Texas's 25th congressional district
Texas's 25th congressional district | |
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Interactive map of district boundaries since January 3, 2023 | |
Representative | |
Distribution |
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Population (2023) | 813,686[2] |
Median household income | $76,046[3] |
Ethnicity |
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Cook PVI | R+18[4] |
Texas's 25th congressional district of the United States House of Representatives stretches from Arlington and Fort Worth to some of its outer southwestern suburbs, as well as rural counties east of Abilene. The district's current Representative is Roger Williams.
History
1980s
The 25th district was created as a result of the redistricting cycle after the 1980 census. The district was originally anchored in the southern parts of Houston and Harris County, including the Texas Medical Center, the Astrodome, Astroworld and the southern shores of the Houston Ship Channel, as well as Rice University, Hobby Airport and Ellington Field. An economically and racially diverse district that narrowly favored Ronald Reagan in 1980,[5] the 25th encompassed such a diverse collection of Houston neighborhoods including both the middle-class suburban neighborhoods of Westbury and Meyerland in southwest Houston (the latter also being the center of Houston's Jewish community) and Park Place and Glenbrook Valley in southeast Houston, the majority African-American neighborhoods of Sunnyside and South Park in southern Houston and Harris County, and much of southeast Harris County including northern parts of the Clear Lake City master-planned community in southeast Houston and such working-class suburbs as Pasadena, Deer Park, La Porte and Seabrook.
Much of this area previously comprised the northern half of the previous 22nd district represented by conservative Republican Ron Paul, and at the time was largely prosperous as Houston continued to benefit from the oil boom of the previous decade that resulted in thousands moving to the Houston area during this time, as well as from growing medical and space industry sectors that benefited respectively from both the increased prominence of the Med Center and the launch of the Space Shuttle program. In the 1980 election, Paul narrowly defeated former Harris County assistant district attorney Mike Andrews in his 1980 reelection to a second full term, largely on the basis of his strong support in the then-emerging Republican stronghold of Fort Bend County as well as his home county of Brazoria.
While Paul's 22nd district was redrawn into a heavily Republican seat comprising the aforementioned emerging suburban counties, along with a largely Republican section of southwest Houston and Harris County along the Southwest Freeway (what eventually became Interstate 69) extending as far east as Greenway Plaza, that he would easily win reelection in 1982, the new 25th took in much of the former 22nd's Democratic-leaning Harris County portion. In the 1982 election, Andrews was the Democratic nominee for the new district against Republican attorney Mike Faubion, winning 60.4 percent of the vote in a district whose voters largely favored President Reagan's economic program but otherwise favored abortion rights and defense spending.[5] Despite Reagan narrowly winning the district in 1984, Andrews easily won a second term with 64 percent of the vote over future state senator and Texas Land Commissioner Jerry Patterson, which would be the closest the district came to being competitive in its original iteration, as the district was hit hard by the impact of the 1980s oil glut that deeply affected Houston's economy, including plummeting real estate values, rising crime numbers and dramatic racial shifts in parts of the district where Anglo residents moved out to suburban areas south of the city including Sugar Land, Pearland, Missouri City and Friendswood. Andrews would only face Republican opposition once more in this version of the district, winning 71 percent of the vote in 1988 despite his district only narrowly favoring Michael Dukakis (whose running mate was Texas U.S. Senator and Houston resident Lloyd Bentsen) over adopted son and Vice President George H. W. Bush with over 51 percent of the vote.
1990s/early 2000s
The 25th district was radically altered in the 1992 and 1994 elections, with many majority Black and Hispanic precincts moved into the
After the 18th and 29th districts were struck down by the Supreme Court in Bush v. Vera as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander in 1996, the 25th would be altered into a more compact district that stayed entirely within Harris County, stretching from the Westchase and Alief areas of southwest Houston, through southern parts of Houston and Harris County, and traveling all the way to the eastern parts of the Houston Ship Channel and Harris County, while encompassing such suburbs as upper-middle class Bellaire and West University Place in the west and working-class Baytown and Pasadena in the east. In the 1996 special election (conducted as such as the 1996 primaries had already taken place when the districts were struck down), Bentsen would go on to win over 57 percent of the vote against Mike Andrews' 1992 opponent, Dolly Madison McKenna, despite Clinton only narrowly winning the district at the presidential level with under 51 percent of the vote.
