2018 Texas Senate election explained

Election Name:2018 Texas Senate election
Country:Texas
Type:legislative
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2016 Texas Senate election
Previous Year:2016
Next Election:2020 Texas Senate election
Next Year:2020
Seats For Election:15 of the 31 seats in the Texas State Senate
Majority Seats:16
Election Date:November 6, 2018
Image1:Paul Bettencourt.jpg
Leader1:Paul Bettencourt
Party1:Republican Party of Texas
Leaders Seat1:7th
Last Election1:20
Seats Before1:21
Seats1:19
Seat Change1:2
Popular Vote1:2,280,884
Percentage1:52.14%
Leader2:José R. Rodríguez
Party2:Texas Democratic Party
Leaders Seat2:29th
Last Election2:11
Seats Before2:10
Seats Needed2: 6
Seats2:12
Seat Change2:2
Popular Vote2:2,026,761
Percentage2:46.33%

The 2018 Texas Senate elections took place as part of the biennial United States elections. Texas voters elected state senators in 15 of the state senate's 31 districts. The winners of this election served in the 86th Texas Legislature. State senators serve four-year terms in the Texas State Senate. A statewide map of Texas's state Senate districts can be obtained from the Texas Legislative Council here, and individual district maps can be obtained from the U.S. Census here.

A primary election on March 6, 2018, determined which candidates appeared on the November 6 general election ballot. Primary election results can be obtained from the Texas Secretary of State's website.[1]

Following the 2016 elections, Republicans maintained control of the Senate with 20 members. However, they gained an extra seat by flipping the 19th District in a September special election, giving them a 21-seat supermajority.

To claim control of the chamber from Republicans, the Democrats would have needed to net six Senate seats. The Democratic Party gained two seats, leaving the Republicans with a 19 to 12 majority in the chamber. Republicans maintained their supermajority, however, due to a 2015 rule change that reduced the effective vote threshold to pass legislation from 21 to 19.[2]

Summary of race results

Summary of the November 6, 2018 Texas Senate election results
PartyCandidatesVotesSeats
%BeforeUpWonAfter+/–
Republican142,280,88452.14211210192
Democratic142,026,76146.331035122
Libertarian767,0621.900000
Total3,525,443100.0035151535
Source:[3]

Retirements

One incumbent did not run for re-election in 2018:

Republican

  1. District 8: Van Taylor ran for Texas's 3rd congressional district.

Seats gained in preceding special elections

Republicans

  1. District 19: Pete Flores defeated Pete Gallego in a preceding special election on September 18, 2018, to flip this seat. The seat was vacated by Carlos Uresti, who resigned after multiple convictions on fraud and laundering charges.

Incumbents defeated

In the primary election

Republicans

  1. District 30: Craig Estes lost to Pat Fallon.

In the general election

Republicans

  1. District 10: Konni Burton lost to Beverly Powell.
  2. District 16: Don Huffines lost to Nathan M. Johnson.

Close races

DistrictWinnerMargin
District 8data-sort-value=1 Republican2.36%
District 10data-sort-value=1 Democratic (flip)3.04%
District 17data-sort-value=1 Republican 4.64%
District 9data-sort-value=1 Republican8.06%
District 16data-sort-value=1 Democratic (flip)8.26%

Summary of results by Senate District

Race results:[3]

