]
Not on ballot
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jodey Arrington (incumbent) 71,234 89.4
Republican Vance Boyd 8,410 10.6
Total votes 79,644 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Tom Watson, attorney[211]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Tom Watson 19,993 100.0
Total votes 19,993 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 19th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jodey Arrington (incumbent) 198,198 74.8
Democratic Tom Watson 60,583 22.9
Libertarian Joe Burnes 6,271 2.4
Total votes 265,052 100.0
Republican hold

District 20

[edit]
2020 Texas's 20th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Joaquin Castro Mauro Garza
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 175,078 89,628
Percentage 64.7% 33.1%

U.S. Representative before election

Joaquin Castro
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Joaquin Castro
Democratic

The 20th district encompasses downtown San Antonio. The incumbent was Democrat Joaquin Castro, who was re-elected with 80.9% of the vote in 2018 without major-party opposition.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Rob Hostetler, U.S. Air Force veteran[8]
  • Justin Lecea, co-op manager[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Joaquín Castro (incumbent) 61,861 92.1
Democratic Justin Lecea 3,047 4.5
Democratic Rob Hostetler 2,252 3.4
Total votes 67,160 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • Gary Allen, retired teacher[8]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Dominick Dina, real estate agent[214]
  • Anita Kegley, construction business owner[214]
  • Tammy Orta, registered nurse[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mauro Garza 7,720 33.3
Republican Gary Allen 6,230 26.9
Republican Dominick Dina 5,242 22.6
Republican Anita Kegley 2,210 9.5
Republican Tammy Orta 1,786 7.7
Total votes 23,188 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Mauro Garza 7,162 60.1
Republican Gary Allen 4,762 39.9
Total votes 11,924 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 20th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Joaquín Castro (incumbent) 175,078 64.7
Republican Mauro Garza 89,628 33.1
Libertarian Jeffrey Blunt 6,017 2.2
Total votes 270,723 100.0
Democratic hold

District 21

[edit]
2020 Texas's 21st congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Chip Roy Wendy Davis
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 235,740 205,780
Percentage 52.0% 45.3%

County results
Roy:      40–50%      70–80%      80–90%
Davis:      40–50%      70–80%

U.S. Representative before election

Chip Roy
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Chip Roy
Republican

The 21st district extends from north San Antonio to central and south Austin, taking in rural parts of the Texas Hill Country. The Democratic nominee is former Texas state senator and 2014 gubernatorial nominee, Wendy Davis. Perennial candidate Arthur DiBianca was nominated by the Libertarian party convention on March 21, 2020.[215] The incumbent was Republican Chip Roy, who was elected with 50.2% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Chip Roy (incumbent) 75,389 100.0
Total votes 75,389 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Wendy Davis 84,593 86.3
Democratic Jennie Lou Leeder 13,485 13.7
Total votes 98,078 100.0

Endorsements

[edit]
Chip Roy (R)

U.S. federal executive officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

Governors

Municipal officials

Individuals

Labor unions

Organizations

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Tossup November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Lean R November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Tossup November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Lean R November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Tossup November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Tossup November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Tossup November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Tossup November 2, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Chip
Roy (R)
Wendy
Davis (D)
Other Undecided
WPA Intelligence (R)[234][N] October 11–12, 2020 412 (LV) 47% 42% 3% 8%
Garin-Hart-Yang Research (D)[235][O] August 31 – September 4, 2020 401 (LV) ± 5% 47% 48%
ALG Research (D)[236][P] August 15–20, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 46% 46%
Garin-Hart-Yang Research (D)[237][O] July 14–17, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.25% 46% 45%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Democrat and Generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[127][J] September 19–21, 2019 523 (LV) – 656 (LV) ± 3.8% – ± 4.2% 44% 49%

Results

[edit]
Texas's 21st congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Chip Roy (incumbent) 235,740 52.0
Democratic Wendy Davis 205,780 45.3
Libertarian Arthur DiBlanca 8,666 1.9
Green Tom Wakely 3,564 0.8
Total votes 453,750 100.0
Republican hold

District 22

[edit]
2020 Texas's 22nd congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Troy Nehls Sri Preston Kulkarni
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 210,259 181,998
Percentage 51.5% 44.6%

County results
Nehls:      40–50%      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Pete Olson
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Troy Nehls
Republican

The 22nd district encompasses the south-central Greater Houston metropolitan area, including the southern Houston suburbs of Sugar Land, Pearland, and Webster. Incumbent Republican Pete Olson was re-elected with 51.4% of the vote in 2018, his narrowest victory ever,[6] and announced on July 25, 2019, that he would not seek re-election.[238]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Declined
[edit]
Endorsements
[edit]
Pierce Bush (eliminated)

Federal officials

State officials

Individuals

Troy Nehls

Individuals

Newspapers

Organizations

Kathaleen Wall (eliminated)

