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Keough wins Montgomery County judge race by 1,519 votes per unofficial voting results

Incumbents Mark Keough and Charlie Riley have won the Republican primary races for Montgomery County judge and Precinct 2 commissioner, respectively, with 121 of 121 election day precincts reporting, according to unofficial voting results from Montgomery County Elections.

The gist: Keough gained 1,519, or 2% more votes for Montgomery County judge with 38,632 total votes, or 51%, over challenger Wayne Mack, who received 37,113 votes, or 49%. Riley won the election over challenger Bob Harvey with 2,082 votes or 8.06%, according to unofficial voting results from Montgomery County Elections. Riley received 13,961 votes, or 54.03%, while Harvey totaled 11,880 votes, or 45.97%.

Some context: The county judge serves as the presiding officer of Montgomery County Commissioners Court, overseeing county operations and working with commissioners to approve budgets, infrastructure projects and policy decisions.

The Precinct 2 commissioner represents a large portion of west Montgomery County and is responsible for county road and bridge projects, precinct-level infrastructure and constituent services.
 

 
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JUST IN: Unofficial winners called for Montgomery County's justice of the peace Republican primary races

According to the Montgomery County elections website, unofficial voting totals are in for the winners of the Montgomery County Republican primary justice of the peace races.

The results are in: Results show that Scott Carson won the Republican nomination in the justice of the peace primary for Precinct 1, Brittany Gable-Hale won for Precinct 3 and Billy Masden won for Precinct 5. They will appear on the November ballots in their respective races.

Another detail: Among the primary winners, Gable-Hale defeated incumbent Jay Mac Sanders, and the incumbents did not run in the other contested races.

What's next: All results are unofficial until canvassed. Visit communityimpact.com/voter-guide to see results from all local elections in your community.  

 
Metro News
UPDATE: View election results for Houston-area Texas House, Senate primary races

With 85% of polling locations reporting as of early morning March 4, several Texas House and Senate races across the Greater Houston have winners in the March 3 primary election.

All results are unofficial until canvassed.

Some context: Per the Texas Secretary of State's website, members of the Texas Legislature must be:

  • A U.S. citizen
  • A qualified elector of the state
  • At least 21 years old to serve in the House; at least 26 years old to serve in the Senate
  • A resident of Texas for two years to serve in the House, or for five years to serve in the Senate
  • A resident of the district they're representing for one year 

Stay tuned: 
The winners of the Republican and Democratic nominations in the March primary election will face each other in the Nov. 3 general election; the winners of the November election will begin serving their respective districts in January 2027.  

 
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UPDATE: See what candidates are heading to the November election for the U.S. House after the March primaries

Six Republican and Democratic candidates have emerged as clear victors in the March primaries for the U.S. House and are heading to the Nov. 4 election. 

Selected races included only contested seats that fall within Community Impact’s Houston coverage zone, which includes Districts 2, 7, 8, 14, 18, 22, 29 and 38.

The update: Out of the eight races per party, six candidates garnered more than 50% of the vote with a decisive victory. However, two races in both the Republican and Democratic parties saw split votes, triggering a runoff election in May. 

Republican winners include:

  • Steve Toth, District 2
  • Randy Weber, District 14
  • Ronald Dwayne Whitefield, District 18
  • Trever Nehls, District 22
  • Martha Fiero, District 29
  • Jessica Hart Steinmann, District 8

Democrat winners include:
  • Shaun Finnie, District 2
  • Lizzie Pannill Fletcher, District 7
  • Laura Jones, District 8
  • Marquette Greene-Scott, District 22
  • Sylvia Garcia, District 29
  • Melissa McDonough, District 38

All results are unofficial until canvassed.

 
Statewide News
Talarico holds 8-point lead in U.S. Senate race; see other Texas Democratic primary results

With 249 of Texas' 254 counties reporting some election results early March 4, state Rep. James Talarico, D-Austin, held a steady lead over U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Dallas, in the Democratic primary for U.S. Senate.

What to know: Talarico led Crockett by nearly eight percentage points in the early hours of March 4, with the Austin Democrat holding 53.28% of the vote over Crockett's 45.45% in the Democratic primary race for U.S. Senate. Ahmad R. Hassan was in a distant third place with 1.27% of the vote, per unofficial returns.

State legislators also led the Democratic primary races for governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general and comptroller, unofficial results showed, although some of those contests had not been called as of press time.

Something to note: Republicans currently hold all statewide offices in Texas and no Democrat or third-party candidate has won a statewide seat since 1994, election records show.

 
Stay In The Know
Texas GOP primary results: U.S. Senate, attorney general and railroad commission races headed to May runoffs

With 253 of Texas' 254 counties reporting some election results, three statewide Republican primary races are headed to runoffs, while candidates had decisive leads in other races.

The details: The Republican primary contests for U.S. Senate, attorney general and railroad commissioner appear to be heading to May runoffs, unofficial election returns showed.

Incumbent John Cornyn and state attorney general Ken Paxton will face each other in a runoff to determine who will be the Republican nominee for U.S. Senate after neither candidate cleared the 50% threshold required to avoid an additional round. In the attorney general race, state Sen. Mayes Middleton, R-Galveston, and U.S. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Austin, will face off in an overtime round.

Incumbent Jim Wright and former Tarrant County GOP chair Bo French will compete in a runoff for railroad commissioner. All primary runoffs will take place on May 26, according to the secretary of state.

 

Your local team

Hannah Brol
Senior Editor

Kim Sommers
General Manager

Email [email protected] for story ideas, tips or questions.

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