Frontrunners for Texas’ new congressional seats look to send message with decisive primary wins

U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, is the favorite to return to Congress via Texas’ 37th District, while Republican Wesley Hunt is the leading contender in the 38th District.

By Patrick Svitek

Texas was the only state to receive two new congressional seats, a result of the biennial process known as reapportionment in which states gain or lose seats based on how much their population has changed.

State lawmakers concentrated one of the new seats, the 37th Congressional District, in Austin and anchored the other, the 38th Congressional District, in Houston and stretched it into the city’s northwestern suburbs.

Republicans are pressing to deliver Army combat veteran Wesley Hunt an outright primary win over a crowd of underdog opponents vying for the new Congressional District 38, a solidly Republican seat. Here, Hunt speaks at a rally in Houston on Jan. 17, 2022. Credit: Briana Vargas for The Texas Tribune

“The fact that I am standing on this stage before you just speaks volumes,” Hunt said. “For a direct descendant of a slave will someday be the congressman for a Republican-leaning, white-majority district in Harris County because you don’t care. You don’t care what I look like.”

Doggett’s decision

U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, speaks at a rally in support of federal voting rights at the state Capitol on June 20, 2021. He has settled in as the heavy favorite for the new 37th U.S. House District seat. Credit: Jordan Vonderhaar for The Texas Tribune

This story originally published by the Texas Tribune.

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