The following table indicates the party of elected officials in the U.S. state of Texas:
- Governor
- Lieutenant Governor
- Attorney General
- State Comptroller of Public Accounts
- State Land Commissioner
- State Agriculture Commissioner
- Treasurer (before 1996)
The table also indicates the historical party composition in the:
- State Senate
- State House of Representatives
- State Railroad Commission
- State delegation to the U.S. Senate
- State delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives
For years in which a presidential election was held, the table indicates which party's nominees received the state's electoral votes.
1846–1890
1891–1998
Year | Executive offices | State Legislature | R. R. Comm. | United States Congress | Electoral votes | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Governor | Lieutenant Governor | Attorney General | Comptroller | Treasurer | Land Comm. | Ag. Comm. | State Senate | State House | U.S. Senator (Class I) | U.S. Senator (Class II) | U.S. House | |||
1891 | Jim Hogg (D) | George C. Pendleton (D) | Charles A. Culberson (D) | John D. McCall (D) | William B. Wortham (D) | William L. McGaughey (D) | Lafayette L. Foster (D)[lower-alpha 13] | 31D | 104D, 2R | 3D | Horace Chilton (D) | Richard Coke (D) | 11D | |
1892 | no such office | Roger Q. Mills (D) | Cleveland/ Stevenson (D) | |||||||||||
1893 | Martin McNulty Crane (D) | 29D, 1Pop, 1I | 119D, 8Pop, 1R | 13D | ||||||||||
1894 | ||||||||||||||
1895 | Charles A. Culberson (D) | George Taylor Jester (D) | Martin McNulty Crane (D) | Richard W. Finley (D) | Andrew Jackson Baker (D) | 29D, 2Pop | 103D, 22Pop, 3R | Horace Chilton (D) | 12D, 1R | |||||
1896 | Bryan/ Sewall (D) | |||||||||||||
1897 | 28D, 2Pop, 1R | 120D, 6Pop, 2R | ||||||||||||
1898 | Thomas Slater Smith (D) | |||||||||||||
1899 | Joseph D. Sayers (D) | James Browning (D) | John W. Robbins (D) | Charles Rogan (D) | 30D, 1R | 118D, 9Pop, 1R | Charles A. Culberson (D) | |||||||
1900 | Bryan/ Stevenson (D) | |||||||||||||
1901 | Charles K. Bell (D) | Robert M. Love (D)[lower-alpha 14] | 31D | 126D, 1Pop, 1IR | Joseph W. Bailey (D) | 13D | ||||||||
1902 | ||||||||||||||
1903 | S. W. T. Lanham (D) | George D. Neal (D) | J. W. Stephen (D)[lower-alpha 15] | John J. Terrell (D) | 130D, 1R, 1Pop, 1IR | 16D | ||||||||
1904 | Robert V. Davidson (D) | Parker/ Davis | ||||||||||||
1905 | 131D, 2R | |||||||||||||
1906 | ||||||||||||||
1907 | Thomas Mitchell Campbell (D) | Asbury Bascom Davidson (D) | Sam Sparks (D) | Robert Teague Milner (D)[lower-alpha 16] | 132D, 1R | |||||||||
1908 | Edward R. Kone (D) | Bryan/ Kern (D) | ||||||||||||
1909 | James T. Robison (D) | 30D, 1R | 131D, 2R | |||||||||||
1910 | Jewel P. Lightfoot (D) | |||||||||||||
1911 | Oscar Branch Colquitt (D) | W. P. Lane (D) | 131D, 1R | |||||||||||
1912 | J. M. Edwards (D) | Wilson/ Marshall (D) | ||||||||||||
James D. Walthall (D) | ||||||||||||||
1913 | William Harding Mayes (D) | B. F. Looney (D) | 141D, 1R | Rienzi Melville Johnston (D) | 18D | |||||||||
Morris Sheppard (D) | ||||||||||||||
1914 | ||||||||||||||
1915 | James E. Ferguson (D)[lower-alpha 17] | William P. Hobby (D) | Henry B. Terrell (D) | Fred Davis (D) | 31D | 140D, 1R, 1I | ||||||||
