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Texas general election matchups are finally set. Here’s what you need to know
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton speaks at an election night watch party held by the Lone Star Liberty PAC Tuesday in Plano, Texas. Paxton defeated Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, in a Senate primary runoff election and will face Democrat James Talarico in the November general election.
Stewart F. House/Getty Images
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Stewart F. House/Getty Images
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President Trump’s stamp was all over Tuesday’s Texas primary runoff results as his pick for Republican Senate nominee, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, toppled Sen. John Cornyn, and his endorsed candidates proceeded to the general election in other races up and down the ballot.
But Democrats put their mark on this race too, even without a marquee race like the Senate primary, which was decided in March. Ousting longtime Democratic Rep. Al Green was the first sign that voters are ready for something new in Washington — and that Texas Republicans’ redistricting hopes might be working out.

Here are four takeaways from Texas’ primary runoffs.
Ken Paxton v. James Talarico sets up expensive Senate race
Texas held one of the first Senate primaries on March 3. Now that the general election matchup is set, though, don’t expect to stop hearing about it. With Paxton’s win on Tuesday night, the Senate seat in Texas became much more competitive than it would have been had Cornyn won. Cook Political Report moved the race from rated as Likely Republican to Lean Republican just moments after the race had been called Tuesday night.
A University of Texas/Texas Politics Project poll from mid-April that tested the matchup between each Republican candidate and the Democratic nominee, state Rep. James Talarico found that Talarico came out ahead of each Republican by roughly the same amount.
But more importantly, nearly 1 in 5 voters polled had not made their minds up in the race between a Republican and Talarico. While some of that support will likely solidify given Trump’s endorsement of Paxton and his win in the primary, that still leaves a lot of voters up for grabs.
The Texas Senate race is already the second most expensive race in the country this year, after the California governor election. According to NPR’s partners at AdImpact, overall, more than $108 million has been spent on that one race this year. Republicans spent almost $75 million of that.
The most recent quarterly campaign finance data shows Talarico has built a significant war chest of his own and he has not had to spend anything as Paxton and Cornyn battled it out. Texas has long been a dream for Democrats, even though one has not won statewide here since 1994 — it’s been even longer than that for a Democratic Senate nominee.
Texas Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico speaks at a campaign rally on March 2 in Houston, Texas.
Danielle Villasana/Getty Images
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Danielle Villasana/Getty Images
The Talarico/Paxton race gives Democrats their best hope in a long time. But the party often gets ahead of itself in Texas, which is still a solidly red state with Republicans controlling pretty much everything in Austin. Remember, those same Republicans drew the map that led to some of the congressional runoffs seen Tuesday night.
Turnout is really going to matter in November
It’s a cliche, right? It will all come down to turnout in Texas. In Tuesday’s primary, NPR’s Senior Political Editor and Correspondent Domenico Montanaro crunched the numbers. Paxton saw a decisive victory — his race call came right as polls closed statewide which is a sign that he was so far ahead there was no mathematical way for Cornyn to catch up.
But the Texas Republican Senate primary runoff had a lot fewer voters to contend with. In 2022, Greg Abbott won the Republican primary for governor outright — no runoff — with a similar margin that Paxton enjoyed over Cornyn. He got 1.2 million votes. Paxton has significantly fewer than a million.
Republicans have seen this kind of lackluster turnout in primaries across the country and despite high profile races. Meanwhile, Democrats have been showing up in 2026 in a big way, starting in Texas. So if Republicans cannot appeal to voters more than the couch and Democrats continue to enjoy this enthusiasm, Texas may see more than a few blue cracks in its red wall.
Democratic voters are asking for new leaders
It is a tough time to be a long-serving Democrat incumbent in Congress. Several of those incumbents will be tested by better-funded challengers in California on June 2 but one, Rep. Al Green, who has represented part of Houston for more than 20 years, lost to fellow incumbent, Rep. Christian Menefee, in the newly redrawn 18th Congressional District.
But Green was also targeted by Texas redistricting which drew part of his original district, including his home, into the 18th. His current district, the 9th, is now a solidly Republican seat in the new map.