District! colspan="2"
DemocraticRepublicanLibertarianTotalResult
scope=col data-sort-type="number" Votesscope=col data-sort-type="number" %scope=col data-sort-type="number" Votesscope=col data-sort-type="number" %scope=col data-sort-type="number" Votesscope=col data-sort-type="number" %scope=col data-sort-type="number" Votesscope=col data-sort-type="number" %
District 2104,89740.65%153,15159.35%--258,048100.00%Republican hold
District 356,39820.53%215,05878.27%3,3011.20%274,757100.00%Republican hold
District 5136,79241.47%182,55055.34%10,5003.18%329,842100.00%Republican hold
District 7124,23240.34%177,86457.75%5,8781.91%307,974100.00%Republican hold
District 8162,15748.82%169,99551.18%--332,152100.00%Republican hold
District 9112,53745.97%132,25654.03%--244,793100.00%Republican hold
District 10148,95951.73%138,96848.27%--287,927100.00%D GAIN from R
District 14276,05271.93%96,83425.23%10,8892.84%383,775100.00%Democratic hold
District 15153,01665.18%75,51832.17%6,2292.65%234,763100.00%Democratic hold
District 16159,22854.13%134,93345.87%--294,161100.00%D GAIN from R
District 17143,97846.80%158,26351.44%5,3961.75%307,637100.00%Republican hold
District 23192,148100.00%----192,148100.00%Democratic hold
District 25173,69842.32%236,75357.68%--410,451100.00%Republican hold
District 3082,66926.08%234,37473.92%--317,043100.00%Republican hold
District 31--174,36787.52%24,86912.48%199,236100.00%Republican hold
Total 2,026,76146.33% 2,280,88452.14% 67,0621.53% 4,374,707100.00%
For districts not displayed, re-election is not scheduled until 2020.
Senate DistrictincumbentPartyElected SenatorParty
2ndBob HallRepBob HallRep
3rdRobert NicholsRepRobert NicholsRep
5thCharles SchwertnerRepCharles SchwertnerRep
7thPaul BettencourtRepPaul BettencourtRep
8thVan TaylorRepAngela PaxtonRep
9thKelly HancockRepKelly HancockRep
10thKonni BurtonRepBeverly PowellDem
14thKirk WatsonDemKirk WatsonDem
15thJohn WhitmireDemJohn WhitmireDem
16thDon HuffinesRepNathan JohnsonDem
17thJoan HuffmanRepJoan HuffmanRep
19th (special)VacantDemPete FloresRep
23rdRoyce WestDemRoyce WestDem
25thDonna CampbellRepDonna CampbellRep
30thCraig EstesRepPat FallonRep
31stKel SeligerRepKel SeligerRep

Detailed results by Senate District

align=center District 2 • District 3 • District 5 • District 7 • District 8 • District 9 • District 10 • District 14 • District 15 • District 16 • District 17 • District 19 • District 23 • District 25 • District 30 • District 31
Sources:[4]

District 2

Incumbent Republican Bob Hall ran for re-election. Hall, a member of the Tea Party movement, was challenged in the Republican primary by state representative Cindy Burkett, who ran as a moderate alternative to Hall.[5] Hall narrowly defeated Burkett in the primary and went on to defeat Democrat Kendall Scudder in the general election by a wide margin.[6]

District 3

Incumbent Republican Robert Nichols won re-election.

District 5

Incumbent Republican Charles Schwertner won re-election.

District 7

Incumbent Republican Paul Bettencourt won re-election.

District 8

Election Name:2018 Texas's 8th senate district election
Country:Texas
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2014 Texas Senate election#District 8
Previous Year:2014
Next Election:2022 Texas Senate election#District 8
Next Year:2022
Seats For Election:Texas's 8th senate district
Image1:File:Angela_Paxton.jpg
Nominee1:Angela Paxton
Party1:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:169,995
Percentage1:51.18%
Nominee2:Mark Phariss
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:162,157
Percentage2:48.82%
Texas Senator
Before Election:Van Taylor
Before Party:Republican Party
After Election:Angela Paxton
After Party:Republican Party
Election Date:November 6, 2018
Image2 Size:x150px

Incumbent Republican Van Taylor retired to run for Texas's 3rd congressional district, which was being vacated by incumbent Republican Sam Johnson.[7] Prior to Taylor's retirement announcement, businessman Phillip Huffines, the brother of senator Don Huffines, announced his bid for the seat on the assumption that Taylor would run for the House. Educator Angela Paxton, the wife of attorney general Ken Paxton, later joined the race. Both candidates ran highly negative campaigns, spending millions of dollars on advertisements on what would become the most expensive senate primaries in state history.[8] [9] Paxton won the Republican primary while Mark Pharris, a plaintiff in the lawsuit to overturn Texas's ban on same-sex marriage, won the Democratic primary.[10] Paxton won the general election in the heavily Republican Collin County district.[11] This was the closest senate election in the state during the 2018 elections.

