Gina Ortiz Jones hugs a supporter after winning the most votes in the Democratic primary election for Congressional District 23. Credit: Scott Ball / San Antonio Report
A wave of Texas women candidates won or made it to runoffs in more than 50 primary races statewide amid a surge of interest in running for office among women around the country.

Texas women dominated in dozens of congressional, legislative and statewide primary races on Tuesday night in the wake of federal elected officials retiring, the #MeToo movement, mounting frustration over a lack of elected women, and President Donald Trump’s win in 2016.

While the majority of the women who succeeded in their primaries were Democrats, a number of Republican women also advanced. Among the results Tuesday: Democrat Jennie Lou Leeder won her 11th Congressional District primary outright with 82 percent of the vote; Republican Angela Paxton beat Phillip Huffines in Texas Senate District 8, which was the most expensive primary contest for a state office this year; and Democrat Gina Ortiz Jones was the top vote-getter in the 23rd Congressional District and will face Rick Treviño in a primary runoff to determine who will take on U.S. Rep. Will Hurd (R-Helotes).

In addition, two Hispanic women Democrats – former El Paso County Judge Veronica Escobar and State Sen. Sylvia Garcia – are poised to be the first two Texas freshmen women elected to a full term in Congress in 22 years.

In Bexar County, political newcomer Monica Ramirez Alcantara ousted incumbent Manuel Medina as Democratic Party chair. Ramirez Alcantara won 67 percent of the vote and enjoyed the endorsement of several local Democratic officeholders who had clashed with Medina, who ran unsuccessfully for San Antonio mayor in 2017.

Bexar County veterans service officer Queta Rodriguez will run off against incumbent Bexar County Commissioner Paul Elizondo (Pct. 2), who has held his seat for more than three decades. Rodriguez secured 30 percent of the vote compared to Elizondo’s 45.

Margo McClinton Stoglin, Texas director for IGNITE, a group focused on getting more women to run for office, said more candidates are letting go of fears about fundraising and not winning their races. She pointed to how Lupe Valdez – now facing Andrew White in a runoff for the Democratic gubernatorial primary – ran for governor even though she could have stayed on as Dallas County sheriff. Stoglin said it’s that kind of “leap of faith” that’s emboldening more women.

“Never before have we seen these types of numbers,” Stoglin said. “Sometimes people think history is what they read in books, but sometimes it’s happening right as we speak, and we can all contribute to that history.”

The day after her primary win, Garcia said she feels like she’s “coming full circle.” She said the number of women running for office this year reminds her of the surge of women candidates in 1992 in the aftermath of the Anita Hill testimony during Supreme Court confirmation hearings for Clarence Thomas. Garcia said that 26 years later, amid sexual harassment scandals and attacks on reproductive rights, women are fed up.

“There’s always an issue that heightens the awareness and helps mobilize people,” Garcia said. “I think we’ll see more women elected this time, and when more women run, more women will win. And I think, obviously, with the numbers that are running that’s going to happen this year.”

Clare Bresnahan English, executive director for She Should Run, a group encouraging more women to run for public office, said she’s anticipating the Texas primary results will have a ripple effect that will get more women to become candidates.

“There’s a part of raising consciousness and getting more engaged in politics that is necessary for each of us to lend our voices,” Bresnahan English said. “A lot of women are realizing it can’t be about one woman’s race or one seat.”

Currently, only three of the 38-member Texas congressional delegation are women. Meanwhile in the Texas Legislature, among the 181 seats that make up the House and Senate, just 37 women hold office, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

She also said while it’s exciting to see Texas women get big numbers of support, there’s still a need to get more Republican women to run for office.

Cynthia Flores handily won the Republican primary race for Texas House District 52, with 60.8 percent of the vote against her two opponents. Flores, a social services worker, had the backing of both outgoing State Rep. Larry Gonzales (R-Round Rock) and Gov. Greg Abbott. She said serving and living in the district for nearly 20 years plus the timing of Gonzales’ open seat inspired her to run. That and she believes she can be a good voice for constituents in the area.

“I didn’t go into the race saying, ‘I’m female therefore I’m going to win,’” Flores said. “For me it was about a clean campaign, getting out there and aligning people with what I stood for. The fact that I’m female, that I’m Hispanic, that’s gravy on the top.”

 

Marissa Evans reports on health and human service policy issues for the Tribune and has been in Austin since October 2016.