Federal officials

State officials

Organizations

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Troy Nehls 29,538 40.5
Republican Kathaleen Wall 14,201 19.4
Republican Pierce Bush 11,281 15.4
Republican Greg Hill 10,315 14.1
Republican Dan Mathews 2,165 3.0
Republican Bangar Reddy 1,144 1.6
Republican Joe Walz 1,039 1.4
Republican Shandon Phan 773 1.1
Republican Diana Miller 771 1.0
Republican Jon Camarillo 718 1.0
Republican Douglas Haggard 398 0.5
Republican Howard Steele 283 0.4
Republican Matt Hinton 274 0.4
Republican Brandon T. Penko 96 0.1
Republican Aaron Hermes 92 0.1
Total votes 73,133 100.0

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Troy
Nehls
Kathaleen
Wall
Undecided
Remington Research Group (R)[261][Q] March 7–8, 2020 507 (LV) ± 4.4% 61% 28% 11%

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Troy Nehls 36,132 69.9
Republican Kathaleen Wall 15,547 30.1
Total votes 51,679 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Chris Fernandez, retiree[263]
  • Nyanza Davis Moore, television news commentator and attorney[264]
  • Carmine Petricco III, former electrician[8]
  • Derrick Reed, Pearland city councilman[265]
Endorsements
[edit]
Sri Preston Kulkarni

Cabinet-level officials

U.S. State Department officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

State officials

County officials

Local officials

Labor unions

Newspapers

Organizations

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sri Preston Kulkarni 34,664 53.1
Democratic Derrick Reed 16,126 24.7
Democratic Nyanza Davis Moore 9,449 14.5
Democratic Carmine Petricco III 5,074 7.8
Total votes 65,313 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Tossup November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Lean R November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Tossup November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Lean R November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Tossup November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Tossup November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Tossup November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Tossup November 2, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Troy
Nehls (R)
Sri Preston
Kulkarni (D)
Joseph
LeBlanc (L)
Other Undecided
GBAO Strategies (D)[283] October 8–11, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 43% 48% 4% 5%
GBAO Strategies (D)[284] September 24–27, 2020 500 (LV) ± 4.4% 44% 47% 3%
GBAO Strategies (D)[284] Mid August, 2020 – (V)[e] 45% 46% 3%
GBAO Strategies (D)[284] Early August, 2020 – (V)[e] 46% 43% 6%
GBAO Strategies (D)[285] July 29 – August 2, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 46% 46% 2%[f] 6%
RMG Research[286] July 27 – August 2, 2020 500 (RV) ± 4.5% 39% 39% 22%
Meeting Street Insights (R)[287][H] July 19–22, 2020 400 (RV) ± 4.9% 44% 32% 5% 17%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Democrat and Generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Democrat
Generic
Republican
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[127][J] Sep 19–21, 2019 523 (LV) – 656 (LV) ± 3.8% – ± 4.2% 45% 49%
Endorsements
[edit]
Sri Preston Kulkarni (D)

U.S. presidents

U.S. vice presidents

Cabinet-level officials

U.S. State Department officials

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

State officials

County officials

Local officials

Labor unions

Organizations

Newspapers

Troy Nehls (R)

Results

[edit]
Texas's 22nd congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Troy Nehls 210,259 51.5
Democratic Sri Preston Kulkarni 181,998 44.6
Libertarian Joseph LeBlanc Jr. 15,791 3.9
Total votes 408,048 100.0
Republican hold

District 23

[edit]
2020 Texas's 23rd congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Tony Gonzales Gina Ortiz Jones
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 149,395 137,693
Percentage 50.6% 46.6%

County results
Gonzales:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Ortiz Jones:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

Will Hurd
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Tony Gonzales
Republican

The 23rd district covers southwestern Texas, including the Big Bend, the southern and western San Antonio suburbs, and the southwestern El Paso suburbs. The incumbent Republican Will Hurd, who was re-elected with 49.2% of the vote in 2018,[6] subsequently announced he would not seek re-election on August 1, 2019.[293]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • Raul Reyes, U.S. Air Force veteran[137]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Declined
[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Tony Gonzales

Federal officials

  • Dan Crenshaw, U.S. representative (TX-02)[301]
  • Phil Gramm, former U.S. senator from Texas (1985–2002) and U.S. Representative (D-TX-06) (1979–1983) (R-TX-06) (1983–1985)[302]
  • Will Hurd, U.S. representative (R-TX-23)[303]
  • Kevin McCarthy, U.S. representative (CA-23) and House Minority Leader, former House Majority Leader (2014–2019) and House Minority Whip (2011–2014)[301]
  • Steve Scalise, U.S. representative (LA-01) and House Minority Whip, former House Majority Whip (2014–2019)[301]
  • Pete Sessions, former U.S. representative from (TX-05) (1997–2003) and (TX-32) (2003–2019)[301]