1916 | ||||||||||||||
1917 | William P. Hobby (D)[lower-alpha 18] | vacant | 142D | |||||||||||
1918 | ||||||||||||||
1919 | Willard Arnold Johnson (D) | Calvin Maples Cureton (D) | John W. Baker (D) | 141D, 1R | ||||||||||
1920 | M. L. Wiginton (D) | George B. Terrell (D) | Cox/ Roosevelt (D) | |||||||||||
1921 | Pat Morris Neff (D) | Lynch Davidson (D) | Lon A. Smith (D) | Charles Vernon Terrell (D) | 30D, 1R | 137D, 4A, 1R | 17D, 1R | |||||||
1922 | Walter Angus Keeling (D) | |||||||||||||
1923 | Thomas Whitfield Davidson (D) | 149D, 1R | Earle B. Mayfield (D) | |||||||||||
1924 | Sidney Lee Staples (D) | Davis/ Bryan (D) | ||||||||||||
1925 | Miriam A. Ferguson (D) | Barry Miller (D) | Dan Moody (D) | Sam Houston Terrell (D) | W. Gregory Hatcher (D) | |||||||||
1926 | ||||||||||||||
1927 | Dan Moody (D) | Claude Pollard (D) | ||||||||||||
1928 | Hoover/ Curtis (R) | |||||||||||||
1929 | 31D | Tom Connally (D) | 18D | |||||||||||
Robert L. Bobbitt (D) | J. H. Walker (D) | |||||||||||||
1930 | 17D, 1R | |||||||||||||
1931 | Ross S. Sterling (D) | Edgar E. Witt (D) | James Allred (D) | George H. Sheppard (D) | Charley Lockhart (D) | James E. McDonald (D) | 150D | |||||||
1932 | 18D | Roosevelt/ Garner (D) | ||||||||||||
1933 | Miriam A. Ferguson (D) | 148D, 2I | 21D | |||||||||||
1934 | ||||||||||||||
1935 | James Allred (D) | Walter Frank Woodul (D) | William McCraw (D) | 149D, 1I | ||||||||||
1936 | ||||||||||||||
1937 | William H. McDonald (D) | |||||||||||||
1938 | ||||||||||||||
1939 | W. Lee O'Daniel (D)[lower-alpha 19] | Coke R. Stevenson (D) | Gerald Mann (D) | Bascom Giles (D) | 150D | |||||||||
1940 | Roosevelt/ Wallace (D) | |||||||||||||
1941 | ||||||||||||||
Jesse James (D) | Andrew Jackson Houston (D) | |||||||||||||
Coke R. Stevenson (D)[lower-alpha 18] | vacant | W. Lee O'Daniel (D) | ||||||||||||
1942 | ||||||||||||||
1943 | John Lee Smith (D) | |||||||||||||
1944 | Grover Sellers (D) | Roosevelt/ Truman (D) | ||||||||||||
1945 | ||||||||||||||
1946 | ||||||||||||||
1947 | Beauford H. Jester (D)[lower-alpha 20] | Allan Shivers (D) | Price Daniel (D) | |||||||||||
1948 | Truman/ Barkley (D) | |||||||||||||
1949 | Allan Shivers (D)[lower-alpha 18] | vacant | Robert S. Calvert (D) | Lyndon B. Johnson (D) | ||||||||||
1950 | 20D, 1R[lower-alpha 21] | |||||||||||||
1951 | Ben Ramsey (D) | John Coyle White (D) | 149D, 1R | 21D | ||||||||||
1952 | Eisenhower/ Nixon (R) | |||||||||||||
1953 | John Ben Shepperd (D) | 150D | Price Daniel (D) | 22D | ||||||||||
1954 | ||||||||||||||
1955 | James Earl Rudder (D) | 21D, 1R | ||||||||||||
1956 | ||||||||||||||
1957 | Price Daniel (D) | Will Wilson (D) | William A. Blakley (D) | |||||||||||
Ralph Yarborough (D) | ||||||||||||||
1958 | Bill Allcorn (D) | |||||||||||||
1959 | ||||||||||||||
1960 | Kennedy/ Johnson (D) | |||||||||||||
1961 | Jerry Sadler (D) | William A. Blakley (D) | ||||||||||||
John Tower (R) | ||||||||||||||
1962 | 148D, 2R | |||||||||||||
1963 | John Connally (D) | Preston Smith (D) | Waggoner Carr (D) | 140D, 10R | 21D, 2R | |||||||||
1964 | Johnson/ Humphrey (D) | |||||||||||||
