Texas Votes 2024
Will Texas remain a Republican stronghold in 2024? With 40 U.S. Electoral College votes on the line, Texas is a must-win state for the Republican Party to regain the White House. Who is leading in the presidential race in Texas, and what issues are influencing voters’ decisions? Meanwhile, with control of the U.S. Senate up for grabs, the Democratic Party hopes to capture a U.S. Senate seat in Texas to hold on to their majority. And Harris County, the nation’s third largest county, has a number of positions on the ballot – will Democrats continue their county-wide dominance? To answer these questions and more, the Hobby School of Public Affairs at the University of Houston conducted an online statewide survey of likely voters in Texas, with an oversample of Harris County voters, between Sept. 26 and Oct. 10, 2024. The statewide survey was fielded in English and Spanish with 1,329 YouGov respondents, resulting in a confidence interval of +/-2.69%. The respondents were matched to a sampling frame based on gender, age, race/ethnicity, education and partisanship, and they are representative of the population of Texas registered voters.
The Texas Votes 2024 study includes five reports. The first report focuses on the statewide races for president, U.S. Senate and the Texas Railroad Commission, along with issues influencing vote intention, and candidate favorability. The second report covers Harris County elections, while two reports concentrate on election integrity and administration statewide and in Harris County. The final report will explore attitudes about electricity infrastructure and distribution in Harris County.
Report 1. Texas Votes 2024: Statewide Races, Issues & Favorability
President Donald Trump leads challenger Kamala Harris, 50.0% and 44.7% respectively. Other candidates combine for 2.7% and another 2.7% are undecided.
Trump holds a 15 percentage point lead over Harris among men (56% to 41%), while Harris holds a 5 percentage point lead over Trump among women (51% to 46%).
Trump and Harris are in a head heat among Latino voters, 48% to 47%, respectively.
Trump and Harris have relatively equal proportions of likely voters with a favorable (50% and 49%) and unfavorable (50% and 51%) evaluation of them, with Trump having a slightly higher proportion of likely voters with a very favorable opinion of him (38% to 34%).
66% of likely voters say the economy is one of the three most important issues influencing their presidential vote decision, followed by immigration & border security (50%) and the future of U.S. democracy (39%).
44% of likely voters believe their personal financial situation is worse today than it was four years ago, while 31% believe it is better and 25% think it is the same.
62% of likely voters believe things in the United States is on the wrong track, while 31% believe they are headed in the right direction.
The U.S. Senate Race
In the Texas U.S. Senate race, Republican Ted Cruz (50%) leads Democrat Colin Allred (46%) by four percentage points, with 3% undecided and 1% intending to vote for Libertarian Ted Brown.
Cruz holds a 15 percentage point lead over Allred among men (56% to 41%), while
Allred holds a 7 percentage point lead over Cruz among women (51% to 44%).
Allred (48%) and Cruz (45%) are deadlocked among Latino likely voters.
62% of the members of the Silent Generation/Baby Boomer cohort intend to vote for Cruz and 37% for Allred. In contrast, 62% of Generation Z intend to vote for Allred, and 36% for Cruz.
Cruz is viewed favorably by a slightly higher proportion of likely voters than Allred (50% to 46%), but is also viewed unfavorably by a higher proportion of likely voters than Allred (48% vs. 42%).
Other Highlights
In the Texas Railroad Commissioner race, Republican Christi Craddick (48%) leads Democrat Katherine Culbert (41%) by seven percentage points. 8% are undecided, 2% intend to vote for Libertarian Hawk Dunlap and 1% for the Green Party’s Eddie Espinoza.
50% of likely voters believe things in Texas are off on the wrong track, while 41% believe they are headed in the right direction.
59% of likely voters report they plan to vote early in person, 32% plan to vote on election day, 8% plan to vote early via mail (absentee ballot) and 1% are unsure how they are going to vote.
Read Report 1 to learn more about where Texans stand on the 2024 General Election candidates and issues, including differences of opinion when considering gender, age, race/ethnicity, education and partisanship.
