Tu banner alternativo

Elections in Texas

Elections in Texas is a topic that has generated great interest and debate in modern society. For years, Elections in Texas has been the subject of study, discussion and controversy in various fields, including politics, science, culture and history. Its relevance and impact on people's lives make it a topic of great importance for understanding today's world. Over the years, a wide spectrum of opinions and points of view on Elections in Texas have developed, which has contributed to enriching the knowledge and understanding of this phenomenon. In this article, we will explore some of the most relevant perspectives and reflections around Elections in Texas, with the aim of analyzing its impact and significance in contemporary society.

Tu banner alternativo


From 1836 to 1845,Texas existed as an independent Republic of Texas and elected its own presidents before agreeing to annexation by the United Sates in 1845. Ever since, the state of Texas began participating in every presidential election with the exceptions of 1864 and 1868. The reason Texas choose not to participate in these two elections was due to its secession from the Union to join the Confederate States of America on February 1, 1861, and later remained as an unreconstructed state following in the American Civil War.

Following annexation, Texas began an election system that was quite similar to other U.S states , with early constitutions establishing offices for governor, judges, and legislators. Records from the Legislative reference library also documented every governor from 1846 and on. The state's election laws codified in the Texas Election Code in some ways including primary election rules and vote thresholds.

Texas holds its statewide elections including the gubernatorial race as well as other state offices. Every four years these elections are held on the nationwide Election Day, the Tuesday following the first Monday in November. They occur in even numbered years that are not divisible by four, meaning they take place during a midterm and don't coincide with the presidential elections. The Texas House of Representatives hold their election every two years, while the Texas Senate seats are more staggered. About half the chamber is elected in each two year cycle with the exception of years where there has been redistricting and all the seats are contested.

For about a century, Texas politics was dominated by the Democratic party, making the state a part of the Solid South which was the "electoral voting bloc for the Democratic Party in the Southern United States between the end of the Reconstruction era in 1877". In a reversal of alignments, since the late 1960s, the Republican Party has grown more prominent. By the 1990s, it became the state's dominant political party and remains so to this day, as Democrats have not won a statewide race since the 1994 Lieutenant gubernatorial election. Texas is a majority Republican state with Republicans controlling every statewide office. Texas Republicans have majorities in the State House and Senate, an entirely Republican Texas Supreme Court, control of both Senate seats in the US Congress. Texas is America's most-populous Republican state. There have been arguments that Texas has trended more competitive since 2016 by citing demographic change,urban population growth,and narrowing statewide margins. However, the 2020 presidential election saw Texas become the third closest state won by republicans, illustrating both the party's strength and the state's gradual movement towards competitiveness.

Texas, simultaneous to Wyoming, was the first state to elect a woman governor in 1924 with the election of Miriam A. Ferguson.[1] (Huddleston,2003) Conversely, Texas has never elected a person of color to be governor.[2]

In a 2020 study led by political science researcher Scot Schraufnagel, Texas was ranked as the hardest state for citizens to vote in due to strict pre-registration laws and in-person voter registration deadlines.[3] Additionally, by the 2020 election, Texas had cut down the amount of polling stations in the state, making voting less widely available.[3]

