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Here's A Look At The Local Races For Texas House

Gabriel Cristóver Pérez
/
KUT
Texas House representatives confer in March during the 85th legislative session.

Midterm elections, especially after a new president comes into office, often bring interesting stories. Just look at 2010, when we saw the rise of the Tea Party and a “red wave� that swept out dozens of congressional Democrats nationally and pushed an almost evenly split Texas House (76-74) to a GOP supermajority (101-49).

Credit Ben Hassan / Texas Tribune
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Texas Tribune
Got questions for Ben about the elections? Email him at [email protected], and he may answer them in an upcoming column.

This year, are focusing on the possibility of a “blue wave� that could flip the U.S. House and even the Senate. Believe it or not, that activism excitement has made its way to Texas. Democrats here are running more candidates in more races than they have in decades. There’s a . And when political pundits asked who could be the next Doug Jones, after the Democrats� upset win in Alabama, .

But before we get to the big, gigantic, all-encompassing statewide view, there’s plenty of stuff to follow here in Central Texas. In fact, there’s so much, I’m going to break it off into smaller bites.

Texas House

Let’s start by going over the local races for Texas House.

Democrats , and not only have no primary opponents, but they also will not have a Republican challenger in November.

Democrat incumbent is also unchallenged in the primary, as is her expected Republican challenger Kyle Austin.

But there are still some interesting races out there.

East Austin Democrat , who has already served 12 terms, is once again running for re-election. But this time, she’s got five high-quality challengers. 

Dukes has drawn criticism for her from the last two legislative sessions. She attributes this to health issues stemming from a car wreck. (all charges were dropped) by the AGÕæÈ˰ټÒÀÖ County DA gave Dukes a stronger leg to run on. But she’ll have a tough race.

Southwest AGÕæÈ˰ټÒÀÖ County Republican will have his own primary challenge this time around. Jay Wiley and Patty Vredevelt are also hoping to be the Republican nominee. Whoever gets the nomination will face off against the winner of a five-person race on the Democratic side.

South Williamson County Republican state won his 2016 re-election bid by 10 points even though, , Hillary Clinton won his district by 2.5 points. Dale doesn’t have a primary opponent, but he’ll face a   in the fall. He hopes that Clinton support can flip the district.

House District 45 incumbent Republican Jason Isaac is not seeking re-election to instead run for Congress. That’s led to five Republicans and three Democrats joining the race to replace him in the district that includes Hays and Blanco counties.

Republicans:

  • Amy Akers

Democrats: 

And here's a rundown of the other state house races in central Texas:

House District 17 (Bastrop, Caldwell,Gonzales, Karnes and Lee Counties)

Republican State  has no primary opponent. He'll face Democrat , also unopposed in the primary, in the fall.

House District 20 (Burnet, Milam and Williamson Counties)

Republican State  has no primary opponent. He'll face Democrat Stephen M. Wyman, who is also unopposed in the primary, in November.

House District 52 (Williamson County)

GOP incumbent Larry Gonzales has decided to not seek re-election. Three Republicans are hoping to replace him on the ballot in November: ,  and .   is unopposed in the Democratic primary.

Your questions about the 2018 primaries

KUT wants to answer any questions you have about the primaries as part of a statewide effort called . I’ll be answering some of them in these weekly columns, and some will get aired on KUT. We’ve already received several good questions, including this one from Danica Alcaraz. She asks:

Do you have to register ... [as] either Democrat or Republican to cast a vote?

She says the idea of having to register with a party is what turns her off about primaries.

Danica, be turned off no more! Texas has open primaries. That means you can vote in either one without joining a party. You can vote in the Democratic primary in 2018, then vote in the GOP primary in 2020. The only rule is that when you pick a side, you have to stick with that side in any runoff elections. So if you do vote in the Democratic primary you can’t vote in any GOP runoffs for 2018.

We also received a question wondering whether people can vote in both party primaries. No, just one at a time. But again, you can switch out every two years without joining or quitting any of the parties.

I’ve just scratched the surface in terms of races on the ballot and questions about the primaries. Check back every Tuesday morning for more on the 2018 elections.

(Editors note: an earlier version of this story incorrectly labeled Rep. Tony Dale as a AGÕæÈ˰ټÒÀÖ County Republican. He actually represents parts of Williamson County.)

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Ben Philpott is the Managing Editor for KUT. Got a tip? Email him at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @BenPhilpottKUT.
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