Newspapers

Raul Reyes

Federal officials

Organizations

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 23rd congressional district Republican primary initial round results by county
Gonzales
  •   Gonzales—40–50%
  •   Gonzales—30–40%
  •   Gonzales—<30%
Reyes
  •   Reyes—30–40%
  •   Reyes—40–50%
Arredondo-Lynch
  •   Arredondo-Lynch—<30%
  •   Arredondo-Lynch—30–40%
  •   Arredondo-Lynch—40–50%
McFarlin
  •   McFarlin—<30%
Jones
  •   Jones—<30%
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tony Gonzales 11,522 28.1
Republican Raul Reyes 9,555 23.3
Republican Alma Arredondo-Lynch 5,391 13.2
Republican Ben Van Winkle 4,427 10.8
Republican Jeff McFarlin 4,241 10.3
Republican Sharon Thomas 2,511 6.1
Republican Cecil Jones 1,552 3.8
Republican Alia Ureste 1,039 2.5
Republican Darwin Boedeker 745 1.8
Total votes 40,983 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tony Gonzales 12,342 50.09
Republican Raul Reyes 12,297 49.91
Total votes 24,639 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Declined
[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Gina Ortiz Jones

Federal politicians

State officials

Local officials

Labor unions

Newspapers

Organizations

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 23rd congressional district Democratic primary results by county
Jones
  •   Jones—70–80%
  •   Jones—60–70%
  •   Jones—50–60%
  •   Jones—40–50%
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Gina Ortiz Jones 41,718 66.4
Democratic Efrain Valdez 6,964 11.1
Democratic Rosalinda Ramos Abuabara 6,896 11.0
Democratic Ricardo Madrid 4,518 7.2
Democratic Jaime Escuder 2,725 4.3
Total votes 62,821 100.0

General election

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Tony Gonzales (R)

Federal officials

  • Dan Crenshaw, U.S. representative (TX-02)[301]
  • Phil Gramm, former U.S. senator from Texas (1985–2002) and U.S. Representative (D-TX-06) (1979–1983) (R-TX-06) (1983–1985)[302]
  • Will Hurd, U.S. representative (R-TX-23)[303]
  • Kevin McCarthy, U.S. representative (CA-23) and House Minority Leader, former House Majority Leader (2014–2019) and House Minority Whip (2011–2014)[301]
  • Steve Scalise, U.S. representative (LA-01) and House Minority Whip, former House Majority Whip (2014–2019)[301]
  • Pete Sessions, former U.S. representative from (TX-05) (1997–2003) and (TX-32) (2003–2019)[301]

Newspapers

Gina Ortiz Jones (D)

U.S. presidents

U.S. vice presidents

Federal politicians

State officials

Local officials

Labor unions

Organizations

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Tilt D (flip) November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Tossup November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Tony
Gonzales (R)
Gina
Jones (D)
Beto
Villela (L)
Undecided
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[331][R] October 3–5, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 41% 42% 3%
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[332][R] August 6–9, 2020 400 (RV) ± 4.9% 40% 41%
Remington Research Group (R)[333] May 19–20, 2020 669 (LV) ± 3.75% 43% 45% 12%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Democrat and Generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Undecided
Public Opinion Strategies (R)[332][R] August 6–9, 2020 400 (V) ± 4.9% 43% 47%
Public Policy Polling (D)[127][J] September 19–21, 2019 523 (LV) – 656 (LV) ± 3.8% – ± 4.2% 41% 53%

Results

[edit]
Texas's 23rd congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tony Gonzales 149,395 50.6
Democratic Gina Ortiz Jones 137,693 46.6
Libertarian Beto Villela 8,369 2.8
Total votes 295,457 100.0
Republican hold

District 24

[edit]
2020 Texas's 24th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Beth Van Duyne Candace Valenzuela
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 167,910 163,326
Percentage 48.8% 47.5%

County results
Van Duyne:      50–60%
Valenzuela:      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Kenny Marchant
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Beth Van Duyne
Republican

The 24th district encompasses the suburbs north of Fort Worth and Dallas, including Grapevine, Carrollton, parts of Irving, and northwestern Dallas. The incumbent was Republican Kenny Marchant, who was re-elected with 50.6% of the vote in 2018.[6] Marchant announced he would not seek re-election on August 5, 2019.[334]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Sunny Chaparala, realtor[137]
  • David Fegan, property manager[336]
  • Jeron Liverman, realtor[8]
  • Desi Maes, U.S. Army Ranger veteran[337]
Declined
[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Beth Van Duyne (R)

Executive officials

Organizations

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Beth Van Duyne 32,067 64.3
Republican David Fegan 10,295 20.7
Republican Desi Maes 2,867 5.7
Republican Sunny Chaparala 2,808 5.6
Republican Jeron Liverman 1,809 3.6
Total votes 49,846 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Withdrew
[edit]
  • Will Fisher, former candidate for Texas's 26th congressional district in 2018[348]
  • Crystal Fletcher, lawyer[349]

