Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton defeated four-term Sen. John Cornyn by more than 25 percentage points in Tuesday's Republican Senate runoff, ending the long-serving Republican senator’s career and making Cornyn the first GOP senator from the state to lose his party's nomination for reelection. The Associated Press called the race almost immediately after polls closed.
Paxton, who was impeached by the GOP-led Texas House in 2023 on corruption charges and later acquitted by the state Senate, secured the nomination one week after receiving President Donald Trump's endorsement, the latest in a string of Trump-backed primary victories this month that also ousted Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky.
In the attorney general race, state Sen. Mayes Middleton defeated U.S. Rep. Chip Roy roughly 55% to 45%, casting himself as the MAGA candidate even without a Trump endorsement. Roy's past criticism of the president likely hurt him among primary voters.
In response, the Cook Political Report shifted the Texas Senate race from "Likely Republican" to "Lean Republican" after the runoff, and an early post-runoff poll showed Democrat James Talarico, a state representative from Austin, leading Paxton 47% to 44%. Nearly a third of Cornyn's primary voters told pollsters they would support, a figure that could make Texas a major battleground for Senate control in November.
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