Voting system and methods

United States presidential election results for Texas[4]
Year Republican / Whig Democratic Third party(ies)
№  % №  % №  %
1848 4,509 29.71% 10,668 70.29% 0 0.00%
1852 4,995 26.93% 13,552 73.07% 0 0.00%
1856 0 0.00% 31,169 66.59% 15,639 33.41%
1860 0 0.00% 0 0.00% 62,986 100.00%
1872 47,468 40.71% 66,546 57.07% 2,580 2.21%
1876 44,800 29.96% 104,755 70.04% 0 0.00%
1880 57,893 23.95% 156,428 64.71% 27,405 11.34%
1884 93,141 28.63% 225,309 69.26% 6,855 2.11%
1888 88,422 24.73% 234,883 65.70% 34,208 9.57%
1892 81,144 19.22% 239,148 56.65% 101,853 24.13%
1896 167,520 30.75% 370,434 68.00% 6,832 1.25%
1900 130,641 30.83% 267,432 63.12% 25,633 6.05%
1904 51,242 21.90% 167,200 71.45% 15,566 6.65%
1908 65,666 22.35% 217,302 73.97% 10,789 3.67%
1912 28,530 9.45% 219,489 72.73% 53,769 17.82%
1916 64,999 17.45% 286,514 76.92% 20,948 5.62%
1920 114,538 23.54% 288,767 59.34% 83,336 17.12%
1924 130,023 19.78% 484,605 73.70% 42,881 6.52%
1928 367,036 51.77% 341,032 48.10% 931 0.13%
1932 97,959 11.35% 760,348 88.06% 5,119 0.59%
1936 104,661 12.32% 739,952 87.08% 5,123 0.60%
1940 212,692 18.91% 909,974 80.92% 1,865 0.17%
1944 191,425 16.64% 821,605 71.42% 137,301 11.94%
1948 303,467 24.29% 824,235 65.97% 121,730 9.74%
1952 1,102,878 53.13% 969,228 46.69% 3,840 0.18%
1956 1,080,619 55.26% 859,958 43.98% 14,968 0.77%
1960 1,121,310 48.52% 1,167,567 50.52% 22,207 0.96%
1964 958,566 36.49% 1,663,185 63.32% 5,060 0.19%
1968 1,227,844 39.87% 1,266,804 41.14% 584,758 18.99%
1972 2,298,896 66.20% 1,154,291 33.24% 19,527 0.56%
1976 1,953,300 47.97% 2,082,319 51.14% 36,265 0.89%
1980 2,510,705 55.28% 1,881,147 41.42% 149,785 3.30%
1984 3,433,428 63.61% 1,949,276 36.11% 14,867 0.28%
1988 3,036,829 55.95% 2,352,748 43.35% 37,833 0.70%
1992 2,496,071 40.56% 2,281,815 37.08% 1,376,132 22.36%
1996 2,736,167 48.76% 2,459,683 43.83% 415,794 7.41%
2000 3,799,639 59.30% 2,433,746 37.98% 174,252 2.72%
2004 4,526,917 61.09% 2,832,704 38.22% 51,144 0.69%
2008 4,479,328 55.38% 3,528,633 43.63% 79,830 0.99%
2012 4,569,843 57.13% 3,308,124 41.35% 121,690 1.52%
2016 4,685,047 52.09% 3,877,868 43.12% 430,940 4.79%
2020 5,890,428 52.00% 5,259,215 46.43% 177,231 1.56%
2024 6,393,597 56.03% 4,835,250 42.37% 182,952 1.60%

To reduce the amount of time required to fill electoral vacancies, Texas conducts special elections, which is to fill an office that has become vacant between general elections. Texas dispenses with party primaries and instead uses a jungle primary system. Candidates of all parties (or no party) appear on the same ballot; if no single one of them receives 50 percent plus 1 vote, the two highest vote-getters also advance to a runoff irrespective of party affiliation.[5]

Texas sets three uniform election dates each year: the first Saturday in May, the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November,[6] and for partisan primary elections the first Tuesday in March in even-numbered years.[7] By the 2020 election cycle, Texas had reduced the number of polling locations across the state, this development was noted by researchers as it made access to in person voting less consistent.

As of 2024, 99.5 percent of registered voters in Texas are in jurisdictions that use voting methods capable of producing an auditable paper ballot, reflecting an established best practice for recounts and audits.[8] Only 0.5 percent of Texas voters continue to use direct recording electronic machines (DREs) without a paper record of each vote, as the states transition to paper based voting technologies. Paper ballots marked by hand are shown to "create a tangible, tamper-evident and auditable record of voter selections".[9] These practices operate within the Texas Election Code, which governors election dates,recounts,and rules.

Voting rights in Texas

Demographics
Poll taxesAbolished 1964
Literacy tests abolishedN/A
Minimum voting age18
Preregistration age17 and 10 months
Felon voting statusNo, unless sentence fully discharged or pardoned
Voter registration
Voter registration requiredYes
Online voter registrationNo
Automatic voter registrationNo
Same-day registrationNo
Partisan affiliationNo
Voting process
Polling place identification requirementsYes, 7 accepted forms of photo ID:

Texas Driver License

Texas Election Identification Certificate

Texas Personal Identification Card

Texas Handgun License

United States Military Identification Card containing the person’s photograph

United States Citizenship Certificate containing the person’s photograph

United States Passport (book or card)
In-person early-voting status17 days prior up to 4 days before
Out-of-precinct voting statusIn select counties approved by Secretary of State of Texas
Postal ballot statusLimited to those with one of 6 acceptable excuses:

65 years of age or older

Sick or disabled

Expecting to give birth within three weeks of Election Day

Absent from the county of registration during the Early Voting period and on Election Day

