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Texas' 19th Congressional District election, 2016

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Texas' 19th Congressional District

General Election Date
November 8, 2016

Primary Date
March 1, 2016

November 8 Election Winner:
Jodey Arrington Republican Party
Incumbent prior to election:
Randy Neugebauer Republican Party
Randy Neugebauer.jpg

Race Ratings
Cook Political Report: Solid R[1]
Sabato's Crystal Ball: Safe R[2]
Rothenberg & Gonzales: Safe R[3]

Texas U.S. House Elections
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2016 U.S. Senate Elections

2016 U.S. House Elections

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The 19th Congressional District of Texas held an election for the U.S. House of Representatives on November 8, 2016.

Heading into the election, Ballotpedia rated this race as safely Republican. Jodey Arrington (R) defeated Mark Lawson (G) and Troy Bonar (L) in the general election on November 8, 2016. Arrington defeated Glen Robertson in the Republican primary runoff election on May 24, 2016. Robertson and Arrington defeated Greg Garrett, Donald May, DeRenda Warren, Don Parrish, Jason Corley, John Key and Michael Bob Starr in the Republican primary on March 1, 2016, to advance to the runoff election. No Democratic candidates filed to run in the race. Incumbent Randy Neugebauer did not seek re-election.[4][5][6]

Candidate Filing Deadline Primary Election General Election
December 14, 2015
March 1, 2016
November 8, 2016

Primary: A primary election is an election in which registered voters select a candidate that they believe should be a political party's candidate for elected office to run in the general election. They are also used to choose convention delegates and party leaders. Primaries are state-level and local-level elections that take place prior to a general election. Texas utilizes an open primary system. Voters do not have to register with a party in advance in order to participate in that party's primary. The voter must sign a pledge stating the following (the language below is taken directly from state statutes)[7]

The following pledge shall be placed on the primary election ballot above the listing of candidates' names: 'I am a (insert appropriate political party) and understand that I am ineligible to vote or participate in another political party's primary election or convention during this voting year.'[8]

For information about which offices are nominated via primary election, see this article.


Incumbent: Heading into the election the incumbent was Randy Neugebauer (R), who was first elected in 2002. Neugebauer did not seek re-election in 2016.[9]

Texas' 19th Congressional District is located in the western portion of the state and includes Bailey, Border, Castro, Cochran, Crosby, Fisher, Gaines, Garza, Hale, Haskell, Hockley, Howard, Jones, Kent, Lamb, Lubbock, Lynn, Nolan, Parmer, Scurry, Shackelford, Stonewall, Taylor, Terry Throckmorton, Yoakum and Young counties as well as areas of Floyd and Stephens counties.[10]

Election results

General election

U.S. House, Texas District 19 General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngJodey Arrington Incumbent 86.7% 176,314
     Libertarian Troy Bonar 8.5% 17,376
     Green Mark Lawson 4.8% 9,785
Total Votes 203,475
Source: Texas Secretary of State

Primary election

U.S. House, Texas District 19 Republican Primary, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngGlen Robertson 26.8% 27,868
Green check mark transparent.pngJodey Arrington 25.9% 27,013
Michael Bob Starr 21.4% 22,303
Donald May 9.2% 9,616
Greg Garrett 8% 8,309
Jason Corley 2.5% 2,558
DeRenda Warren 2.2% 2,323
Don Parrish 2.1% 2,197
John Key 1.9% 1,959
Total Votes 104,146
Source: Texas Secretary of State
U.S. House, Texas District 19 Republican Runoff Primary, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.pngJodey Arrington 53.7% 25,322
Glen Robertson 46.3% 21,832
Total Votes 47,154
Source: Texas Secretary of State

Candidates

General election candidates:

Republican Party Jodey Arrington Approveda
Libertarian Party Troy Bonar
Green Party Mark Lawson

Runoff candidates:

Democratic

A Democratic runoff was not required.

Republican

Glen Robertson
Jodey Arrington Approveda

Primary candidates:[11]

Democratic

No Democratic candidates filed to run.

Republican

Glen Robertson - Mayor of Lubbock[12] Approveda
Jodey Arrington - Former advisor to George W. Bush[13] Approveda
Greg Garrett - Business owner[14]
Donald May - Doctor[15]
Michael Bob Starr - Retired Air Force Colonel[16][17]
DeRenda Warren[18][17]
Don Parrish[17]
Jason Corley[17]
John Key[17]

Third Party/Other

Troy Bonar (Libertarian)[19] Approveda
Mark Lawson (Green)[20] Approveda

Not running:

Randy Neugebauer - Incumbent[9]


Endorsements

Jodey Arrington

  • Former Gov. Rick Perry - "There are some really quality people in this region that people had to pick from, and this isn’t about being against anybody — this is about being for somebody. I’ve known this guy a really long time and I’ve seen him when things weren’t so good and I’ve seen him have his struggles in life. He’s doing it because he understands the soul of being a servant. I think that’s really important. I’m for Jodey Arrington — I’ve worked with him in a professional way and I just see the results that we did, whether it was the Enterprise Fund or whether the Emerging Technology Fund."[21]

Media

Jodey Arrington

"Gov. Rick Perry Endorses Conservative Jodey Arrington" - Ad supporting Arrington, released April 2016

District history

2014

See also: Texas' 19th Congressional District elections, 2014

The 19th Congressional District of Texas held an election for the U.S. House of Representatives on November 4, 2014. Incumbent Randy Neugebauer (R) defeated Neal Marchbanks (D) and Richard Peterson (L) in the general election.