Endorsements

[edit]
Kim Olson

Federal politicians

Labor unions

Newspapers

Organizations

Candace Valenzuela

Federal politicians

Labor unions

Organizations

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Crystal
Fletcher
Jan
McDowell
Kim
Olson
Candace
Valenzuela
Other
Bold PAC/The Hill[357][S] Released on October 28, 2019 – (V)[e] 10%[g] 9% 12% 14% [e]
[h][e] [e] 8% 29% [e]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Kim Olson 24,442 41.0
Democratic Candace Valenzuela 18,078 30.4
Democratic Jan McDowell 5,965 10.0
Democratic Crystal Fletcher (withdrawn) 3,386 5.7
Democratic Richard Fleming 3,010 5.1
Democratic Sam Vega 2,677 4.5
Democratic John Biggan 1,996 3.4
Total votes 59,554 100.0

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Kim
Olson
Candace
Valenzuela
Undecided
Data for Progress (D)[358][S] July 2–7, 2020 440 (LV) ± 4.7% 37% 52% 11%

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Candace Valenzuela 20,003 60.4
Democratic Kim Olson 13,131 39.6
Total votes 33,134 100.0

Third parties

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]
  • Mark Bauer (independent), journalist[359]
  • Steve Kuzmich (independent), attorney[360]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Tossup November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Tilt D (flip) November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Tossup November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Tossup November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Lean D (flip) November 2, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Beth Van
Duyne (R)
Candace
Valenzuela (D)
Other/Undecided
Victoria Research & Consulting (D)[361][T] July 31 – August 2, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 41% 47% 10%[i]
RMG Research/Term Limits[362] July 27 – August 2, 2020 500 (RV) ± 4.5% 36% 36% 27%
DCCC Targeting and Analytics (D)[363][F] June 11–15, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.4% 39% 45%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Republican and Generic Democrat

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Other Undecided
Victoria Research & Consulting (D)[364][T] July 31 – August 2, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 44% 46% 4%[j] 6%
Public Policy Polling (D)[127][J] Sep 19–21, 2019 523 (LV) – 656 (LV) ± 3.8% – ± 4.2% 46% 47%

Endorsements

[edit]
Beth Van Duyne (R)

U.S presidents

Organizations

Candace Valenzuela (D)

Former U.S. Presidents

Former U.S. Vice Presidents

Federal politicians

State politicians

Labor unions

Organizations

Results

[edit]
Texas's 24th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Beth Van Duyne 167,910 48.8
Democratic Candace Valenzuela 163,326 47.5
Libertarian Darren Hamilton 5,647 1.6
Independent Steve Kuzmich 4,229 1.2
Independent Mark Bauer 2,909 0.9
Total votes 344,021 100.0
Republican hold

District 25

[edit]
2020 Texas's 25th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Roger Williams Julie Oliver
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 220,088 165,697
Percentage 55.9% 42.1%

County results
Williams:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%
Oliver:      60–70%

U.S. Representative before election

Roger Williams
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Roger Williams
Republican

The 25th district runs from north Austin through rural areas of Texas Hill Country northward into southern Fort Worth suburbs. The incumbent was Republican Roger Williams, who was re-elected with 53.5% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Keith Neuendorff, software engineer[90]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roger Williams (incumbent) 63,146 87.6
Republican Keith Neuendorff 8,965 12.4
Total votes 72,111 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Heidi Sloan, community organizer and farmer[373]

Endorsements

[edit]
Julie Oliver (D)
Heidi Sloan (D)

Labor unions

Organizations

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Julie Oliver 56,151 69.6
Democratic Heidi Sloan 24,512 30.4
Total votes 80,663 100.0

General election

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Julie Oliver (D)

Executive branch officials

  • Joe Biden, former vice president (2009–2017) and Democratic nominee for president in 2020[379]

U.S. senators

U.S. representatives

State officials

Individuals

Organizations

Labor unions

Publications

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Likely R November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Likely R November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Likely R November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Likely R November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean R November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Likely R November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Likely R November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Likely R November 2, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Roger
Williams (R)
Julie
Oliver (D)
Undecided
EMC Research (D)[384][U] September 2–5, 2020 400 (LV) ± 4.9% 43% 41%
Remington Research Group (R)[385][V] September 1–2, 2020 810 (LV) ± 3.5% 52% 40% 8%
DCCC Targeting and Analytics (D)[386][F] July 21–22, 2020 389 (LV) ± 4.97% 45% 43%

Results

[edit]
Texas's 25th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Roger Williams (incumbent) 220,088 55.9
Democratic Julie Oliver 165,697 42.1
Libertarian Bill Kelsey 7,738 2.0
Total votes 393,523 100.0
Republican hold

District 26

[edit]
2020 Texas's 26th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Michael C. Burgess Carol Iannuzzi
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 261,963 161,009
Percentage 60.6% 37.3%