District 9

Incumbent Republican Kelly Hancock won re-election.

District 10

Election Name:2018 Texas's 10th senate district election
Country:Texas
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2014 Texas Senate election#District 10
Previous Year:2014
Next Election:2022 Texas Senate election#District 10
Next Year:2022
Seats For Election:Texas's 10th senate district
Image1:File:Texas_State_Sen._Beverly_Powell_2021_(cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Beverly Powell
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:148,959
Percentage1:51.73%
Nominee2:Konni Burton
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:138,968
Percentage2:48.27%
Texas Senator
Before Election:Konni Burton
Before Party:Republican Party
After Election:Beverly Powell
After Party:Democratic Party
Election Date:November 6, 2018
Image2 Size:x150px

Incumbent Republican Konni Burton ran for re-election. She was initially elected in 2014, flipping the seat after incumbent Democrat Wendy Davis retired to run for governor. Democrats Allison Campolo and Beverly Powell ran in the Democratic primary to challenge Burton, with Campolo running from the progressive wing of the Democratic party while Powell ran from the moderate wing of the party.[12] Powell advanced to the general election, which saw large spending from conservative groups such as Empower Texans to defend Burton's seat.[13] Powell narrowly defeated Burton in the general election, flipping the seat back to the Democrats.[14] [15]

District 14

Incumbent Democrat Kirk Watson won re-election.

District 15

Incumbent Democrat John Whitmire won re-election.

District 16

Election Name:2018 Texas's 16th senate district election
Country:Texas
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2014 Texas Senate election#District 16
Previous Year:2014
Next Election:2022 Texas Senate election#District 16
Next Year:2022
Seats For Election:Texas's 16th senate district
Image1:3x4.svg
Nominee1:Nathan Johnson
Party1:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:159,228
Percentage1:54.13%
Nominee2:Don Huffines
Party2:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:134,933
Percentage2:45.87%
Texas Senator
Before Election:Don Huffines
Before Party:Republican Party
After Election:Nathan Johnson
After Party:Democratic Party
Election Date:November 6, 2018
Image2 Size:x150px

Incumbent Republican Don Huffines ran for re-election. Despite Republicans having held the 16th district for over 30 years, Huffines was seen as vulnerable due to the district's shifting demographics and Huffines' ultraconservative voting record. The district had voted for Hillary Clinton by 5 percentage points in 2016.[16] [17] Nathan Johnson, the Democratic nominee, defeated Huffines in the general election.

District 17

Election Name:2018 Texas's 17th senate district election
Country:Texas
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2014 Texas Senate election#District 17
Previous Year:2014
Next Election:2022 Texas Senate election#District 17
Next Year:2022
Seats For Election:Texas's 17th senate district
Image1:File:Joan_Huffman.jpg
Nominee1:Joan Huffman
Party1:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:158,263
Percentage1:51.44%
Nominee2:Rita Lucido
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:143,978
Percentage2:46.80%
Texas Senator
Before Election:Joan Huffman
Before Party:Republican Party
After Election:Joan Huffman
After Party:Republican Party
Election Date:November 6, 2018
Image2 Size:x150px

Incumbent Republican Joan Huffman ran for re-election. Although she was considered potentially vulnerable due to Donald Trump's narrow victory in the district in 2016, she defeated Democrat Rita Lucido in the general election by 5 percentage points.[18]

District 19 (special)

