-
Greg Abbott and Beto O'Rourke will compete to be Texas' governor in November. Both parties will head to a run-off for the attorney general's seat.
-
Texas voters who go to the polls Tuesday will be asked in which primary they want to participate – the Republican or the Democratic? Texas has an open primary system, so voters are free to choose. But what happens if someone votes in the other party’s primary in order to be a spoiler?
-
With hundreds of candidates vying for local or statewide office, there is a chance a winner won’t be declared after the primary. Here's a simple breakdown of what triggers a runoff election and when they will be held.
-
The gloves come off in the primary fight to be Republican nominee for Texas Attorney General. And we hear from Rochelle Mercedes Garza — a Democrat seeking the AG nomination.
-
In the state's largest counties, voter turnout was below 5% during the first seven days of early voting. Election officials said some Texans could still be making up their minds before Election Day on March 1.
-
The Republican governor hosted a party in McAllen one day after his Democratic challenger met with voters in Harlingen and Brownsville.
-
Two years after they first squared off, nine-term Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar faces progressive Jessica Cisneros in a March 1 primary. Both Democrats and Republicans are watching the key race.
-
Across Texas, there are 15 single-member State Board of Education districts, and every seat is on the ballot this election. The SBOE makes important decisions about things like public school curriculum and what textbooks are used.
-
In Harris County — home to Houston — election officials so far have sent back to voters nearly 38% of mail-in ballots, citing issues with new state ID requirements.
-
A federal judge in San Antonio temporarily blocked a provision in Senate Bill 1, known as the Texas voter restriction bill, last Friday.