U.S. Representative before election

Michael C. Burgess
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Michael C. Burgess
Republican

The 26th district is based in the northern portion of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, centering on Denton County. The incumbent was Republican Michael C. Burgess, who was re-elected with 59.4% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Michael Armstrong, pastor[8]
  • Jason Mrochek, U.S. Army veteran and founder of the Patriot Coalition[387]
  • Jack Wyman, activist[388]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael C. Burgess (incumbent) 51,312 73.6
Republican Jack Wyman 7,816 11.2
Republican Michael Armstrong 5,745 8.2
Republican Jason Mrochek 4,846 7.0
Total votes 69,719 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Carol Iannuzzi, activist[389]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Neil Durrance, former Denton city councilman and nominee for Texas's 26th congressional district in 2010[390]
  • Mat Pruneda, financial analyst, former candidate for Texas House District 64 in 2018[389]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Carol Iannuzzi 31,019 55.3
Democratic Mat Pruneda 15,701 28.0
Democratic Neil Durrance 9,329 16.7
Total votes 56,049 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 26th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael C. Burgess (incumbent) 261,963 60.6
Democratic Carol Iannuzzi 161,009 37.3
Libertarian Mark Boler 9,243 2.1
Total votes 432,215 100.0
Republican hold

District 27

[edit]
2020 Texas's 27th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Michael Cloud Rick De La Fuente
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 172,305 95,446
Percentage 63.1% 34.9%

U.S. Representative before election

Michael Cloud
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Michael Cloud
Republican

The 27th district stretches across the Coastal Bend, from Corpus Christi up to Bay City. The incumbent was Republican Michael Cloud, who was re-elected with 60.3% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael Cloud (incumbent) 60,945 100.0
Total votes 60,945 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Ricardo "Rick" De La Fuente, businessman[391]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Charlie Jackson, businessman[391]

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 27th congressional district Democratic primary results by county
De La Fuente
  •   De La Fuente—70–80%
  •   De La Fuente—60–70%
  •   De La Fuente—50–60%
Jackson
  •   Jackson—50–60%
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Ricardo "Rick" De La Fuente 20,767 61.5
Democratic Charlie Jackson 13,030 38.5
Total votes 33,797 100.0

Libertarian primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 27th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Michael Cloud (incumbent) 172,305 63.1
Democratic Ricardo "Rick" De La Fuente 95,466 34.9
Libertarian Phil Gray 5,482 2.0
Total votes 273,253 100.0
Republican hold

District 28

[edit]
2020 Texas's 28th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Henry Cuellar Sandra Whitten
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 137,494 91,925
Percentage 58.3% 39.0%

Results by county
Cuellar:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Whitten:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%

U.S. Representative before election

Henry Cuellar
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Henry Cuellar
Democratic

The 28th district is based in the Laredo area and stretches north of the Rio Grande Valley into east San Antonio. The incumbent was Democrat Henry Cuellar, who was re-elected with 84.4% of the vote in 2018 without major-party opposition.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Jessica Cisneros and Henry Cuellar in 2013
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Primary results by county
  Cuellar
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  •   70–80%
  Cisneros
  •   50–60%
  •   60–70%
  Tie
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Henry Cuellar (incumbent) 38,834 51.8
Democratic Jessica Cisneros 36,144 48.2
Total votes 74,978 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Sandra Whitten, Sunday school teacher[430]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Sandra Whitten 20,656 100.0
Total votes 20,656 100.0

Third parties

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 28th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Henry Cuellar (incumbent) 137,494 58.3
Republican Sandra Whitten 91,925 39.0
Libertarian Bekah Congdon 6,425 2.7
Total votes 235,844 100.0
Democratic hold

District 29

[edit]
2020 Texas's 29th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Sylvia Garcia Jaimy Z. Blanco
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 111,305 42,840
Percentage 71.1% 27.4%

U.S. Representative before election

Sylvia Garcia
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Sylvia Garcia
Democratic

The 29th district encompasses parts of eastern Houston, taking in the heavily Latino areas of the city. The incumbent was Democrat Sylvia Garcia, who was elected with 75.1% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sylvia Garcia (incumbent) 28,180 100.0
Total votes 28,180 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Jaimy Z. Blanco, real estate investor and candidate for Texas's 29th congressional district in 2018[8]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Robert Schafranek, sales associate and candidate for Texas's 29th congressional district in 2016 and 2018[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jaimy Z. Blanco 4,336 56.9
Republican Robert Schafranek 3,286 43.1
Total votes 7,622 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 29th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Sylvia Garcia (incumbent) 111,305 71.1
Republican Jaimy Z. Blanco 42,840 27.4
Libertarian Phil Kurtz 2,328 1.5
Total votes 156,473 100.0
Democratic hold

