A lot of money was spent, and the status quo remains for the most part (assuming 2 recounts don’t change the election night winner) . The blue wave that was suspected did not hit Texas shores. The Texas House of Representatives stayed at its current makeup (83 Republicans, 67 Democrats) with two upsets coming from the Houston area one Republican incumbent, Sarah Davis, losing to Democratic challenger Ann Johnson and one Democratic incumbent Gina Calanni losing to former Rep. Michael Schofield. The makeup of the Senate changed with the upset of democrat Roland Gutierrez over Sen. Pete Flores, many suspected this turn as this was a traditionally blue seat. The makeup of the Senate is 18 Republicans and 13 Democrats.
The DFW area was a hotspot for potential flips but none come to fruition. In the tightest races, Rep. Angie Chen Button bested her democratic opponent Brandy Chambers by 223 votes. Rep. Matt Shaheen fended off democratic challenger Sharon Hirsch by 1,000 votes. Rep. Morgan Meyer fended off democratic challenger Joanna Cattanach by 1,634 votes.
Republicans went after two House seats in the Austin area, coming up short. In the race against Rep. Erin Zwiener, republican challenger Carrie Isaac lost by 1,211 votes. In the race to unseat Rep. Vikki Goodwin, republican challenger Justin Berry lost by 1,324, he may have had a shot, but the libertarian candidate Michael Clark took 3,282 votes.
In the Houston area, an open seat left by Rep. Rick Miller, was close but Republican Jacey Jetton was able win at 51.93%
Republicans held on to the Supreme Court but did lose many seats on the Court of Appeals.
Next up is the Speaker’s Race, 8 legislators have filed. This afternoon Rep. Dade Phelan (R-Beaumont) announced at a press conference he has the votes to secure the speakership.