A rare mix of competitive races up and down the ballot has voters turning up to the polls in droves ahead of Tuesday’s primary election, which will set match-ups in the high-stakes midterms in November.
Austin, TX
Why Vanderbilt’s top RB, an AISD rushing legend, has had ‘Horns down’ all his life
Expect these Texas football players to step up against Vanderbilt
The American-Statesman’s Danny Davis, Cedric Golden and Thomas Jones discuss what went wrong against Georgia and what must go right against Vanderbilt.
In some ways, this weekend’s home game against Texas football is a dream come true for Vanderbilt running back Sedrick Alexander.
A sophomore, Alexander is an Austinite and the city’s all-time leading rusher. But this isn’t a story about a kid getting to play the hometown team he once rooted for. Nor is this the tale of a local talent with an axe to grind against the school that never extended a scholarship offer.
No, Alexander was raised as an Oklahoma fan. His father cheered for the Sooners, and thus the apple didn’t fall far from the tree. He has long worn the No. 28 as a tribute to Adrian Peterson.
“I always had horns down,” Alexander said this week. “I want to beat them. I always want to beat Texas, even when I was rooting for OU. … I want to beat them and say that I beat them.”
Vanderbilt is resurging ahead of Texas matchup
Not too long ago, a Vanderbilt player talking about beating No. 6 Texas would have sounded preposterous. But these aren’t the Commodores of yesteryear.
Despite being picked to finish last in the Southeastern Conference’s preseason poll and winning just 12 games over the past five seasons, Vanderbilt is 5-2 this year. The Commodores upset then-No. 2 Alabama at home Oct. 5, and they’ve taken a top-10 team in Missouri to double overtime. The No. 25 team in both the US LBM Coaches Poll and Associated Press poll, Vanderbilt is ranked for the first time since the 2013 season.
With one more victory, Vanderbilt will qualify for its first bowl game since 2018. Alexander was an eighth-grader at Pflugerville’s Kelly Lane Middle School when the Commodores reached that year’s Texas Bowl.
But if you ask Alexander, he saw this success coming when he signed with Vanderbilt during the 2023 recruiting cycle. While starring at LBJ High, Alexander was rated as a three-star prospect. He received offers from Texas State and UTSA but wanted to experience life outside of Central Texas. Iowa State and the service academies were interested, but Vanderbilt presented an opportunity to play in the SEC. The educational experience at Vanderbilt was also something that Alexander said he did not want to pass up.
Additionally, Alexander believed in Vanderbilt coach Clark Lea. A former Vanderbilt fullback, Lea was hired away from his position as Notre Dame’s defensive coordinator after the 2020 season.
“I came here for stuff like this to happen,” Alexander said. “I believe in coach Lea and his vision and what he asks of this team, and I’m just excited to be here with him and enjoy the moment while I’m here.”
Alexander’s future, and present, at Vanderbilt appears to be bright
As for what is working at Vanderbilt this season, Alexander credits the preparation done during the week in meetings and practices. Having an offense that leads the SEC in time of possession and has turned over the football just twice this season also helps. Vanderbilt has been led offensively by quarterback Diego Pavia, a graduate transfer from New Mexico State, and Alexander has proven to be a suitable sidekick.
The 5-foot-9, 200-pound Alexander, who celebrates his 20th birthday Friday, has rushed 95 times for 380 yards. He’s also caught 13 passes. Two of his team-high six touchdowns were scored in Vanderbilt’s 40-35 win over Alabama, and Alexander collided with Alabama’s Jihaad Campbell on one of those scores, bullying the 244-pound linebacker into the end zone.
“He’s kind of been a bright spot for us in just how he conducts his business,” Lea said. “The person he is first is where I’d focus. He’s got a great family, got a great spirit. Like all young people, he’s growing into himself.
“We are really excited about his skill set. I think a lot of that has surfaced this year. He’s added physical components to his game that I think make him a really well-rounded back. It’s just his second year, so there’s so many great things ahead for him and we’re glad he’s here.”
A UT defense that ranks 18th nationally against the run at 104.3 yards per game has taken note of Alexander. Steve Sarkisian, the Longhorns’ fourth-year coach, described Alexander this week as a “heck of a running back.” Texas cornerback Jahdae Barron said that “he’s a tough cat.”
