Election results: How Texas voted in the November 2022 midterms

The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization dedicated to helping you navigate Texas policy and politics — including the 2022 elections. Here are the election results of the Texas 2022 midterms on Nov. 8.

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What you should know:

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How to read these results

✓ A checkmark indicates the projected winner called by Decision Desk HQ. ✓ The winner is a Republican candidate. ✓ The winner is a Democratic candidate. Additional noteworthy information provided for these races.

Voters could support R Republican, D Democratic, L Libertarian, G Green Party
or I independent candidates in some races.

If you share your address below, we’ll personalize the results for you by showing the results for your area. (Don’t worry: We don’t store your information.)

Governor

The governor is the chief executive of Texas. The seat has not been held by a Democrat since 1995. Republican Greg Abbott won a third term against Democrat Beto O’Rourke of El Paso, a former U.S. representative with statewide name recognition because of his 2018 U.S. Senate and 2020 presidential runs.

Attorney General

The attorney general is the top lawyer in Texas, representing the state in mostly civil litigation. Despite his tenure clouded by a high-profile securities fraud indictment and an FBI investigation into claims of malfeasance, Ken Paxton won reelection against Democratic challenger Rochelle Garza, a former lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union from the Rio Grande Valley.

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Lieutenant Governor

The lieutenant governor, the second-highest executive in the state, presides over the state Senate. For the second time since 2018, Republican incumbent Dan Patrick won against Democratic nominee Mike Collier.

Land Commissioner

The land commissioner oversees an agency that manages 13 million acres of state land, administers disaster recovery funds, contributes to public school funding and has administrative control of the Alamo. Republican Dawn Buckingham won the open seat against Democrat Jay Kleberg.

Railroad Commissioner

In Texas, the Railroad Commission regulates the oil and gas industry. Members of the three-person board are elected statewide, and one seat was up for election in 2022. Republican incumbent Wayne Christian won reelection against Luke Warford, a former Texas Democratic Party staffer.

Agriculture Commissioner

The agriculture commissioner oversees programs to financially assist farmers, ranchers, rural hospitals and school lunch programs. Sid Miller won a third term against Democratic challenger Susan Hays.

Comptroller

The comptroller is the state official responsible for collecting taxes, overseeing the state treasury and forecasting the amount of money that’s available for the state’s two-year budget. Republican Glenn Hegar won a third term against Democratic challenger Janet Dudding, an accountant.

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U.S. House Texas delegation

Texas’ new 38-district congressional map incorporates two new House seats, which the state gained due to its explosive growth over the last decade. U.S. representatives serve two-year terms, and 31 sitting members ran again this year.

State Board of Education

There are 15 districts within the State Board of Education, which oversees the curriculum taught in Texas public schools . Every seat was on the ballot this year because the districts were redrawn last year. Five seats are now held by Democrats and ten by Republicans, widening their majority.

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Texas Supreme Court

The Texas Supreme Court, the state’s highest civil court, has nine justices. Three of the nine seats on the Supreme Court were up for election in 2022. Justices are elected statewide, and Republicans will continue to hold all the seats.

Texas Court of Criminal Appeals

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals is the state’s highest criminal court. The nine members are elected statewide and will continue to be all Republicans. Three seats were up for election this year, with one of them uncontested.

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Texas Senate

Every seat in the 31-member Texas Senate was on the ballot because the districts were redrawn last year.

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Texas House

There are 150 members of the Texas House. Each state representative serves a two-year term. This election took place under a new map drawn by legislators.

What we are seeing

Turnout for early voting in this midterm election reached 31%, about 7 percentage points below what it was in 2018. This may be due to voter apathy.

Domestic mail-in ballots turned in and postmarked by election day were counted if they arrived no later than 5 p.m. Nov. 9. Mail-in ballots from military and overseas voters had to be postmarked by Election Day and arrive no later than Nov. 14. In close races, mail-in votes and provisional ballots helped determine the winner, delaying the calling of those races. The certification of final election results was completed by all the counties on Nov. 21 and released by the secretary of state on Nov. 28.

The Texas Tribune’s election data was provided by Decision Desk HQ, which gathered information from the secretary of state’s office and a representative sample of 50 counties. Decision Desk called winners and provided estimates as to how many votes were left to be counted. The estimates of votes left to be counted changed throughout election night.

Election results data provided by Decision Desk HQ.

County shapes and city locations provided by the U.S. Census Bureau. Road lines provided by Natural Earth.

Contributions by Emily Albracht, Yuriko Schumacher, Darla Cameron and AmyJo Brown.

Disclosure: The Texas secretary of state, the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Terry Canales, Senfronia Thompson, Brooks Landgraf, Vikki Goodwin and Todd Hunter have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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