Four takeaways from Tuesday’s Texas elections

Published 10:46 am Wednesday, November 7, 2018

By Emma Platoff

The Texas Tribune

texastribune.org

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Beto O’Rourke came close — but no cigar.

In one of the nation’s closest-watched elections, Beto O’Rourke lost a tight race to U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz. But Texas Democrats celebrated the close margin.

“I am as inspired and hopeful as I have ever been in my life,” O’Rourke told a sprawling crowd of supporters in his hometown of El Paso.

Lower on the ballot, Democrats picked up several seats in the U.S. House, unseating U.S. Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Dallas and U.S. Rep. John Culberson, R-Houston. That inches Texas’ congressional delegation toward the center, shifting the partisan split from 11-25 to 13-23. Texas also sent its first Latinas to Congress with the victories of Sylvia Garcia and Veronica Escobar.

“Tonight’s results have shown that we have the power to change the direction of our country — that’s what we did with this race,” Democrat Lizzie Fletcher said after unseating Culberson.

O’Rourke included, Democrats narrowed their losing margins in top state races.

Gov. Greg Abbott sailed to re-election with a double-digit margin, easily besting his Democratic challenger, former Dallas County Sheriff Lupe Valdez with 56 percent of the vote to her 43. But lower on the ballot, Texas Republican incumbents won with much narrower mandates than they carried in years past.

In 2014, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick was elected with a double-digit margin of victory; this year, he won by just 5 points. The margins were similar for Attorney General Ken Paxton, who bested challenger Justin Nelson by 4 percent. Nelson consistently attacked Paxton, who has served the bulk of his first term under indictment for securities fraud — and that line of attack seemed to have seen some limited success.

Other Republicans, including Comptroller Glenn Hegar, Land Commissioner George P. Bush, Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller and Railroad Commissioner Christi Craddick, handily kept their seats. And Republicans continue to hold all 18 seats on the state’s two highest courts, the Texas Supreme Court and Court of Criminal Appeals.

Republicans maintained their dominant majority in the Legislature… but Democrats made serious headway, especially in the Dallas area.

Democrats picked up 12 seats in the Texas House, moving the lopsided 95-55 split to 83-67. State Rep. Matt Rinaldi, R-Irving, an important member of the Texas House Freedom Caucus, lost his re-election bid to Democrat Julie Johnson as a group of Dallas-area Democrats bested their GOP opponents. Moderates Tony Dale and Paul Workman were unseated as well. Those changes shift calculations for House lawmakers who will elect a new speaker in January. Democrats had been hoping that pickups in the midterm elections would boost their bargaining power — and they seem to have gotten their wish.

In the Texas Senate, incumbents Don Huffines and Konni Burton were unseated by Democratic challengers. But the GOP still holds 19 seats in the upper chamber — enough to bring legislation to the floor without any support from Democrats, and more than enough to pass it.

Turnout surged to near-presidential election levels.

In 2016, a presidential election year, nearly 9 million Texans showed up to the polls. Midterm years tend to have far lower turnout — in 2014, for example, just 4.6 million Texans voted.

This year, Texans bucked that trend. Turnout topped 8.3 million — historically high for a midterm election in Texas. By the end of early voting, turnout in the 30 Texas counties that house 78 percent of the state’s registered voters had already surpassedturnout from the 2012 presidential election.

Many political observers attribute that boost to a blockbuster U.S. Senate race at the top of the ticket. Nationally, voters on both sides of the aisle were energized by President Donald Trump, with Democrats hoping the 2018 midterms would mark a sharp rebuke of the president and Republicans voting in droves to defend him.

The Texas Tribune is a nonpartisan, nonprofit media organization that informs Texans — and engages with them — about public policy, politics, government and statewide issues.

 

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