2026 Texas Attorney General election
November 3, 2026
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| Elections in Texas |
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| Government |
The 2026 Texas Attorney General election is scheduled to take place on November 3, 2026, to elect the Attorney General of Texas. Incumbent Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton is eligible to run for re-election to a fourth term in office, but is instead running for U.S. Senate against incumbent John Cornyn.[1]
Republican primary
Candidates
Declared
- Joan Huffman, state senator from the 17th district (2008–present)[2]
- Mayes Middleton, state senator from the 11th district (2023–present)[3]
- Aaron Reitz, former U.S. Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Policy (2025)[4]
- Chip Roy, U.S. representative from Texas's 21st congressional district (2019–present)[5]
Withdrawn
- John Bash, former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Texas (2017–2020)[6]
Declined
- Brian Harrison, state representative from the 10th district (2021–present) and candidate for Texas's 6th congressional district in 2021[7] (running for re-election)[8]
- Bryan Hughes, state senator from the 1st district (2017–present)[9]
- Eric Johnson, mayor of Dallas (2019–present)[10]
- Mitch Little, state representative from the 65th district (2025–present) (running for re-election)[11]
- Ken Paxton, incumbent attorney general (running for U.S. Senate, endorsed Reitz)[12][13]
- Matt Rinaldi, former chair of the Texas Republican Party (2021–2024) and former state representative from the 115th district (2015–2019)[14]
Endorsements
Joan Huffman
- Labor unions
Aaron Reitz
- Statewide officials
- Ken Paxton, attorney general of Texas (2015–present)[13]
- Labor unions
- Organizations
Chip Roy
- U.S. senators
- U.S. representatives
- Lauren Boebert, CO-04 (2021–present)[13]
- Byron Donalds, FL-19 (2021–present)[13]
- Keith Self, TX-03 (2023–present)[13]
- Organizations
- Gun Owners of America Texas[19]
- Young Conservatives of Texas (co-endorsement with Middleton)[20]
Mayes Middleton
- U.S. representatives
- Brian Babin, TX-36 (2015–present)[16]
- Lance Gooden, TX-05 (2019–present)[16]
- Randy Weber, TX-14 (2013–present)[16]
- Organizations
- Young Conservatives of Texas (co-endorsement with Roy)[20]
Polling
| Poll source | Date(s) administered |
Sample size[a] |
Margin of error |
Joan Huffman |
Mayes Middleton |
Aaron Reitz |
Chip Roy |
Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pulse Decision Science (R)[21][A] | November 2–5, 2025 | 800 (LV) | ± 3.5% | 13% | 13% | 7% | 40% | 27% |
| University of Houston/Texas Southern University[22] | September 19 – October 1, 2025 | 576 (RV) | ± 4.08% | 12% | 3% | 8% | 40% | 37% |
| co/efficient (R)[23][B] | August 27–30, 2025 | 800 (LV) | ± 3.5% | 8% | 4% | 7% | 24% | 58% |
| Pulse Decision Science (R)[24][A] | August 27–30, 2025 | 800 (LV) | ± 3.5% | 4% | 4% | 3% | 38% | 50% |
| Texas Southern University[25] | August 6–12, 2025 | 1,500 (LV) | ± 2.5% | 12% | 8% | 7% | – | 73% |
Results
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Republican | Joan Huffman | |||
| Republican | Mayes Middleton | |||
| Republican | Aaron Reitz | |||
| Republican | Chip Roy | |||
| Total votes | 100.00 | |||
Democratic primary
Candidates
Declared
- Tony Box, attorney[26]
- Joe Jaworski, former mayor of Galveston, grandson of former U.S. Department of Justice special counsel Leon Jaworski, and candidate for attorney general in 2022[27]
- Nathan Johnson, state senator from the 16th district (2019–present)[28]
Declined
- Joaquin Castro, U.S. representative from Texas's 20th congressional district (2013–present)[29]
- Jasmine Crockett, U.S. representative from Texas’s 30th congressional district (2023–present)[30]
- Roland Gutierrez, state senator from the 19th district (2021–present) and candidate for U.S. Senate in 2024 (running for re-election)[31]
- Justin Nelson, partner at Susman Godfrey and nominee for attorney general in 2018[32]
Endorsements
Polling
| Poll source | Date(s) administered |
Sample size[a] |
Margin of error |
Tony Box |
Joe Jaworski |
Nathan Johnson |
Undecided |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Texas Southern University[34] | December 9–11, 2025 | 1,600 (LV) | ± 2.45% | 3% | 21% | 19% | 57% |
| Texas Southern University[25] | August 6–12, 2025 | 1,500 (LV) | ± 2.5% | – | 20% | 20% | 60% |
Results
| Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Democratic | Anthony "Tony" Box | |||
| Democratic | Joe Jaworski | |||
| Democratic | Nathan Johnson | |||
| Total votes | 100.00 | |||
General election
Predictions
| Source | Ranking | As of |
|---|---|---|
| Sabato's Crystal Ball[35] | Safe R | August 21, 2025 |
Polling
Hypothetical polling
Notes
- Partisan clients
See also
References
- ^ Jeffers, Gromer (November 29, 2024). "John Cornyn and Ken Paxton have been trading jabs as a potential primary showdown looms". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved November 29, 2024.
- ^ Guo, Kayla (June 23, 2025). "Sen. Joan Huffman joins GOP field vying to succeed Ken Paxton as Texas attorney general". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved June 23, 2025.
- ^ Scherer, Jasper (April 15, 2025). "Sen. Mayes Middleton announces bid for Texas attorney general". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved April 15, 2025.