“Game recognizes game,” Texas safety Michael Taaffe said. “When you’re a good Austin guy, it’s cool because not a lot of talent comes out of Austin as far as recruiting. I know there’s a lot of talent in Austin, but we don’t always get the recognition that we deserve.”
Alexander joins Texas trio among college football’s Austin-area standouts
Alexander, who was listed as “questionable” with an undisclosed injury on Vanderbilt’s first availability report of the week, has a personal relationship with several Longhorns who also grew up in the Austin area. He has trained with Taaffe, who attended Westlake. Barron, who went to Pflugerville Connally, said that he shared some BBQ and trash talk with Alexander’s father before the season started.
Alexander was also high school teammates with UT safety Andrew Mukuba, who has a “questionable” designation for this weekend’s game because of a knee injury. Texas director of high school relations Jahmal Fenner coached both players at LBJ. While at LBJ, Alexander set the Austin ISD career rushing record and led the Jaguars to the Class 4A, Division I championship game in 2021.
Alexander is now among those representing the Austin-area football scene on the stage that is college football. Barron, Mukuba and Taaffe all start for Texas, and Barron and Mukuba are responsible for half of UT’s 10 interceptions. Texas Tech’s Tahj Brooks leads the Big 12 with his 134.0 rushing yards per game while fellow Manor product Quinten Joyner is averaging 9.1 yards per carry at USC. Westlake’s alumni association also includes the quarterback with the second-most touchdown passes in the Atlantic Coast Conference (Clemson’s Cade Klubnik) and Notre Dame’s second-leading receiver (Jaden Greathouse).
“I’m looking at film each and every day, and I’m like, dang, there’s really three people (in the Texas secondary),” Alexander said. “To see everybody that’s spread out throughout the country at different universities just representing the 512, that is something that I look forward to the rest of my years and with the younger generation.”
Austin, TX
Texas Primary: Breakdown of Texas races
Democrats tried to stop a mid-decade redistricting effort, but were unsuccessful. Now, we are starting to see some of the candidates emerging in those newly drawn districts. FOX 7 Austin’s Rudy Koski gives a full breakdown.
Austin, TX
Remembering Jorge Pederson: Minnesota MMA fighter killed in Austin, Texas, shooting
ROCHESTER, Minn. (KTTC) – A shooting on West Sixth Street in Austin, Texas, early Sunday morning, killed three people and injured more than a dozen others, according to the Austin Police Department. APD confirmed one of the victims was 30-year-old Jorge Pederson, a Minnesota man who worked as an MMA fighter for the Med City Fighting Championships.
“You meet tons of fighters and there are people that stand above the rest that you find you enjoy or find the most amusing,” MCFC Co-Owner Matthew Vogt said. “He was definitely one of them.”
According to Vogt, Pederson was also the owner of a Minnesota business called Metro Movers. Vogt said the MMA competitor touched everyone’s hearts since his first day of fighting professionally in Rochester.
“As soon as we met him when it was the weighing time, we just loved the guy already because he had a great mission or spirit about him,” Vogt said. “He was a funny guy and great fighter.”
Vogt told KTTC when he first saw the news that Pederson was killed, he could not believe what he saw.
“I was looking, like, ‘Wait a minute. Is this one of his shenanigans or did something actually happen there?’” Vogt said, recalling the moment he saw a social media post regarding the shooting in Austin. “I confirmed with a few people and I’m just like, sometimes, some things happen that you don’t even like, you don’t even know how to respond to it because it’s just so out of left field that you don’t immediately have a response to it.”
MCFC confirmed there is an online fundraiser dedicated to supporting Pederson’s family. As of Tuesday afternoon, more than $10,000 has been raised.
“He was someone that always could make anybody laugh,” Vogt said. “Support his family through the fundraiser and take a look at his Instagram especially to see how funny he was.”
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Austin, TX
Here are the major statewide and Austin-area races on the ballot Tuesday

A voter heads into the Ben Hur Shrine polling place in Austin as early voting begins for the March primary elections in Texas, Feb. 17, 2026. Voters can cast their ballots to decide who represents Republicans and Democrats in the November midterm elections.
Voters will decide if U.S. Sen. John Cornyn gets to keep the seat he’s held for more than two decades and which candidates will likely take a slew of redrawn congressional seats meant to give Republicans an edge. The races could decide control of Congress.