Election Name:2018 Texas's 19th senate district special election
Country:Texas
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2016 Texas Senate election#District 19
Previous Year:2016
Next Election:2020 Texas Senate election#District 19
Next Year:2020
Seats For Election:Texas's 19th senate district
Image1:File:Pete_Flores.jpg
Nominee1:Pete Flores
Party1:Republican Party (United States)
Popular Vote1:25,330
Percentage1:56.67%
Nominee2:Pete Gallego
Party2:Democratic Party (United States)
Popular Vote2:19,367
Percentage2:43.33%
Texas Senator
Before Election:vacant
Before Party:Democratic Party
After Election:Pete Flores
After Party:Republican Party
Election Date:September 18, 2018
Image2 Size:x150px

Incumbent Democrat Carlos Uresti resigned after multiple convictions on fraud and laundering charges.[19] Former U.S. Representative Pete Gallego and Texas House representative Roland Gutierrez ran as Democrats against Republican Pete Flores in the special election. Flores placed first in the election, a boon to Republicans in the Democratic-leaning district, but he failed to win a majority of the vote, forcing him into a runoff with Gallego.[20] Despite stirrings of an upcoming Democratic wave election, Flores defeated Gallego in the runoff on September 18, 2018, to flip this seat, giving Republicans a supermajority of 21 seats in the Senate.[21]

District 23

Incumbent Democrat Royce West won re-election unopposed.

District 25

Incumbent Republican Donna Campbell won re-election.

District 30

Incumbent Craig Estes, considered a centrist Republican, faced conservative state representative Pat Fallon in a primary race.[22] [23] As the primary election approached, both campaigns grew increasingly combinative, including spars over an ad by Estes' campaign featuring Fallon in a Catholic confessional.[24] Polling on behalf of Fallon paid for by lieutenant governor Dan Patrick suggested that Patrick supported Fallon's primary challenge, although he made no official endorsement.[25] Fallon defeated Estes in the primary by a wide margin and went on to win the general election by an even larger margin.[26]