1965 | 149D, 1R | 23D | ||||||||||||
1966 | ||||||||||||||
1967 | Crawford Martin (D) | 30D, 1R | 143D, 7R | 21D, 2R | ||||||||||
1968 | Humphrey/ Muskie (D) | |||||||||||||
1969 | Preston Smith (D) | Ben Barnes (D) | 29D, 2R | 141D, 8R, 1I[lower-alpha 22] | 20D, 3R | |||||||||
1970 | ||||||||||||||
1971 | Bob Armstrong (D) | 141D, 9R | Lloyd Bentsen (D) | |||||||||||
1972 | Nixon/ Agnew (R) | |||||||||||||
1973 | Dolph Briscoe (D) | William P. Hobby Jr. (D) | John Hill (D) | 28D, 3R | 133D, 17R | 20D, 4R | ||||||||
1974 | ||||||||||||||
1975 | Bob Bullock (D) | 132D, 18R | 21D, 3R | |||||||||||
1976 | Carter/ Mondale (D) | |||||||||||||
1977 | Warren G. Harding (D) | Reagan V. Brown (D) | 131D, 19R | 22D, 2R | ||||||||||
1978 | 27D, 4R | |||||||||||||
1979 | Bill Clements (R) | Mark White (D) | 127D, 23R | 20D, 4R | ||||||||||
1980 | Reagan/ Bush (R) | |||||||||||||
1981 | 24D, 7R | 113D, 37R | 19D, 5R | |||||||||||
1982 | ||||||||||||||
1983 | Mark White (D) | Jim Mattox (D) | Ann Richards (D) | Garry Mauro (D) | Jim Hightower (D) | 26D, 5R | 21D, 6R | |||||||
1984 | ||||||||||||||
1985 | 25D, 6R | 95D, 55R | Phil Gramm (R) | 17D, 10R | ||||||||||
1986 | ||||||||||||||
1987 | Bill Clements (R) | 90D, 60R | ||||||||||||
1988 | Bush/ Quayle (R) | |||||||||||||
1989 | 23D, 8R | 91D, 59R | 19D, 8R | |||||||||||
1990 | ||||||||||||||
1991 | Ann Richards (D) | Bob Bullock (D) | Dan Morales (D) | John Sharp (D) | Kay Bailey Hutchison (R) | Rick Perry (R) | 22D, 9R[lower-alpha 23] | 90D, 60R | ||||||
1992 | 2D, 1R | Bush/ Quayle (R) | ||||||||||||
1993 | 18D, 13R | 92D, 58R | Bob Krueger (D) | 21D, 9R | ||||||||||
Martha Whitehead (D)[lower-alpha 24] | Kay Bailey Hutchison (R) | |||||||||||||
1994 | 91D, 59R[lower-alpha 25] | 3R | ||||||||||||
1995 | George W. Bush (R) | 17D, 14R | 89D, 61R | 18D, 12R | ||||||||||
1996 | 87D, 63R[lower-alpha 26] | Dole/ Kemp (R) | ||||||||||||
1997 | office abolished[lower-alpha 27] | 17R, 14D | 82D, 68R | 17D, 13R | ||||||||||
1998 | ||||||||||||||
Year | Governor | Lieutenant Governor |
Attorney General |
Comptroller | Treasurer | Land Comm. | Ag. Comm. | State Senate | State House | R. R. Comm. | U.S. Senator (Class I) |
U.S. Senator (Class II) |
U.S. House |
Electoral votes |
Executive offices | State Legislature | United States Congress |
1999–present
- ↑ Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States House of Representatives.
- 1 2 3 4 As lieutenant governor, filled unexpired term.
- ↑ Evicted from office due to his refusal to swear an oath to the Confederate States of America.
- ↑ Fled Austin as it fell to Union forces.
- ↑ Provisional military governor.
- 1 2 Was removed from office by General Philip Sheridan, commander of the Fifth Military District during Reconstruction.
- ↑ Resigned due to disagreements with General Joseph J. Reynolds.
- ↑ The office remained vacant until the 14th Legislature in 1874.
- ↑ Elected lieutenant governor in 1869 but was not inaugurated. He presided over the provisional session but left office after being selected as an at-large representative to the United States Congress.
- ↑ Elected in a special election held under military direction.