Rep. Christian Menefee, D-Texas, smiles during his swearing-in ceremony at the U.S. Capitol on February 2, 2026 in Washington, D.C.
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Heather Diehl/Getty Images
Another incumbent, Rep. Julie Johnson, also lost Tuesday to a familiar face. Former Rep. Colin Allred challenged her for the nomination. Johnson replaced Allred in the House when he left to run against Sen. Ted Cruz in 2024. Now, he’ll likely retake the newly renumbered, safe blue seat in November.
Democrats did manage to avoid nominating a controversial pick in the somewhat competitive 35th Congressional District. Maureen Galindo drew criticism after she made antisemitic comments but ultimately lost Tuesday.
Still, Democrats may have to pin their hopes on the Senate race. Both of the most competitive House seats in November are already being held by Democrats and pickup opportunities look less and less likely.
Republicans are forecast to win 3-5 seats House seats in Texas alone, and Trump’s influence over the Republican Party led to victories for several of his endorsed candidates. In the 9th Congressional District — a prime Republican pickup opportunity — and the aforementioned 35th, the candidates Trump endorsed won. In both cases, they beat Republicans backed by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott.
The YOLO caucus gets its newest member … maybe
When Cornyn delivered his concession speech Tuesday evening, he did not mention Paxton by name, but he said he remained committed to the Republican Party.
“There’s a simple rule in elections. You’ve heard me say it before, and that is the candidate who gets the most votes wins. The party in the majority gets to govern. And my hope is to keep my party in power for generations,” Cornyn said.
The generally mild-mannered lawmaker is the newest potential member of what NPR is calling the “YOLO caucus” in Congress. Shorthand for “you only live once,” the slang is used to signal things that you might not do in normal circumstances. In this case, Cornyn joins the likes of fellow Republicans defeated by Trump-backed challengers, Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky. Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, a fellow YOLO caucus-er, chose not to run for reelection this year rather than face Trump’s wrath.
With narrow margins in both the House and the Senate, just a few lawmakers who want to burn it all to the ground on the way out the door could change things entirely for the president’s legislative agenda. Trump may have sacrificed his policy hopes for political wins in party primaries. The candidates he has backed in more competitive general election matchups are not always the most popular to the wider electorate.
But Cornyn hasn’t signaled what he’ll do with his final seven months in office, keeping it vague in his concession speech.
“I intend to continue my work to help make this nation a better place for all Texans and all Americans.”
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Video: The Two Issues That Could Swing This District
new video loaded: The Two Issues That Could Swing This District
By Reis Thebault, Christina Shaman, Anna Clare Spelman and June Kim
May 27, 2026
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Biden sues Justice Department to stop release of audio from interviews
Former President Joe Biden sued the Justice Department on Tuesday, urging a federal judge to block the release of audio recordings and transcripts of his private conversations with the ghostwriter of his 2017 memoir.
The suit stems from a 2024 Freedom of Information Act request by the conservative Heritage Foundation, which later filed its own lawsuit to obtain Biden’s remarks to Mark Zwonitzer when they were writing “Promise Me, Dad: A Year of Hope, Hardship, and Purpose.”
The Justice Department had withheld the sought-after materials, arguing they were exempt from disclosure. But during President Donald Trump’s second term, Biden’s attorney Amy Jeffress writes in Tuesday’s lawsuit in U.S. District Court for Washington D.C., “the Department has reversed that position.”
In February, Jeffress writes, “without any formal explanation for its about-face, the Department notified President Biden of its intention to release the audio recordings and transcripts to the plaintiffs in the FOIA Action.”
Months later, on May 5, “the Office of the Deputy Attorney General informed President Biden, through counsel, that the Department had made a final decision to release the materials, with limited redactions, to the Heritage Plaintiffs and to Congress on June 15,” Biden’s lawsuit says.
In “President Biden’s conversations with Zwonitzer and, ultimately, in his memoir, he recounted the year of his life that began during the Thanksgiving holiday in 2014,” Jeffress writes. “That year was among the most consequential of President Biden’s political life and the most painful of his personal life.”