District 31

Incumbent Republican Kel Seliger ran for re-election. Seliger was considered vulnerable to a primary challenge due to his refusal to back many conservative bills during previous sessions. He narrowly won his primary in 2014, voted against a 20-week abortion ban, opposed school voucher legislation, and refused to endorse lieutenant governor Dan Patrick's re-election campaign. He drew two primary challengers, including Mike Canon, whom Seliger had narrowly defeated in 2014 and had the support of conservative groups such as Empower Texans.[27] [28] [29] Seliger won the primary, narrowly avoiding a runoff.[30] He faced nominal third-party opposition in the general election and easily won.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Election Results . . August 4, 2018.
  2. Web site: Samuels . Alex . 2018-11-07 . Democrats Nathan Johnson and Beverly Powell defeat state Sens. Don Huffines and Konni Burton in Texas midterm . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  3. Web site: Race Summary Report - 2018 General Election. live. May 13, 2021. Office of the Secretary of State. https://web.archive.org/web/20210428081554/https://elections.sos.state.tx.us/elchist331_state.htm. April 28, 2021.
  4. Web site: Texas State Senate elections, 2018 . . August 4, 2018.
  5. Web site: Svitek . Patrick . 2017-09-05 . State Rep. Cindy Burkett challenging state Sen. Bob Hall in primary . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  6. Web site: Leszcynski . Ray . 2018-03-07 . Sen. Bob Hall wins District 2 Republican primary, beats back challenge from four-term Rep. Cindy Burkett . 2024-06-08 . Dallas News . en.
  7. News: Svitek . Patrick . August 23, 2017 . GOP state Sen. Van Taylor of Plano makes congressional run official . September 5, 2017 . Texas Tribune.
  8. Web site: Svitek . Patrick . 2018-03-05 . End is near in bruising, expensive Huffines-Paxton battle . 2024-06-06 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  9. Web site: Connelly . Christopher . 2018-02-12 . Paxton, Huffines Spend Millions In GOP Bid For Texas' Only Open State Senate Seat . 2024-06-06 . KERA News . en.
  10. Web site: Wigglesworth . Valerie . 2018-03-07 . Paxton beats Huffines in bitter Republican primary race for Texas Senate District 8 . 2024-06-06 . Dallas News . en.
  11. Web site: Ford . Holley . 2018-11-05 . Republican Angela Paxton Wins Over Democrat Mark Phariss for Texas District 8 Senate Seat . 2024-06-06 . NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth . en-US.
  12. Web site: Greene . Sydney . 2018-02-09 . In this Texas Democratic primary, the Clinton/Sanders divide still lingers . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  13. Web site: Barragán . James . 2018-10-11 . West Texas oil, fracking billionaires pump $1M into D-FW legislative races to prop up GOP candidates . 2024-06-08 . Dallas News . en.
  14. Web site: Leszcynski . Ray . Ayala . Eva-Marie . 2018-11-07 . Conservative stronghold in state Senate cracks as two North Texas incumbents defeated . 2024-06-08 . Dallas News . en.
  15. Web site: Kuo . Stephanie . 2018-11-07 . A Democrat Takes Back A Tarrant County State Senate Seat . 2024-06-08 . KERA News . en.
  16. Web site: Samuels . Alex . 2018-10-25 . In Dallas State Senate District Held By GOP For Decades, Don Huffines Is In A Tight Race . 2024-06-08 . KERA News . en.
  17. Web site: Samuels . Alex . 2018-09-13 . With a supermajority, Republicans have complete control of the Texas Senate. That's at risk this election cycle. . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  18. Web site: Barajas . Michael . 2018-10-26 . To Chip Away at Dan Patrick's Power, Dems Need a Crashing Blue Wave in SD 17 . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Observer . en-US.
  19. News: June 26, 2018 . Former state Sen. Carlos Uresti gets 12 years in prison in federal corruption case . Mysa .
  20. Web site: Svitek . Patrick . 2018-07-31 . Republican Pete Flores, Democrat Pete Gallego set for runoff for Uresti seat . 2024-06-06 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  21. Web site: Svitek . Patrick . 2018-09-20 . How Texas Democrats lost a state Senate seat amid talk of a blue wave . 2024-06-06 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  22. Web site: Jones . Mark P. . December 19, 2017 . Upcoming battles in the ongoing Texas GOP civil war . 2024-06-08 . TribTalk.
  23. Web site: Svitek . Patrick . 2017-09-06 . State Rep. Pat Fallon says he's challenging state Sen. Craig Estes . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  24. Web site: Choate . Trish . February 24, 2018 . 'Confessions' ad latest controversy in heated Senate battle . 2024-06-08 . Times Record News . en-US.
  25. Web site: Svitek . Patrick . 2018-02-07 . Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick spends $5.1M on TV ads in January, $17K on polling for Sen. Estes opponent . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  26. Web site: Greene . Sydney . Formby . Brandon . 2018-03-07 . GOP state Sen. Craig Estes ousted; Sen. Bob Hall defeats Burkett . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Tribune . en.
  27. Web site: Collins . Christopher . 2018-02-12 . The Far-Right is Staging an Ouster of Moderate Republicans in the Panhandle. Will Incumbents Outlast the Attack? . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Observer . en-US.
  28. Web site: STEIN . ROBERT . State Sen. Kel Seliger opts not to back Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick in re-election . 2024-06-08 . Amarillo Globe-News . en-US.
  29. Web site: Stein . Robert . February 18, 2018 . The battle over State Senate District 31 . 2024-06-08 . Lubbock Avalanche-Journal . en-US.
  30. Web site: Root . Jay . 2018-03-07 . It was a bad election night for Gov. Greg Abbott and Texas' best-funded Tea Party group . 2024-06-08 . The Texas Tribune . en.