- ^ Goldenstein, Taylor (June 12, 2025). "Aaron Reitz, a former Trump DOJ official and Paxton aide, joins the race for Texas AG". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ Manchester, Julia (August 21, 2025). "Chip Roy launches Texas attorney general bid". The Hill. Retrieved August 21, 2025.
- ^ Runnels, Ayden (April 30, 2025). "John Bash, first candidate to enter Texas attorney general's race, exits". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved May 1, 2025.
- ^ Jeffers, Gromer Jr. (April 10, 2025). "Ken Paxton's departure creates competitive AG primary in 2026". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved April 10, 2025.
- ^ "Harrison announces for reelection to Texas House". In the Know Ellis. November 16, 2025. Retrieved December 10, 2025.
- ^ Richardson, Michael (June 10, 2025). "Sen. Bryan Hughes says he won't run for attorney general". KLTV. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ Nir, David (October 17, 2025). "Morning Digest: New GOP plan to save gerrymander might be 'most embarrassing election lawsuit of 2025'". Retrieved October 17, 2025.
- ^ "Little seeks second term, rules out Attorney General run". September 23, 2025. Retrieved September 24, 2025.
- ^ Scherer, Jasper (April 8, 2025). "Texas AG Ken Paxton officially joins U.S. Senate race challenging John Cornyn". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved April 8, 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g Birenbaum, Gabbie (August 25, 2025). "Cruz, Paxton issue dueling endorsements in Texas attorney general GOP primary". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved August 26, 2025.
- ^ Bugenhagen, Faith (April 9, 2025). "If Ken Paxton wins Senate race, who could become Texas attorney general?". Chron.com. Retrieved April 11, 2025.
- ^ "CLEAT Political Action Committee". CLEAT. Retrieved December 3, 2025.
- ^ a b c d e "Attorney General election endorsements". Ballotpedia. Retrieved October 20, 2025.
- ^ "Endorsements by Conservative Political Action Coalition". Ballotpedia.
- ^ "Republicans for National Renewal Endorses Aaron Reitz for Texas Attorney General". Republicans for National Renewal. July 20, 2025. Retrieved November 25, 2025.
- ^ "2026 GOA Texas Endorsements". GOA Texas. Retrieved December 4, 2025.
- ^ a b Darsch, Nathan (November 13, 2025). "YCT Announces Dual Endorsement of Senator Mayes Middleton and Congressman Chip Roy for Texas Attorney General - Young Conservatives of TexasYoung Conservatives of Texas". Young Conservatives of Texas. Retrieved November 14, 2025.
- ^ Nir, David; Singer, Jeff (November 20, 2025). "Morning Digest: Georgia Democrats could flip this red seat in a December special election". Retrieved November 20, 2025.
- ^ "Texas Trends 2025". DocumentCloud. October 9, 2025. Retrieved October 9, 2025.
- ^ Johnson, Brad [@bradj_TX] (September 17, 2025). "More internal polling from the #txlege AG race, @aaron_reitz camp memo showed the race w/ @KenPaxtonTX backing Reitz: Reitz-30% (7% initial ballot test) Roy-13% (24%) Huffman-6% (8%) Middleton-3% (4%) Undecided-48% (58%) Methodology: 8/16-17, 473 LV Rs, 4.51% MOE" (Tweet). Retrieved September 21, 2025 – via Twitter.
- ^ Johnson, Brad [@bradj_TX] (September 16, 2025). "New--Internal polling from the Roy camp puts an initial ballot test in the AG race at: @chiproytx -38% (+40 fav/unfav) @joanhuffman -4% (+8) @mayes_middleton -4% (+7) @aaron_reitz -3% (+5) undecided-50% #txlege" (Tweet). Retrieved September 21, 2025 – via Twitter.
- ^ a b Adams, Michael; Jones, Mark (August 20, 2025). "The 2026 Down-Ballot Texas Republican & Democratic Primaries: Attorney General, Comptroller, & Agriculture Commissioner". Texas Southern University. Retrieved August 21, 2025.
- ^ Jeffers Jr., Gromer (October 30, 2025). "Dallas lawyer Tony Box launches campaign to replace Ken Paxton as Texas attorney general". Dallas News. Retrieved October 31, 2025.
- ^ Klibanoff, Eleanor (July 17, 2025). "Democrat Joe Jaworski to run for Texas attorney general again". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved July 17, 2025.
- ^ Klibanoff, Eleanor (July 15, 2025). "Democratic state Sen. Nathan Johnson announces run for attorney general". The Texas Tribune. Retrieved July 15, 2025.
- ^ Davies, David Martin (November 11, 2025). "Rep. Castro is a 'no' vote on funding federal government and shares his plans for political office". Texas Public Radio. Retrieved November 11, 2025.
- ^ Wermund, Benjamin (September 18, 2025). "Why Texas Democrats aren't lining up to take on Greg Abbott in the midterms". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved September 22, 2025.
- ^ "Political Roundup for September 10, 2025". September 10, 2025. Retrieved September 10, 2025.
- ^ McCardel, Justin (April 20, 2025). "Democratic consultant says party will field strong candidates in 2026, names several". WFAA. Retrieved April 20, 2025.
- ^ "Anthony Box". votevets.org. Retrieved November 7, 2025.
- ^ Adams, Michael; Jones, Mark. "DECEMBER 2025 THE 2026 TEXAS DEMOCRATIC PRIMARIES: GOVERNOR & ATTORNEY GENERAL" (PDF). Texas Southern University. Retrieved December 18, 2025.
- ^ "State Attorneys General: The Top Races to be "Top Cop"". Sabato's Crystal Ball. August 21, 2025. Retrieved September 18, 2025.
- ^ "Texas Senate Primaries Take Shape as Statewide Races Stay Close". Texas Public Opinion Research. September 12, 2025. Retrieved October 5, 2025.
External links
Official campaign websites