- 1 2 3 4 As president pro tempore of the state Senate, served as lieutenant governor ex officio while the office remained vacant.
- ↑ Resigned to take an elected seat in the United States Senate.
- ↑ Commissioner of Agriculture, Insurance, Statistics & History. Governor Hogg appointed Foster to the First Railroad Commission of Texas in May.
- ↑ Shot and killed in office by a former employee.
- ↑ Appointed by Governor upon the death of his predecessor.
- ↑ Governor appointed first incumbent when office was created by the Legislature.
- ↑ Resigned due to the legislature's bringing impeachment proceedings against him.
- 1 2 3 As lieutenant governor, filled unexpired term, and was subsequently in his own right.
- ↑ Resigned after winning the Democratic primary for a United States Senate seat; he won the election.
- ↑ Died in office.
- ↑ Republican Ben H. Guill won a special election to succeed Democrat Eugene Worley, who resigned, flipping a seat.
- ↑ John Poerner won his seat as a Republican in a special election March, but changed to Independent once sworn into the House.
- ↑ Republican David Sibley won a February special election to fill the seat of Democrat Chet Edwards, who resigned to become a U.S. Representative.
- ↑ Initially appointed to fill vacancy; later elected in his or her own right.
- ↑ Representative Ric Williams switched parties.[1]
- ↑ In February 1995, Republican Todd Staples won a special election to flip a seat.[2] Later in 1995, Representative Warren Chisum switched parties.[3]
- ↑ In 1996, voters approved a constitutional amendment abolishing the Office of State Treasurer and transferring its functions to the Office of Comptroller of Public Accounts.
- ↑ Democrat Donna Howard won a special election to fill the unexpired term of Republican Todd Baxter.
- ↑ Democrat Dan Barret won a special election to fill the unexpired term of Republican Anna Mowery, and Republican Kirk England switched his party affiliation from Republican to Democratic, flipping two seats.[4][5]
- ↑ Republican John Lujan won a special election to succeed Democrat Joe Farias, who resigned, flipping a seat.[6] Additionally, Independent Laura Thompson won a special election to succeed Democrat Ruth Jones McClendon, who resigned, flipping another seat.[7]
- ↑ Republican Pete Flores won a special election to succeed Democrat Carlos Uresti, who resigned, flipping a seat.[8]
- ↑ Republican John Lujan won a special election to succeed Democrat Leo Pacheco, who resigned, flipping a seat.[9] Additionally, Ryan Guillen switched parties from Democratic to Republican.[10]
- ↑ Republican Mayra Flores won a special election to succeed Democrat Filemon Vela Jr., who resigned, flipping a seat.[11]
References
- ↑ McNeely, Dave (December 21, 1993). "Williamson party switch no surprise". Austin American Statesman. pp. A15. Retrieved June 17, 2023.
- ↑ "Republican wins District 11 seat in special vote". Houston Chronicle. February 13, 1995. p. 15.
- ↑ Attlesey, Sam (June 27, 1995). "Laughlin, tops list of converts to GOP He says switch is about principles". The Dallas Morning News. pp. 11A. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
- ↑ "Race Summary Report: Special Runoff Election State Representative District 97". Office of the Secretary of State of Texas. Retrieved 2021-07-16.
- ↑ "State Representative Kirk England switches to Democratic Party | www.pegasusnews.com | Dallas/Fort Worth". 2014-02-22. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2021-07-16.
- ↑ Gonzalez, John W. (2016-01-27). "Republican Lujan captures South Side special legislative election". San Antonio Express-News. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
- ↑ Gonzalez, John W. (2016-08-03). "Independent Thompson captures District 120 seat". mySA. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
- ↑ Mikelionis, Lukas (2018-09-20). "Texas Republican wins state Senate race in district held by Democrats for 139 years". Fox News. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
- ↑ Svitek, Patrick (2021-11-02). "Republican John Lujan wins special election runoff to flip Texas House seat in San Antonio". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved 2021-11-06.
- ↑ Svitek, Patrick (November 15, 2021). "State Rep. Ryan Guillen switches to GOP in latest blow to South Texas Democrats". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved November 15, 2021.
- ↑ Svitek, Patrick (2022-06-11). "Republicans flip U.S. House seat in South Texas, historically a Democratic stronghold". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved 2023-01-04.
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