The contest by McKenna would mark the beginning of a series of competitive but underdog Republican challenges for the seat over four cycles; in 1998 Bentsen would win 58 percent against Republican challenger John Sanchez, while in 2000 he polled 60 percent against Republican Phil Sudan despite the district only giving a plurality of the vote to Al Gore over native son and Texas Governor George W. Bush (son of former President George H.W. Bush). After Bentsen retired to make an unsuccessful run for the Democratic nomination for the open U.S. Senate of retiring Republican Phil Gramm in 2002, former Houston City Council member Chris Bell defeated Republican Tom Reiser with less than 55 percent of the vote in a district that now stretched from the affluent River Oaks neighborhood west of downtown Houston to much of southwest and southeast Houston, along with all or parts of many of the same working-class suburbs east of Houston that had been in previous iterations of the 25th including southern parts of Pasadena and most of Baytown, Highlands and La Porte.
Mid-2000s redistricting
In 2003, after Republicans gained control of the Texas House of Representatives for the first time since Reconstruction, the new Republican majority (with outside assistance from then-U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay from the neighboring 22nd district, where he had succeeded Ron Paul in 1984) radically altered the state's congressional map. The old 25th essentially became the 9th district, though Bell's home was drawn into the heavily Republican 7th district. Bell ultimately sought reelection the following year in the new 9th where he lost to fellow Democrat Al Green in the Democratic primary,
A new 25th was created in an area stretching from
The new district would be won by incumbent Democrat
2010s
In July 2011, Texas Governor Rick Perry signed into law a redistricting plan ("C185"), approved by the Texas legislature in June, which gave the 25th district a completely different geography for the 2012 elections, including part of Travis County, and stretching as far north as Johnson County, south of Fort Worth, with Fort Hood situated in the geographic heart of the district. The redistricting split Travis County into five districts, four of which (the 10th, 17th, 21st and 25th) were heavily Republican. As a result, the only realistic place for Lloyd Doggett to run in was the new 35th district (which by weight of population is more of a San Antonio district than an Austin district); Doggett nonetheless won reelection in the new 35th which was by far the most Democratic of all the districts now serving Travis County. Former Texas Secretary of State and auto dealer Roger Williams, who had previously been a candidate for the U.S. Senate as early as 2010 while Kay Bailey Hutchison was still serving (she would eventually retire the following year and would be succeeded in 2012 by Ted Cruz), ultimately won a crowded Republican primary and would go on to win comfortable margins or better in a district where Democrats were only competitive in the western Travis County portion of the district (which includes some of the most Republican areas in the county including much of the area surrounding Lake Travis; Mitt Romney won 60 percent of the vote in the new district in 2012.
As the 2010s progressed, fast-growing Austin and Travis County became even more Democratic than they already were, with Donald Trump's nationwide struggles with suburban voters beginning to impact Republican candidates both in presidential and in midterm elections. As a result, Williams and other Republican congressional nominees in Travis County faced increasingly competitive elections later in the decade. His closest reelection came in 2018, when Williams won 53.5 percent of the vote against Democratic challenger Julie Oliver and would go on to win less than 56 percent in a rematch with Oliver, as the district gave 55 percent of the vote to Donald Trump in 2016 and 2020 (with Trump losing the Travis County portion by large margins). For a number of years, there was a consolidated lawsuit against the redistricting;[6][7] in March 2017, a panel of federal judges ruled that the new 35th district and two others were illegally drawn with discriminatory intent.[8] However, the district was allowed to stand in the Supreme Court's 2018 Abbott v. Perez ruling.
2020s
For the 2022 election, the 25th was redrawn into a district anchored in the southwest corner of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, including a southern portion of Tarrant County encompassing most of Arlington including AT&T Stadium, Globe Life Field and Six Flags Over Texas, as well as most or all of several rural counties between the Metroplex and Abilene. Donald Trump won less than 65 percent of the vote in this new district, with only the Tarrant County portion considered competitive. Roger Williams won reelection unopposed in the new 25th district, which includes Weatherford where he owns an automobile dealership.