Biden argues that such personal information is exempt from a disclosure under FOIA laws.
“Every American, including a sitting or former Vice President, has a right to privacy in the personal conversations he has within his own home,” Jeffress wrote in the lawsuit.
The Heritage Foundation sought all records that then-special counsel Robert Hur relied on to write particular passages of a 2023 report on Biden’s handling of classified documents that described him as “painfully slow, with Mr. Biden struggling to remember events and straining at times to read and relay his own notebook entries.”
The audio of Hur interviewing Biden about the classified documents that remained in his possession after he was vice president confirmed memory lapses that White House officials denied at the time. Hur declined to criminally charge Biden.
The Justice Department and Zwonitzer did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Trump weighed in on the lawsuit on Truth Social, calling Biden “a Crooked Politician.”
Without court intervention, the materials will be released June 15.
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Trump-backed redistricting plan is rejected in the South Carolina Legislature
Maps for new congressional districts in South Carolina are shown in the South Carolina Senate antechamber on Friday.
Jeffrey Collins/AP
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Jeffrey Collins/AP
South Carolina lawmakers dealt President Trump’s national redistricting effort a blow Tuesday when the state Senate voted against redistricting there after three weeks of rushed hearings and long debate.
Trump had been pushing state Republicans to redraw voting lines so they could flip a seat currently held by Democratic Rep. Jim Clyburn. It would have made all the state’s seven congressional districts lean Republican and it would have extended the GOP lead in the national redistricting race, already netting them around nine more seats in the U.S. House.
Early voting in the June 9 primary had started Tuesday morning and was one factor some Republican senators cited for opposing the redistricting, which had dragged on through weeks of on-and-off debate.
A move to bring the bill to a vote failed in the Senate when 12 Republicans joined 12 Democrats on a key procedural vote to block the 26 votes needed to end debate and bring up a vote on the bill. A second procedural vote fell even more short.
The state senate is not up for election this year
Several Republicans moved to the opposition saying that changing the map could disenfranchise some voters. Around 26,000 cast ballots within the first several hours of polls opening, putting Tuesday on track to break early primary voting records.
Republican state Sen. Richard Cash echoed that concern from the floor Tuesday and said time had run out.
“Voting has begun, it is time to conclude the matter,” Cash said. “I know there’s going to be a lot of anger and frustration that we did not get the job done. I get it. Many of us are also frustrated and disappointed at what is a very unsatisfying outcome.”
Unlike members of the House, senators are not up for reelection this year and that could give them some insulation from pressure from Trump, who generated primary challenges against Republicans elsewhere for opposing redistricting.
Earlier Tuesday, Clyburn cast his ballot early in Orangeburg, a city 45 miles southeast of Columbia, and told reporters he was set to run in whatever district they draw him into. “I am embarrassed that so many people in our legislature will allow strangers in Washington to tell them what to do, when to do it, and how to do it,” Clyburn said.
Trump and Republicans still hold an advantage in the redistricting battle
Overall, Trump and the Republicans have gained in the unprecedented, mid-decade redistricting push he started. Republicans hold just a few-seats advantage in the House and the party in the White House usually loses seats in midterms. Usually, states redistrict at the start of the decade after the census count.
Redistricting across the country has given Republicans an advantage in about 15 more seats to the Democrats’ six That would net the Republicans about nine seats, while some court challenges remain that could alter that figure.
Trump got Texas Republicans to redistrict last summer. California Democrats, backed by a public vote, countered that. But since then it’s been mostly Republicans’ gains as they control more legislatures and many Democratic-led states are constrained by laws against gerrymandering.
South Carolina Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey, who fielded several calls from Trump, was one of those Republicans opposing the redistricting. He said that unlike other southern states that rushed to redistrict, South Carolina’s districts did not fall under a recent Supreme Court ruling weakening voting rights for minorities.
Also on Tuesday, a federal court temporarily blocked the redistricting plan Alabama lawmakers had approved to flip a Democratic-held seat there. The court ruling is expected to be challenged at the U.S. Supreme Court,which has earlier backed the redistricting plan.
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