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TEXAS VOTER GUIDE 2026: What’s on the ballot in Austin on March 3?
Plus, there are multiple statewide office openings for the first time in more than a decade. And voters will decide who will challenge Gov. Greg Abbott as he seeks a record fourth term in office.
U.S. Senate
After more than two decades in the U.S. Senate, John Cornyn’s political career hangs in the balance.
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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has led most of the public polling leading into the election, as he campaigns on a Make America Great Again platform that seeks to paint the more establishment Cornyn as out of touch. Further complicating Cornyn’s path to reelection is U.S. Rep. Wesley Hunt of Houston, whose campaign has focused attention on Cornyn’s 74-years of age.
The primary is expected to be one of the tightest statewide races in recent history, with most political observers predicting it will go to a runoff.
On the Democratic side, two of the party’s fastest-rising stars are facing off in a race that has largely been a contrast of styles.
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U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, a 44-year-old former public defender, has cast herself as a partisan fighter who is unafraid to go toe-to-toe with President Donald Trump and congressional Republicans.
State Rep. James Talarico, a 36-year-old former middle school teacher in San Antonio, skyrocketed to national fame last year by leaning into his Christian faith and warning that Republicans are trying to use religion as a wedge by pushing such legislation as requiring public schools to post placards of the Ten Commandments.
Attorney General
The race for attorney general has become one of the most closely watched elections this cycle after Ken Paxton opted to leave the job to run for U.S. Senate, opening up the seat for the first time in more than a decade.
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A crowded field of candidates is vying for the job and raising eye-popping totals. It’s become the second-most expensive race for political ad spending in Texas after the contest for U.S. Senate.
On the Republican side, state Sens. Joan Huffman and Mayes Middleton, former DOJ official and former Paxton aide Aaron Reitz, and U.S. Rep. Chip Roy are competing.
Public polling has shown Roy ahead, but more recent surveys indicate Middleton is gaining ground.
U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, for whom both Roy and Reitz worked as chief of staff, is backing Roy, while Reitz nabbed his own major endorsement from Paxton.
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The Democrats gunning for a chance to be the state’s top lawyer include former federal prosecutor and FBI agent Tony Box; lawyer, mediator and former Galveston Mayor Joe Jaworski; and lawyer and state Sen. Nathan Johnson.
Jaworski and Johnson have emerged as early leaders, but many voters were still undecided, public polling showed.
Comptroller
The fight to run Texas’ top financial agency features an expensive GOP brawl. Gov. Greg Abbott is backing his ally Kelly Hancock, who is currently serving as acting comptroller, against former state Sen. Don Huffines, an antagonist of the governor’s who has lined up support from grassroots activists. Railroad Commissioner Christi Craddick is running, as well, with support from the oil and gas industries.
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Democratic state Sen. Sarah Eckhardt of Austin appears to be the favorite for her party’s nomination and faces former Houston ISD trustee Savant Moore and Houston resident Michael Lange.
The winner will have an outsized role in Abbott’s property tax-slashing agenda should he win a fourth term in office. They will also oversee the state’s new $1 billion private school voucher program.
Agriculture Commissioner
Three-term incumbent Sid Miller is battling beekeeper and entrepreneur Nate Sheets, who has the endorsement of Gov. Greg Abbott and several Republican lawmakers.
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Miller, a onetime rodeo champion, has won the endorsement of President Donald Trump, who made his choice known in a social media post after his visit to Corpus Christi on Friday.
Congressional District 31
U.S. Rep. John Carter of Georgetown is facing a crowded field of Republican primary challengers, including a one-time TV pitchman as he pushes for a 13th term in Congress.
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Carter has President Donald Trump’s “complete and total” endorsement.
His GOP challengers are: businessman Abhiram Garapati, who has challenged Carter three times before; Army veteran William Abel, who was among Carter’s 2024 opponents; Elvis Lossa, an Army veteran who served in both Afghanistan and Iraq; Steven Dowell, a former member of the Army’s military police; Vince “Shamwow” Shlomi, who hosted offbeat infomercials for cleaning products; and Valentina Gomez, a former collegiate swimmer who two years ago made an unsuccessful bid for the GOP nomination for Missouri secretary of state.
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