U.S. House, Texas District 19 General Election, 2014
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngRandy Neugebauer Incumbent 77.1% 89,326
     Democratic Neal Marchbanks 18.4% 21,325
     Libertarian Richard Peterson 4.4% 5,120
     Write-in Donald L. Vance 0% 54
Total Votes 115,825
Source: Texas Secretary of State

2012

See also: Texas' 19th Congressional District elections, 2012

The 19th Congressional District of Texas held an election for the U.S. House of Representatives on November 6, 2012, in which incumbent Randy Neugebauer (R) won re-election. He defeated Richard Peterson (L) in the general election.[22]

U.S. House, Texas District 19 General Election, 2012
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Republican Green check mark transparent.pngRandy Neugebauer Incumbent 85% 163,239
     Libertarian Richard Peterson 15% 28,824
Total Votes 192,063
Source: Texas Secretary of State "Official Election Results, 2012 General Election"

Important dates and deadlines

See also: Texas elections, 2016

The calendar below lists important dates for political candidates in Texas in 2016.

Dates and requirements for candidates in 2016
Deadline Event type Event description
September 15, 2015 Ballot access First day to file for a place on the primary ballot for precinct chair candidates
November 14, 2015 Ballot access First day to file for all other candidates for offices that are regularly scheduled to be on the primary ballot
December 14, 2015 Ballot access Filing deadline for candidates; filing deadline for independent candidates to file intent declaration
January 15, 2016 Campaign finance January semi-annual report due
February 1, 2016 Campaign finance 30th-day pre-primary report due
February 12, 2016 Campaign finance Personal financial statement due
February 22, 2016 Campaign finance 8th-day pre-primary report due
March 1, 2016 Election date Primary election
May 16, 2016 Campaign finance 8th-day pre-runoff report due
July 15, 2016 Campaign finance July semi-annual report due
October 11, 2016 Campaign finance 30th-day pre-election report due
October 31, 2016 Campaign finance 8th-day pre-election report due
November 8, 2016 Election date General election
January 17, 2017 Campaign finance January semi-annual report due
Sources: Texas Secretary of State, "Important 2016 Election Dates," accessed July 17, 2016
Texas Ethics Commission, "2016 Filing Schedule for Candidates and Officeholders Who File with the Texas Ethics Commission," accessed November 25, 2015

See also

Footnotes

  1. Cook Political Report, "2016 House Race Ratings for July 11, 2016," accessed July 19, 2016
  2. Sabato's Crystal Ball, "2016 House," accessed July 18, 2016
  3. Rothenberg & Gonzales Political Report, "House Ratings," accessed July 19, 2016
  4. Texas Secretary of State, "2016 March Primary Election Candidate Filings by County," accessed December 15, 2015
  5. The New York Times, "Texas Primary Results," March 1, 2016
  6. The New York Times, "Texas Primary Results," May 24, 2016
  7. Texas Statutes, "Section 172.086," accessed October 7, 2024
  8. Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Everything Lubbock.com, "Neugebauer Will Not Seek Re-Election in 2016," September 17, 2015
  10. Texas Redistricting Map, "Map," accessed July 24, 2012
  11. Candidates are listed by party and alphabetically within each party.
  12. KCBD, "Mayor Robertson to run for Congressman Neugebauer's seat," October 13, 2015
  13. Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, "Jodey Arrington plans on running for Congressional District 19," October 13, 2015
  14. KCBD, "Lubbock realtor, bank CEO Greg Garrett announces run for Neugebauer seat," September 24, 2015
  15. Everything Lubbock, "Donald May Announces Bid for Congress," October 14, 2015
  16. Twitter, "Patrick Svitek," November 11, 2015
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 Texas Secretary of State, "2016 March Primary Election Candidate Filings by County," accessed December 14, 2015
  18. Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, "Director of nursing in Smyer announces U.S. District 19 candidacy," October 21, 2015
  19. The Libertarian Party of Texas, "2016 Candidates," accessed May 4, 2016
  20. Green Party of Texas, "2016 Candidate Applicants," accessed February 2, 2016
  21. Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, "Former Gov. Perry endorses Arrington in U.S. House 19 runoff during Lubbock visit," April 11, 2016
  22. Politico, "2012 Election Map, Texas," November 6, 2012


For information about public policy issues in the 2016 elections, see: Public policy in the 2016 elections!


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