District 30

[edit]
2020 Texas's 30th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Eddie Bernice Johnson Tre Pennie
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 204,928 48,685
Percentage 77.5% 18.4%

U.S. Representative before election

Eddie Bernice Johnson
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Eddie Bernice Johnson
Democratic

The 30th district encompasses Downtown Dallas as well as South Dallas. The incumbent was Democrat Eddie Bernice Johnson, who was re-elected with 91.1% of the vote in 2018 without major-party opposition.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Eddie Bernice Johnson (incumbent) 58,804 70.6
Democratic Shenita Cleveland 11,358 13.6
Democratic Barbara Mallory Caraway 10,452 12.6
Democratic Hasani Burton 2,638 3.2
Total votes 83,252 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tre Pennie 9,928 100.0
Total votes 9,645 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 30th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Eddie Bernice Johnson (incumbent) 204,928 77.5
Republican Tre Pennie 48,685 18.4
Independent Eric Williams 10,851 4.1
Total votes 264,464 100.0
Democratic hold

District 31

[edit]
2020 Texas's 31st congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee John Carter Donna Imam
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 212,695 176,293
Percentage 53.4% 44.3%

County results
Carter:      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

John Carter
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

John Carter
Republican

The 31st district encompasses northern Austin to Temple, including Williamson and Bell counties. The incumbent was Republican John Carter, who was re-elected with 50.6% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Abhiram Garapati, real estate investor[433]
  • Christopher Wall, police officer[90]
  • Mike Williams, retired firefighter[433]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Carter (incumbent) 53,070 82.3
Republican Mike Williams 5,560 8.6
Republican Christopher Wall 3,155 4.9
Republican Abhiram Garapati 2,717 4.2
Total votes 64,502 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Donna Imam, computer engineer[433]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
Endorsements
[edit]
Donna Imam[434]

State officials

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Christine Eady Mann 24,145 34.7
Democratic Donna Imam 21,352 30.7
Democratic Tammy Young 9,956 14.3
Democratic Michael Edward Grimes 7,542 10.8
Democratic Eric Hanke 4,117 5.9
Democratic Dan Janjigian 2,471 3.5
Total votes 69,583 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Democratic primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Donna Imam 21,026 56.6
Democratic Christine Eady Mann 16,109 43.4
Total votes 37,135 100.0

Third parties

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]
  • Clark Patterson (Libertarian), photographer and videographer and candidate for Texas's 35th congressional district in 2018
Declined
[edit]
  • Trip Seibold (Libertarian), former software engineer (running for Texas State Board of Education district 10)[436]

General election

[edit]

Endorsements

[edit]
Donna Imam (D)

Cabinet-level officials

Federal officials

State officials

Organizations

Labor unions

Individuals

Newspapers and publications

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Lean R November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Likely R November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Likely R November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean R November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Likely R November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Likely R November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Likely R November 2, 2020

Polling

[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
John
Carter (R)
Donna
Imam (D)
Clark
Patterson (L)
Jeremy
Bravo (I)
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[446] August 26–27, 2020 831 (V) 43% 37% 7% 3% 11%
Hypothetical polling

with Generic Democrat and Generic Republican

Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Generic
Republican
Generic
Democrat
Undecided
Public Policy Polling (D)[127][J] Sep 19–21, 2019 523 (LV) – 656 (LV) ± 3.8% – ± 4.2% 51% 44%

Results

[edit]
Texas's 31st congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican John Carter (incumbent) 212,695 53.4
Democratic Donna Imam 176,293 44.3
Libertarian Clark Patterson 8,922 2.2
Independent Johnathan Scott (write-in) 147 0.1
Total votes 398,057 100.0
Republican hold

District 32

[edit]
2020 Texas's 32nd congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Colin Allred Genevieve Collins
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 178,542 157,867
Percentage 51.9% 45.9%

County results
Allred:      50–60%
Collins:     50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Colin Allred
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Colin Allred
Democratic

The 32nd district covers northern and eastern Dallas and its inner northern suburbs. The incumbent was Democrat Colin Allred, who flipped the district and was elected with 52.3% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Colin Allred (incumbent) 72,761 100.0
Total votes 72,761 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Genevieve Collins, business executive[447]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Jon Hollis, film producer
  • Floyd McLendon, executive aide to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, Legislative Fellow, and retired U.S. Navy SEAL[448]
  • Mark Sackett, structural engineer[8]
  • Jeff Tokar, technical contractor[8]
Declined
[edit]
Polling
[edit]
Poll source Date(s)
administered
Sample
size[a]
Margin
of error
Genevieve
Collins
Floyd
McLendon
Other Undecided
0ptimus/Big Tree PAC[450] January 28–30, 2020 971 (LV) ± 3.3% 14%[k] 10% 4%[l] 72%

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Genevieve Collins 22,908 52.9
Republican Floyd McLendon 14,699 33.9
Republican Jon Hollis 1,945 4.5
Republican Jeff Tokar 1,846 4.4
Republican Mark Sackett 1,892 4.4
Total votes 43,324 100.0

