Texas Senate | |
Legislature: | 88th Texas Legislature |
Coa Pic: | Seal of State Senate of Texas.svg |
Session Room: | Austin, Texas (2018) - 084.jpg |
House Type: | Upper house |
Body: | Texas Legislature |
Term Limits: | None |
New Session: | January 10, 2023 |
Leader1 Type: | President |
Leader1: | Dan Patrick (R) |
Election1: | January 20, 2015 |
Leader2 Type: | President pro tempore |
Leader2: | Charles Schwertner (R) |
Election2: | May 29, 2023 |
Leader3 Type: | Majority Leader |
Leader3: | Angela Paxton (R) |
Election3: | September 16, 2023 |
Leader4 Type: | Minority Leader |
Leader4: | Carol Alvarado (D) |
Election4: | January 8, 2020 |
Term Length: | 4 years (with one 2-year term each decade) |
Authority: | Article 3, Texas Constitution |
Salary: | $7,200/year + per diem |
Members: | 31 |
Structure1: | Texas Senate May 2024.svg |
Structure1 Res: | 250px |
Political Groups1: | Majority Minority |
Last Election1: | November 8, 2022 (31 seats) |
Next Election1: | November 5, 2024 (15 seats) |
Voting System1: | First-past-the-post |
Redistricting: | Legislative control |
Meeting Place: | State Senate Chamber Texas State Capitol Austin, Texas |
Website: | Texas State Senate |
The Texas Senate is the upper house of the Texas Legislature, with the Texas House of Representatives being the lower house. Together, they compose the state legislature of the state of Texas.
There are 31 members of the Senate, representing single-member districts across the U.S. state of Texas, with populations of approximately 940,000 per constituency, based on the 2020 U.S. Census. Elections are held in even-numbered years on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November.
There are no term limits. Terms are four years in length, with one two-year term each decade. Senators are divided into two groups based in part on the intervening Census:
As such, every two years, about half of the Texas Senate is on the ballot.
The Senate meets at the Texas State Capitol in Austin. The Republicans currently control the chamber, which is made up of 19 Republicans and 12 Democrats.
The Lieutenant Governor of Texas serves as the President of the Senate. Unlike most lieutenant governors who are constitutionally designated as presiding officers of the upper house, the Lieutenant Governor regularly presides over the chamber rather than delegate this role to the President Pro Tempore. The Lieutenant Governor's duties include appointing chairs of committees, committee members, assigning and referring bills to specific committees, recognizing members during debate, and making procedural rulings. The Lieutenant Governor may also cast a vote should a Senate floor vote end in a tie. If the Senate votes to dissolve itself into the Committee of the Whole, in which all members are part of the Committee, the President Pro-Tempore presides over the proceedings, with the Lieutenant Governor acting as a regular voting member. Due to the various powers of committee selection and bill assignment, the Lieutenant Governor of Texas is considered one of the most powerful lieutenant governorships in the United States.
Unlike other state legislatures, the Texas Senate does not include majority or minority leaders. Instead, the President Pro Tempore is considered the second most powerful position, and can be reserved to any political party in the chamber regardless if the party is a majority or not. Presidents Pro Tempore are usually the most senior members of the Senate. The President Pro Tempore presides when the Lieutenant Governor is not present or when the legislature is not in regular session.
Position | Name | Party | Residence | District | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elected Statewide | ||||||
Charles Schwertner | Georgetown | 5 |
There have been at least three cases of quorum-busting in Texas Senate history. The first case was in 1870, with the Rump Senate, followed by the 1979 Killer Bees[1] and finally the "Texas Eleven" in August 2003 during the controversial mid-decade redistricting plan at the time.[2]
The following represents the Senate committee structure for the 88th Legislature (numbers in parentheses are the number of committee members, as appointed by the President of the Texas Senate).[3]
In addition to these committees, there are also six joint committees composed of members of both the State Senate and House:
12< | -- | 1-->< | -- | 0--> | 19 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic< | -- | Don't show Independent here. It messes up the width and impresses upon the reader that they have more seats in the chamber than what they actually have. --> | Republican |
Affiliation | Party (shading indicates majority caucus) | Total | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Democratic | Vacant | ||||
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | 2011–12 | 19 | 12 | 31 | 0 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | 2013–14 | 19 | 12 | 31 | 0 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | 2015-16 | 20 | 11 | 31 | 0 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | 2017–18 | 20 | 11 | 31 | 0 | |
nowrap style="font-size:80%" | 2019–20 | 19 | 11 | 31 | 0 | |
2021–22 | 18 | 13 | 31 | 0 | ||
2023–24 | 19 | 12 | 31 | 0 | ||
Latest voting share |
District | Image | Senator | Party | Residence | First elected | Next election | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rep | 2016 | 2026 | ||||||
Rep | 2014 | 2026 | ||||||
Rep | 2006 | 2026 | ||||||
Rep | 2014† | 2026 | ||||||
Rep | 2012 | 2026 | ||||||
Dem | 2018† | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2014 | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2018 | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2012 | 2026 | ||||||
Rep | 2022 | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2022 | 2026 | ||||||
Rep | 2022 | 2024 | ||||||
Dem | 2016 | 2026 | ||||||
Dem | 2020† | 2024 | ||||||
Dem | 2024† | 2024 | ||||||
Dem | 2018 | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2008† | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2014† | 2026 | ||||||
Dem | 2020 | 2026 | ||||||
Dem | 2002 | 2024 | ||||||
Dem | 1986 | 2026 | ||||||
Rep | 2010† | 2026 | ||||||
Dem | 1992 | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2022 | 2026 | ||||||
Rep | 2012 | 2024 | ||||||
Dem | 2015† | 2026 | ||||||
Dem | 2022 | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2014† | 2026 | ||||||
Dem | 2020 | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2020† | 2024 | ||||||
Rep | 2022 | 2026 |
See main article: Political party strength in Texas. The Senate was continuously held by Democrats from the end of the Reconstruction era until the Seventy-fifth Texas Legislature was seated in 1997, at which point Republicans took control. The Republican Party has maintained its control of the Senate since then.