Civilly committed under Chapter 841 of the Texas Health and Safety Code

Confined in jail, but otherwise eligible.
Permanent list postal ballot statusApply yearly if disabled or 65+
Ballot collection statusHousehold member, relative, or lawful assistant
Straight-ticket device statusno
Election methodFirst past the post
Voter powers
Redistricting systemComputer generated districts voted on by state legislature
Prison-based redistrictingYes
Ballot question rightsNo
Recall powersOnly local offices in Home Rule cities that have included recall in their charter
Federal representation levelState level

Voting rights and voter powers

Districting

Procedure

Texas uses an open primary system for all partisan offices, allowing voters to participate in either party's primary regarding affiliation. Counties are able to choose between separate or joint primaries.[10] In this system, voters may vote in either party's primary, without being affiliated with said party. In counties with joint primaries,both parties hold their primaries at the same time and location, and voters must inform election officials which party primary they would rather participate in.

If a runoff election is needed, voters may only participate in the runoff of the party they affiliated with in the primary (but if they did not vote in the primary, they may still vote in the runoff election and, if both parties are holding runoffs, may choose either one). Party affiliation for voting purposes expires at the end of the voting year in which affiliation was established.[11]

History

Women in Texas were denied the right to vote until 1918, when the Texas Legislature passed a law that allowed women to vote in primary elections only. Shortly after, Texas ratified the 19th Amendment which stopped states from denying the right to vote to citizens of the United States on the basis of sex. This ultimately extended full suffrage to women in all elections.

In 1870, the 15th Amendment was passed and people of color were permitted to vote in the U.S. However, African Americans continued to be oppressed when Texas allowed the Democratic Party to prevent them from voting in primary elections with The White Primary Law.[12] After that law was overruled by the U.S. Supreme Court, Texas Democrats enacted a rule that would not allow Black people to join the Democratic Party.[12] Once again, the Supreme Court overruled this decision, and soon after, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 ultimately secured voting right protections for African Americans in Texas.[12]

In addition, Texas began providing voting materials in Spanish in 1975 to accommodate voters who were not fluent in English. Congress found that citizens who did not speak English, prevented them "from voting by their language and should follow the Voting Rights Act". [12]

Elections

General

Gubernatorial

Senatorial

Ballot propositions

See also

Further reading

  • Nina Perales; Luis Figueroa; Criselda G. Rivas (2006), Voting rights in Texas, 1982-2006 (PDF), Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, OCLC 837607742
  • Nick Corasaniti; Stephanie Saul; Patricia Mazzei (September 13, 2020), "Big Voting Decisions in Florida, Wisconsin, Texas: What They Mean for November", New York Times, archived from the original on September 13, 2020, Both parties are waging legal battles around the country over who gets to vote and how

References

  1. ^ "Texas Politics - Governors: Miriam A. Ferguson". texaspolitics.utexas.edu. Retrieved April 24, 2025.
  2. ^ "Legislative Reference Library | Legislators and Leaders | Governors of Texas, 1846 - present". lrl.texas.gov. Retrieved April 24, 2025.
  3. ^ a b Schraufnagel, Scot; Pomante II, Michael J.; Li, Quan (December 2020). "Cost of Voting in the American States: 2020". Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy. 19 (4): 503–509. doi:10.1089/elj.2020.0666. ISSN 1533-1296.
  4. ^ "Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections - Presidential General Election Results Comparison - Texas". Uselectionatlas.org. Retrieved November 17, 2025.
  5. ^ "ELECTION CODE CHAPTER 2. VOTE REQUIRED FOR ELECTION TO OFFICE". statutes.capitol.texas.gov. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
  6. ^ "ELECTION CODE CHAPTER 41.001 UNIFORM ELECTION DATES". statutes.capitol.texas.gov. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  7. ^ "ELECTION CODE CHAPTER 41.007 PRIMARY ELECTIONS". statutes.capitol.texas.gov. Retrieved May 25, 2025.
  8. ^ "Views on Election Integrity in 2020-22: GOP & Trump Voters". The Center for Election Innovation & Research. Retrieved September 17, 2024.
  9. ^ "Verifier". Verified Voting. Retrieved September 17, 2024.
  10. ^ "ELECTION CODE CHAPTER 172. PRIMARY ELECTIONS". statutes.capitol.texas.gov. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  11. ^ "Glossary of Elections Terminology". www.sos.state.tx.us. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  12. ^ a b c d "Timeline of Voting & Elections in Texas - The League of Women Voters of Texas". www.lwvtexas.org. Retrieved April 24, 2025.