-
The Texas Republican Party is facing internal turmoil. Some lifelong conservatives say the GOP has become too extreme. Who will they vote for on election day?
-
Sen. John Cornyn said in a statement that the upper chamber is broken but he intends to help fix it.
-
Good news: Your vote in the primaries makes a bigger impact because fewer people are voting.
-
Jill Dutton won the special election for House District 2 against Brent Money in a race both Democrats and Republicans were eligible to vote in. But that hasn't stopped some Texas Republicans calling for closed primaries, claiming Democrats skewed results.
-
More recently, the party has been engulfed in controversy and infighting — from spats over Attorney General Ken Paxton’s impeachment to ties to white supremacists.
-
There are 11 Republicans and one Democrat on the ballot for the March 5 primaries for Texas’ U.S. Congressional District 26.
-
Voters in northeast Texas are picking between two Republicans on Tuesday in a special election runoff that marks an early test for the GOP’s warring factions in the March primary.
-
In his teens and his 20s, Stickland was a prolific internet troll. But instead of growing out of it, he would make a career of it — ascending to the role of a conservative Texas powerbroker, before taking heat for hosting a meeting with white supremacist Nick Fuentes.
-
The two feuding Republicans were the top two finishers in a November special election to succeed expelled state Rep. Bryan Slaton, R-Royse City, in House District 2.
-
State Rep. Justin Holland is the latest target of Republican party leaders openly opposing incumbents in their own party.
-
The Texas Nationalist Movement says it plans to sue the state Republican Party after it rejected a petition to include a "TEXIT" question on the March primary ballot. The party says the signatures were turned in after the deadline, and many were invalid.
-
Senate Bill 6 was filed by Sen. Bryan Hughes, R-Mineola, in an effort to skirt a handful of lawsuits that could delay the implementation of changes approved by Texas voters in last month’s constitutional amendment election.