Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
2024 Texas's 3rd congressional district election [28] Party Candidate Votes % Republican: Keith Self (incumbent) 237,794 : 62.5 : Democratic: Sandeep Srivastava 142,953 37.6 Total votes 380,747 : 100.0 : Republican hold
The district is also home to a public four-year university, Texas A&M University-Commerce, as well as Collin College. Texas has had at least three congressional districts since 1869. The current seat dates from a mid-decade redistricting conducted before the 1966 elections after Texas's original 1960s map was thrown out by Wesberry v.
The Texas Legislature drew new maps for Texas' congressional districts to account for the two new congressional districts it gained through the 2020 census. The Republican Party had a trifecta in the Texas Government at the time, giving them full control of the redistricting process. [ 6 ]
The 2026 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas will be held on November 3, 2026, to elect the thirty-eight U.S. representatives from the State of Texas, one from all thirty eight of the state's congressional districts.
He was a candidate for Texas's 3rd congressional district in the March 2022 Republican primary, finishing second to incumbent Van Taylor and advancing to a May runoff. [11] After the primary, Taylor announced that he would end his congressional campaign amid accusations of marital infidelity, giving Self the nomination.
Texas's 3rd congressional district, 2020 [20] Party Candidate Votes % Republican: Van Taylor (incumbent) 230,512 : 55.1 : Democratic: Lulu Seikaly 179,458 42.9 Libertarian: Christopher Claytor 8,621 2.1 Total votes 418,591 : 100.0 : Republican hold
(Please list previous offices sought, with years): Prior to being elected as the Member of Congress for the 24th District in November 2020, I was Mayor of the City of Irving, Texas from 2011-2017 ...
Texas's congressional districts since 2023. A long history exists of various individuals serving in the congressional delegations from the State of Texas to the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate, with all of this occurring after Texas as a territory was annexed as a State in December 1865.