Libertarian primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Declared
[edit]
  • Christy Mowrey, executive director of education[431]
Eliminated at convention
[edit]
  • Ken Ashby, perennial candidate[451]

Endorsements

[edit]
Genevieve Collins (R)

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Likely D November 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Likely D November 2, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D November 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Likely D November 2, 2020
Politico[16] Lean D November 2, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Likely D November 2, 2020
RCP[18] Lean D November 2, 2020
270toWin[19] Likely D November 2, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 32nd congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Colin Allred (incumbent) 178,542 51.9
Republican Genevieve Collins 157,867 45.9
Libertarian Christy Mowrey Peterson 4,946 1.4
Independent Jason Sigmon 2,332 0.7
Total votes 343,687 100.0
Democratic hold

District 33

[edit]
2020 Texas's 33rd congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Marc Veasey Fabian Vasquez Carlos Quintanilla
Party Democratic Republican Independent
Popular vote 105,317 39,638 8,071
Percentage 66.8% 25.2% 5.1%

U.S. Representative before election

Marc Veasey
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Marc Veasey
Democratic

The 33rd district is located in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, encompassing Downtown Fort Worth, western Dallas, and parts of Grand Prairie and Irving. The incumbent was Democrat Marc Veasey, who was re-elected with 76.2% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Sean Paul Segura, activist[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Marc Veasey (incumbent) 23,869 63.6
Democratic Sean Paul Segura 13,678 36.4
Total votes 37,547 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Fabian Vasquez, business manager[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Fabian Vasquez 7,317 100.0
Total votes 7,317 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 33rd congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Marc Veasey (incumbent) 105,317 66.8
Republican Fabian Vasquez 39,638 25.2
Independent Carlos Quintanilla 8,071 5.1
Libertarian Jason Reeves 2,586 1.6
Independent Rene Welton 1,994 1.3
Total votes 157,606 100.0
Democratic hold

District 34

[edit]
2020 Texas's 34th congressional district election

 
Nominee Filemon Vela Jr. Rey Gonzalez
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 111,439 84,119
Percentage 55.4% 41.9%

Results by county
Vela:      40–50%      50–60%      60–70%
Gonzalez:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%      80–90%

U.S. Representative before election

Filemon Vela Jr.
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Filemon Vela Jr.
Democratic

The 34th district stretches from Brownsville in the Rio Grande Valley, northward into rural counties. The incumbent was Democrat Filemon Vela, who was elected with 60.0% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Osbert Rodriguez Haro III, health consultant[460]
  • Diego Zavala, high school teacher[460]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Filemon Vela (incumbent) 39,484 75.1
Democratic Diego Zavala 9,707 18.4
Democratic Osbert Rodriguez Haro III 3,413 6.5
Total votes 52,604 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Rey Gonzalez, physician and nominee for Texas's 34th congressional district in 2016 and 2018[460]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Rey Gonzalez 10,665 56.3
Republican Rod Lingsch 8,271 43.7
Total votes 18,936 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 34th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Filemon Vela (incumbent) 111,439 55.4
Republican Rey Gonzalez 84,119 41.9
Libertarian Anthony Cristo 3,222 1.6
Independent Chris Royal 2,235 1.1
Total votes 201,027 100.0
Democratic hold

District 35

[edit]
2020 Texas's 35th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Lloyd Doggett Jennifer Garcia Sharon
Party Democratic Republican
Popular vote 176,373 80,795
Percentage 65.4% 30.0%

County results
Doggett:      50–60%      60–70%      70–80%
Garcia Sharon:      50–60%

U.S. Representative before election

Lloyd Doggett
Democratic

Elected U.S. Representative

Lloyd Doggett
Democratic

The 35th district connects eastern San Antonio to southeastern Austin, through the I-35 corridor. The incumbent was Democrat Lloyd Doggett, who was re-elected with 71.3% in 2018.[6]

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Rafael Alcoser, insurance broker[8]

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 35th congressional district Democratic primary results by county
Doggett
  •   Doggett—80–90%
  •   Doggett—70–80%
  •   Doggett—60–70%
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lloyd Doggett (incumbent) 51,169 73.0
Democratic Rafael Alcoser 18,922 27.0
Total votes 70,091 100.0

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Jennifer Garcia Sharon, volunteer caregiver[8]
Eliminated in runoff
[edit]
  • William Hayward, ostrich farmer[8]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • Nick Moutos, attorney[461]

Primary results

[edit]
2020 Texas's 35th congressional district Republican primary initial round results by county
Sharon
  •   Sharon—40–50%
  •   Sharon—30–40%
Hayward
  •   Hayward—40–50%
Moutos
  •   Moutos—30–40%
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jennifer Garcia Sharon 6,751 37.1
Republican William Hayward 6,237 34.3
Republican Nick Moutos 5,200 28.6
Total votes 18,188 100.0