Recent election results from statewide races
Year | Office | Results[9] |
---|---|---|
2008 | President | McCain 66% - 34% |
2012 | President | Romney 70% - 30% |
2014 | Senate | Cornyn 73% - 27% |
Governor | Abbott 70% - 30% | |
2016 | President | Trump 66% - 29% |
2018 | Senate | Cruz 65% - 35% |
Governor | Abbott 69% - 30% | |
Lt. Governor | Patrick 64% - 34% | |
Attorney General | Paxton 64% - 34% | |
2020 | President | Trump 65% - 34% |
Senate | Cornyn 66% - 32% | |
2022 | Governor | Abbott 68% - 31% |
Lt. Governor | Patrick 66% - 32% | |
Attorney General | Paxton 66% - 31% | |
Comptroller of Public Accounts | Hegar 69% - 29% | |
2024 | President | Trump 68% - 31% |
Senate | Cruz 64% - 33% |
Composition
For the 118th and successive Congresses (based on redistricting following the 2020 census), the district contains all or portions of the following counties and communities:[10]
Callahan County (4)
- Baird, Clyde (part; also 19th), Cross Plains, Putnam
Comanche County (5)
- All 5 communities
Eastland County (6)
- All 6 communities
Erath County (5)
- All 5 communities
Hood County (9)
- All 9 communities
Jack County (3)
- All 3 communities
Johnson County (11)
- Briaroaks, Burleson (part; also 6th; shared with Tarrant County), Cleburne, Coyote Flats (part; also 6th), Cresson (shared with Hood and Johnson counties), Cross Timber, Fort Worth (part; also 12th, 24th, 26th, and 33rd; shared with Denton, Parker, Tarrant, and Wise counties), Godley, Joshua, Keene (part; also 6th), Rio Vista
- All 8 communities
Parker County (9)
- Aledo (part; also 12th), Annetta North (part; also 12th), Cresson (shared with Hood and Johnson counties), Dennis, Fort Worth (part; also 12th, 24th, 26th, and 33rd; shared with Denton, Johnson, Tarrant, and Wise counties), Horseshoe Bend, Weatherford (part; also 12th), Western Lake, Willow Park (part; also 12th)
Stephens County (1)
Somervell County (1)
Tarrant County (12)
- Arlington (part; also 30th and 33rd), Burleson (part; also 6th; shared with Johnson County), Crowley (part; also 12th), Dalworthington Gardens, Edgecliff Village, Forest Hill (part; also 33rd), Fort Worth (part; also 12th, 24th, 26th, and 33rd; shared with Denton, Johnson, Parker, and Wise counties), Grand Prairie (part; also 6th and 33rd; shared with Dallas and Ellis counties), Kennedale, Mansfield (part; also 6th), Pantego, Rendon
Young County (4)
- All 4 communities
List of members representing the district
Recent elections
2004
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic
|
Lloyd Doggett | 108,309 | 67.6 | +12.9 | |
Republican
|
Rebecca Klein | 49,252 | 30.7 | −12.4 | |
Libertarian
|
James Werner | 2,656 | 1.7 | +0.7 | |
Majority | 59,057 | 36.9 | |||
Turnout | 160,217 | ||||
Democratic hold
|
Swing | +12.6 |
2006
On June 28, 2006, the
As a result, on August 4, 2006, a three-judge panel announced replacement district boundaries for 2006 election for the 23rd district, as well as for the 15th, 21st, 25th and 28th districts. On election day in November, these five districts held open primaries; if any candidate received over 50%, they were elected. Otherwise, a runoff election in December decided the seat.[13]
The redrawn 25th was more compact and restricted to Central Texas, comprising more of Travis County, most of Bastrop County, and all of Hays, Caldwell, Fayette, Gonzales, Lavaca, and Colorado Counties.[1]
Incumbent congressman Doggett faced Republican Grant Rostig (formerly the Libertarian nominee), independent candidate Brian Parrett, and Libertarian Party Barbara Cunningham, and won re-election.
2008
In the 2008 election Doggett faced Republican George Morovich, a structural engineer from La Grange and Libertarian Jim Stutsman, a retired Army veteran. Doggett won with 65.8% of the vote to Morovich's 30.5% and Stutsman's 3.7%. Doggett won 73.8% of the vote in his Austin-based stronghold of Travis County.
2010
Dogget faced Republican and "Tea Party favorite" Donna Campbell, and again held his seat, though by a surprisingly small margin.[14]
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic
|
Lloyd Doggett (incumbent) | 99,851 | 53 | −14.6 | |
Republican
|
Donna Campbell | 84,780 | 45 | +14.3 | |
Libertarian
|
Jim Stutsman | 4,424 | 2 | +0.3 | |
Democratic hold
|
Swing | -14.5 |
2012
The new district boundaries were more favorable to Republicans, as had been foreseen.
