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1986 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas

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FieldValue
election_name1986 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas
countryTexas
typelegislative
ongoingno
previous_election1984 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas
previous_year1984
next_election1988 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas
next_year1988
seats_for_electionAll 27 Texas seats to the United States House of Representatives
election_dateNovember 4, 1986
party1Democratic Party (United States)
last_election1**17**
seats1**17**
seat_change1
popular_vote1**1,716,978**
percentage1**57.0%**
swing10.6%
party2Republican Party (United States)
last_election210
seats210
seat_change2
popular_vote21,263,413
percentage242.0%
swing20.3%
map_image1986 Texas US House.svg
map_caption

Democratic Republican The 1986 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas occurred on November 4, 1986, to elect the members of the state of Texas's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Texas had twenty-seven seats in the House, apportioned according to the 1980 United States census.

These elections occurred simultaneously with the United States Senate elections of 1986, the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.

Democrats maintained their majority of U.S. House seats from Texas, but Republicans retained the four seats they gained in 1984 under the coattails of Ronald Reagan's re-election.

Overview

1986 United States House of Representatives elections in TexasPartyVotesPercentageSeats beforeSeats after+/–
Democratic1,716,97857.03%1717-
Republican1,263,41341.97%1010-
Libertarian13,0050.43%00-
Independent17,0100.57%00-
**Totals****3,010,406****100.00%****27****27****-**

Congressional districts

District 1

Incumbent Democrat Sam B. Hall resigned to become a U.S. District Judge. This prompted a special election to be held. Republicans saw this special election as a prime opportunity to demonstrate the political realignment of East Texas, as the district had supported Republicans Ronald Reagan and Phil Gramm in 1984. Gramm had arranged Hall's appointment to the judiciary in an attempt to see a Republican elected from the area. In the end, however, Democrat Jim Chapman narrowly won the election in a runoff. He ran for re-election unopposed.

District 2

Incumbent Democrat Charlie Wilson ran for re-election.

District 3

Incumbent Republican Steve Bartlett ran for re-election.

District 4

Incumbent Democrat Ralph Hall ran for re-election.

District 5

Incumbent Democrat John Wiley Bryant ran for re-election.

District 6

Incumbent Republican Joe Barton ran for re-election.

District 7

Incumbent Republican Bill Archer ran for re-election.

District 8

Incumbent Republican Jack Fields ran for re-election.

District 9

Incumbent Democrat Jack Brooks ran for re-election.

District 10

Incumbent Democrat J. J. Pickle ran for re-election.

District 11

Incumbent Democrat Marvin Leath ran for re-election unopposed.

District 12

Incumbent Democrat Jim Wright ran for re-election. He was subsequently elected Speaker of the House.

District 13

Incumbent Republican Beau Boulter ran for re-election.

District 14

Incumbent Republican Mac Sweeney ran for re-election.

District 15

Incumbent Democrat Kika de la Garza ran for re-election unopposed.

District 16

Incumbent Democrat Ronald D. Coleman ran for re-election.

District 17

Incumbent Democrat Charles Stenholm ran for re-election unopposed.

District 18

Incumbent Democrat Mickey Leland ran for re-election.

District 19

Incumbent Republican Larry Combest ran for re-election.

District 20

Incumbent Democrat Henry B. González ran for re-election unopposed.

District 21

Incumbent Republican Tom Loeffler retired to run for governor.

District 22

Incumbent Republican Tom DeLay ran for re-election.

District 23

Incumbent Democrat Albert Bustamante ran for re-election.

District 24

Incumbent Democrat Martin Frost ran for re-election.

District 25

Incumbent Democrat Michael A. Andrews ran for re-election unopposed.

District 26

Incumbent Republican Dick Armey ran for re-election. Former representative Tom Vandergriff had considered running to regain the seat he had previously held from 1983 to 1985, but he ultimately declined.

District 27

Incumbent Democrat Solomon Ortiz ran for re-election unopposed.

References

References

  1. "Historical Apportionment Data (1910-2020)".
  2. [[Texas State Historical Association]]. (1987). "Texas Almanac, 1988-1989". [[The Dallas Morning News]].
  3. (1987). "Federal Elections 86". Federal Election Commission.
  4. "Sam B. Hall, Jr.".
  5. King, Wayne. (1985-08-02). "U.S. COURT SAYS TEXAS ERRED BUT DOESN'T DELAY ELECTION". The New York Times.
  6. Taylor, Paul. (1985-08-04). "Democrat Narrowly Wins Texas House Election". Washington Post.
  7. "Our Campaigns - TX District 1 - Special Election Runoff Race - Aug 03, 1985".
  8. [[Texas State Historical Association]]. (1987). "Texas Almanac, 1988-1989". [[The Dallas Morning News]].
  9. (1987). "House of Representatives–Tuesday, January 6, 1987". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  10. Reinhold, Robert. (1986-05-05). "TEXAS PRIMARY SETS STAGE FOR REMATCH FOR GOVERNOR". The New York Times.
  11. Dunham, Richard. (January 1, 1985). "Defeated congressman ponder political future". [[Dallas Times Herald]].
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