Polls close for early voting in Texas Senate runoff race between Paxton, Cornyn
The race drew more than $135 million in advertising as Trump’s endorsement and low-turnout runoff rules favor Paxton, analysts said.
- Early voting concluded Friday across Texas, setting the stage for Tuesday's primary runoff elections featuring the U.S. Senate race between John Cornyn and Ken Paxton and the Congressional District 18 contest.
- Voter fatigue and confusion over shifting district lines appear to be suppressing participation as this runoff marks the sixth election since November's general election, with residents voting repeatedly.
- Official counts in Harris County show a combined total of 120,066 early voters, including nearly 31,000 Democrats and nearly 41,000 Republicans, though experts say turnout remains lower than expected.
- Democrats Johnny Garcia and Maureen Galindo are competing for the chance to represent District 35 in the November election, adding another high-profile contest to the ballot.
- KHOU 11 political analyst Brandon Rottinghaus warns that low participation allows results to be swung easily. "An election can be swung easily by just a handful of voters," Rottinghaus said.
18 Articles
18 Articles
Even MS NOW Panel Admits: Beating Ken Paxton in Texas Would Be An ‘Uphill Battle’
On Saturday’s edition of T
Cornyn won’t commit to backing Paxton if Trump-endorsed AG wins primary
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) on Sunday would not commit to backing Trump-endorsed Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) if he wins the upcoming Texas Republican Senate runoff election to face Democrat James Talarico in November. NewsNation’s Chris Stirewalt asked Cornyn on “The Hill Sunday” that, based on past comments, Paxton is unfit to serve in the…
Rallies, ad blitzes and a Trump endorsement: Inside the final days of the Cornyn-Paxton runoff
WASHINGTON — Thirteen months, $135 million, hundreds of endorsements, numerous AI-generated ads and an uncountable number of ad hominem attacks later, the bruising primary battle between John Cornyn and Ken Paxton will finally come to an end Tuesday.
Is Trump trying to turn Texas blue?
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton with Donald Trump in 2022. Brandon Bell/Getty Images.Happy Memorial Day weekend, readers! The Texas U.S. Senate runoff is on Tuesday, though, so we didn’t want to sit on this deep dive on the race.Two other quick things to also alert you to:The World Series of Poker also starts on Tuesday, so I’ve updated my annual guide with several sections of new material.And as we’re getting toward the end of the month, SBSQ…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 75% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium