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican
|
Roger Williams | 154,245 | 58.4 | +13.4 | |
Democratic
|
Elaine Henderson | 98,827 | 37.4 | −15.5 | |
Libertarian
|
Betsy Dewey | 10,860 | 4.1 | +2.1 | |
Majority | 55,418 | 21.00 | |||
Turnout | 263,932 | 100 | |||
Democratic
|
Swing | +13.4 |
2014
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican
|
Roger Williams (incumbent) | 107,120 | 60.21 | +1.77 | |
Democratic
|
Marco Montoya | 64,463 | 36.23 | −1.21 | |
Libertarian
|
John Betz | 6,300 | 3.54 | −.57 | |
Majority | 42,657 | 23.98 | |||
Turnout | 177,883 | 100 | −32.6 | ||
Republican hold
|
Swing | +1.77 |
2016
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican
|
Roger Williams (incumbent) | 180,988 | 58.35 | −1.86 | |
Democratic
|
Kathi Thomas | 117,073 | 37.74 | +1.51 | |
Libertarian
|
Loren Marc Schneiderman | 12,135 | 3.91 | +.37 | |
Majority | 63,915 | 20.61 | −3.37 | ||
Turnout | 310,196 | 100 | +75.1 | ||
Republican hold
|
Swing | -1.86 |
2018
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Republican
|
Roger Williams (incumbent) | 163,023 | 53.53 | −4.82 | |
Democratic
|
Julie Oliver
|
136,385 | 44.78 | +7.04 | |
Libertarian
|
Desarae Lindsey | 5,145 | 1.69 | −2.22 | |
Majority | 26,638 | 8.75 | −11.86 | ||
Turnout | 304,553 | 100 | −1.82 | ||
Republican hold
|
Swing | -4.82 |
2020
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Roger Williams (incumbent) | 220,088 | 55.93 | |
Democratic | Julie Oliver
|
165,697 | 42.11 | |
Libertarian | Bill Kelsey | 7,738 | 2.00 | |
Total votes | 393,523 | 100.0 | ||
Republican hold |
2022
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Roger Williams (incumbent) | 185,270 | 100.0 | |
Total votes | 185,270 | 100.0 | ||
Republican hold |
2024
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Republican | Roger Williams (incumbent) | 263,042 | 100.0 | |
Write-in | 1,661 | 0.6 | ||
Total votes | 264,703 | 100.0 | ||
Republican hold |
References
- U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the originalon April 2, 2013.
- ^ "My Congressional District".
- ^ "My Congressional District".
- ^ "2025 Cook PVI℠: District Map and List (119th Congress)". Cook Political Report. Retrieved April 5, 2025.
- ^ a b January 1983 0, Victoria Loe (January 1, 1983). "The Making of a Congressman". Texas Monthly. Retrieved November 12, 2022.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Riding the Pinwheel", Lee Nichols, The Austin Chronicle, August 26, 2011
- ^ Lawsuit charges racial bias in redistricting maps, Tim Eaton, Austin American-Statesman Sept. 5, 2011
- ^ "Federal Court Rules Three Texas Congressional Districts Illegally Drawn" by Laurel Wamsley, NPR, March 11, 2017
- ^ https://davesredistricting.org/maps#viewmap::1c2c1e0d-2fd1-43a8-a039-73e7023124d1
- ^ https://www2.census.gov/geo/maps/cong_dist/cd118/cd_based/ST48/CD118_TX25.pdf
- ^ "District Population Analysis with County Subtotals | CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS - PLANC2100" (PDF). Capitol Data Portal. Texas Legislative Council. August 26, 2021. Archived (PDF) from the original on June 27, 2022. Retrieved January 1, 2023.
- ^ "District Population Analysis with County Subtotals | CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS - PLANC2193" (PDF). Capitol Data Portal. Texas Legislative Council. October 17, 2021. Archived (PDF) from the original on December 25, 2022. Retrieved January 1, 2023.
- ^ "Austin American-Statesman 4 August 2006". Archived from the original on September 19, 2008.
- Austin ChronicleNovember 2, 2010.
- ^ Texas Office of the Secretary of State "2014 General Election"
- ^ Texas Office of the Secretary of State "2016 General Election"
- ^ Texas Office of the Secretary of State "2018 General Election"
- ^ "Texas Election Results - Official Results". Texas Secretary of State. Retrieved November 26, 2020.
- Martis, Kenneth C. (1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
- Congressional Biographical Directory of the United States 1774–present