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Texas' 34th Congressional District election, 2026 (March 3 Democratic primary)

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2024
Texas' 34th Congressional District
Ballotpedia Election Coverage Badge.png
Democratic primary
Republican primary
General election
Election details
Filing deadline: December 8, 2025
Primary: March 3, 2026
Primary runoff: May 26, 2026
General: November 3, 2026
How to vote
Poll times:

7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Voting in Texas

Race ratings
Cook Political Report: Lean Republican
DDHQ and The Hill: Pending
Inside Elections: Toss-up
Sabato's Crystal Ball: Lean Republican
Ballotpedia analysis
U.S. Senate battlegrounds
U.S. House battlegrounds
Federal and state primary competitiveness
Ballotpedia's Election Analysis Hub, 2026
See also
Texas' 34th Congressional District
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Texas elections, 2026
U.S. Congress elections, 2026
U.S. Senate elections, 2026
U.S. House elections, 2026

A Democratic Party primary takes place on March 3, 2026, in Texas' 34th Congressional District to determine which Democratic candidate will run in the district's general election on November 3, 2026.

Candidate filing deadline Primary election General election
December 8, 2025
March 3, 2026
November 3, 2026



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. State law requires voters to sign the following pledge before voting in a primary: "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."[1]

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

This page focuses on Texas' 34th Congressional District Democratic primary. For more in-depth information on the district's Republican primary and the general election, see the following pages:

Candidates and election results

Note: The following list includes official candidates only. Ballotpedia defines official candidates as people who:

  • Register with a federal or state campaign finance agency before the candidate filing deadline
  • Appear on candidate lists released by government election agencies

Democratic primary election

Democratic primary for U.S. House Texas District 34

Incumbent Vicente Gonzalez Jr. and Etienne Rosas are running in the Democratic primary for U.S. House Texas District 34 on March 3, 2026.


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Candidate profiles

This section includes candidate profiles that may be created in one of two ways: either the candidate completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey, or Ballotpedia staff may compile a profile based on campaign websites, advertisements, and public statements after identifying the candidate as noteworthy. For more on how we select candidates to include, click here.

Image of Etienne Rosas

WebsiteFacebookTwitter

Party: Democratic Party

Incumbent: No

Political Office: None

Submitted Biography "I’m a proud 1st generation Mexican-American, born in Brownsville, Texas and raised in both sides of the border. I’m a public policy expert, a working musician, and a democratic socialist candidate for U.S. Congress in Texas’s 34th district. I’m running to fight for the dignity of working-class people and immigrants in South Texas and to challenge the corporate capture of our political system. I hold a PhD in public policy from the RAND Corporation and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Princeton, where I specialized in democratic decline and institutional corruption. I believe we are at a major political crossroads as a country and the Rio Grande Valley will play a pivotal role in the national struggle to take back our democracy from the hands of the oligarchs who have corrupted it. That begins with reflecting our people's true voice and I intend to be that voice. Beyond my academic work, I’ve spent the last decade touring both the U.S. and Mexico with my band, The Revies, singing songs about border life, struggle, and hope. I’ve been part of artistic and researcher communities that fight back against gerrymandering, immigrant abuse, union-busting, militarization, and environmental exploitation in our region. I’m not a career politician—I’m part of a generation that’s done waiting for Washington to save us. I’m stepping up because we need leaders who aren’t afraid to name what’s broken—and who are ready to build something better."


Key Messages

To read this candidate's full survey responses, click here.


The border is not a war zone, it is a way of life. Militarization of our border has stifled our economy and our historic cultural connection to Mexican communities. ICE has terrorized our citizens and violated our human rights - it must be abolished. We must protect immigrants and asylum seekers and overhaul our immigration system to create sensible avenues towards citizenship. We must extend cooperation with our southern neighbors that is not centered on enforcement or militarization, but on mediation, trust, and social resilience.


We must implement universal healthcare and childcare. We are the only developed country in the world to not provide these key services to our citizens. Yet, we spend more per capital on healthcare than any other country in the world and have worse outcomes. The RGV is one of the most medically underserved and uninsured regions in the US. These universal programs would not only lead to better social outcomes for society as a whole, but they would disproportionately benefit our region create a boom of sustainable economic growth.


Our policy ideas cannot be sustained if we do not take back our democracy from the forces that have undermined it. This is not merely about wealth, but about power. And in order to restore power to the people, we need to focus on the three R's: regulation, redistribution, and representation. Corporations must be regulated and monopolies dismantled. Billionaires must be taxed to curb their influence and funds must be applied towards universal programs that stimulate bottom-up and middle-out growth. The people must regain representation within their political system - this means getting money out of politics, expanding voting rights and access, protecting worker unions, and abolishing undemocratic structures like the Electoral College.

Voting information

See also: Voting in Texas

Ballotpedia will publish the dates and deadlines related to this election as they are made available.

Campaign finance

Name Party Receipts* Disbursements** Cash on hand Date
Vicente Gonzalez Jr. Democratic Party $1,301,352 $312,793 $1,270,619 As of September 30, 2025
Etienne Rosas Democratic Party $16,920 $7,229 $9,691 As of September 30, 2025

Source: Federal Elections Commission, "Campaign finance data," 2026. This product uses the openFEC API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Election Commission (FEC).

* According to the FEC, "Receipts are anything of value (money, goods, services or property) received by a political committee."
** According to the FEC, a disbursement "is a purchase, payment, distribution, loan, advance, deposit or gift of money or anything of value to influence a federal election," plus other kinds of payments not made to influence a federal election.

District analysis

This section will contain facts and figures related to this district's elections when those are available.

Ballot access

This section will contain information on ballot access related to this state's elections when it is available.

See also

External links

Footnotes


Senators
Representatives
District 1
District 2
District 3
District 4
District 5
District 6
District 7
District 8
District 9
Al Green (D)
District 10
District 11
District 12
District 13
District 14
District 15
District 16
District 17
District 18
Vacant
District 19
District 20
District 21
Chip Roy (R)
District 22
District 23
District 24
District 25
District 26
District 27
District 28
District 29
District 30
District 31
District 32
District 33
District 34
District 35
District 36
District 37
District 38
Republican Party (27)
Democratic Party (12)
Vacancies (1)