Runoff results

[edit]
Republican primary runoff results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Jennifer Garcia Sharon 4,138 53.2
Republican William Hayward 3,645 46.8
Total votes 7,783 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe D July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid D October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe D June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe D July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe D April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe D June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe D June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe D June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 35th congressional district, 2020
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Lloyd Doggett (incumbent) 176,373 65.4
Republican Jennifer Garcia Sharon 80,795 30.0
Libertarian Mark Loewe 7,393 2.7
Independent Jason Mata 5,236 1.9
Total votes 269,797 100.0
Democratic hold

District 36

[edit]
2020 Texas's 36th congressional district election

← 2018
2022 →
 
Nominee Brian Babin Rashad Lewis
Party Republican Democratic
Popular vote 222,712 73,148
Percentage 73.6% 24.3%

U.S. Representative before election

Brian Babin
Republican

Elected U.S. Representative

Brian Babin
Republican

The 36th district encompasses parts of Southeast Texas, including the Clear Lake region. The incumbent was Republican Brian Babin, who was re-elected with 72.6% of the vote in 2018.[6]

Republican primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
Eliminated in primary
[edit]
  • RJ Boatman, former Chief of Police and Federal Task Force Director, Municipal Judge and business owner from Houston, TX[462]

Primary results

[edit]
Republican primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brian Babin (incumbent) 75,277 89.6
Republican RJ Boatman 8,774 10.4
Total votes 84,051 100.0

Democratic primary

[edit]

Candidates

[edit]
Nominee
[edit]
  • Rashad Lewis, former Jasper city councilman[8]

Primary results

[edit]
Democratic primary results[9]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Rashad Lewis 22,422 100.0
Total votes 22,422 100.0

General election

[edit]

Predictions

[edit]
Source Ranking As of
The Cook Political Report[12] Safe R July 2, 2020
FiveThirtyEight[13] Solid R October 13, 2020
Inside Elections[14] Safe R June 2, 2020
Sabato's Crystal Ball[15] Safe R July 2, 2020
Politico[16] Safe R April 19, 2020
Daily Kos[17] Safe R June 3, 2020
RCP[18] Safe R June 9, 2020
270toWin[19] Safe R June 7, 2020

Results

[edit]
Texas's 36th congressional district, 2020[20]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Brian Babin (incumbent) 222,712 73.6
Democratic Rashad Lewis 73,148 24.3
Libertarian Chad Abbey 4,848 1.6
Green Hal Ridley Jr. 1,571 0.5
Total votes 302,549 100.0

See also

[edit]

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 x y z aa Key:
    A – all adults
    RV – registered voters
    LV – likely voters
    V – unclear
  2. ^ Includes "Refused"
  3. ^ "Blank ballot/refused" with 9%
  4. ^ "Someone new" with 41%
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Not yet released
  6. ^ "Someone else" with 2%
  7. ^ Standard VI response
  8. ^ Response after pollster gives respondents Valenzuela's biography
  9. ^ "Other" with 2% and Undecided with 8%
  10. ^ "Other/neither" with 4%
  11. ^ Including voters who lean towards a particular candidate
  12. ^ Tokar with 2%; Sackett and Hollis with 1%

Partisan clients

  1. ^ Poll sponsored by the DCCC, which has endorsed Seikaly prior to the sampling period.
  2. ^ Poll sponsored by Lulu Seikaly's campaign and DCCC.
  3. ^ Poll sponsored by Van Taylor's campaign
  4. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Lulu Seikaly's campaign
  5. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Daniel's campaign
  6. ^ a b c d Poll conducted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.
  7. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Wesley Hunt's campaign.
  8. ^ a b c d Poll commissioned by the Congressional Leadership Fund
  9. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Siegel's campaign.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Poll sponsored by House Majority Forward, a non-profit arm of the Democratic-supporting House Majority PAC.
  11. ^ The Miles of Greatness Fund supports Jackson's candidacy
  12. ^ a b The Club for Growth had endorsed Ronny Jackson prior to the sampling period of this poll
  13. ^ Poll sponsored by Kennedy's campaign
  14. ^ Poll sponsored by the Club for Growth, which has endorsed Roy prior to the sampling period.
  15. ^ a b Poll sponsored by Davis' campaign
  16. ^ Poll conducted for End Citizens United, which has endorsed Davis prior to this poll's sampling period.
  17. ^ Poll sponsored by Troy Nehls' campaign
  18. ^ a b c Poll conducted for the Gonzales campaign.
  19. ^ a b Bold PAC is a campaigning arm of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, which had endorsed Valenzuela prior to this poll's sampling period
  20. ^ a b Poll conduced for the House Majority Pac.
  21. ^ Poll conducted for Oliver's campaign.
  22. ^ Poll sponsored by Williams' campaign

References

[edit]
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Further reading

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