Media Release October 15, 2024
Report 2. Texas Votes 2024: Harris County
In the race for Harris County Sheriff, incumbent Democrat Ed Gonzalez leads Republican challenger Mike Knox by a 16-point margin, 53% to 37%. Another 10% are undecided.
Democrat Sean Teare leads the race for Harris County District Attorney with 52% of the vote, compared to 38% for Republican Dan Simons, with 10% undecided.
Democrat Annette Ramirez leads Republican Steve Radack by 12 points in the race for county tax assessor-collector, 50% to 38%; 12% are undecided.
In the county attorney’s race, incumbent Democrat Christian Menefee leads Republican Jacqueline Lucci Smith, 48% to 37%, with 15% undecided.
51% of voters support Harris County Flood Control District Proposition A, which would increase the district's property tax rate by $0.01581 per $100 valuation to fund maintenance of flood control infrastructure. Another 30% are opposed, and 19% are undecided.
The Top Issues
Crime and rising property taxes were each cited by 16% of voters as the single most serious issue facing the county, followed by electricity service reliability (12%), housing affordability (11%) and flooding (10%).
Read Report 2 to learn more about where likely voters in Harris County stand on the candidates and issues, including differences of opinion when considering gender, age, race/ethnicity, education and partisanship.
Media Release October 18, 2024
Report 3. Texas Votes 2024: Elections & Democracy
Election Integrity & Administration
86% of Texas likely voters have confidence that the 2024 presidential election in their county will be conducted fairly and accurately while 85% have confidence that the state will handle the election fairly and accurately. Meanwhile, 69% of Texas likely voters have confidence that the 2024 presidential election nationwide will be conducted fairly and accurately.
42% and 38% of Texas likely voters believe that voter suppression is a major problem nationwide and in Texas, respectively.
50% and 22% of Texas likely voters believe that election fraud is a major problem nationwide and in Texas, respectively.
The top five issues identified as very serious or somewhat serious threats to Texas having a secure election in 2024 by one-half or more of Texas voters are foreign interference (56%), voter roll maintenance (53%), voter suppression (52%), election fraud (50%), and ballot harvesting (50%).
40% of Texas likely voters are very confident that non-citizens will not be able to cast votes in the presidential election across the country, while 31% are not at all confident.
Threats to Democracy
More than half of Texas likely voters consider four political-related factors to represent a very serious threat to U.S. democracy today: money corrupting politics (66%), biased media coverage (60%), the use of the legal system to target political opponents (53%) and attempts to overturn elections (52%).
73% of Texas likely voters believe that once every state has certified its vote for president, that the loser has an obligation to accept the results and concede, with 12% disagreeing and 15% unsure.
Election Policies
81% of likely Texas voters believe that all Texans should be required to provide a photo ID in order to be able to vote in person, including 97% of Republicans and 62% of Democrats.
56% of likely Texas voters believe that all Texans should be allowed to register to vote online, including 83% of Democrats and 32% of Republicans.
50% of likely Texas voters believe that all Texans should be able to vote by mail for any reason, including 82% of Democrats and 22% of Republicans.
Read Report 3 to learn more about where likely voters in Texas stand on issues surrounding election integrity and administration, threats to democracy and election policies, including differences of opinion when considering gender, age, race/ethnicity, education, partisanship and 2024 presidential vote intention.
Media Release October 23, 2024
Report 4. Texas Votes 2024: Harris County - Elections & Democracy
Highlights
76% of Harris County likely voters are confident that the 2024 presidential election will be conducted fairly and accurately in Harris County, with 38% very confident and 38% somewhat confident.
More than one-half of Harris County likely voters believe voter suppression (54%), an insufficient number of adequately trained poll workers (52%), and foreign interference (51%) represent either a very serious or somewhat serious threat to Texas having a safe, secure and accurate election this fall.
32% of Harris County likely voters consider voter suppression to be a major problem in Harris County, while 36% consider it to be a minor problem and 32% do not consider it to be a problem.
37% of Harris County voters do not consider election fraud to be a major problem in Harris County, while 31% consider it to be a minor problem and 32% consider it to be a problem.
45% of Harris County likely voters believe that Texas’s election rules make it neither too hard nor too easy to register and to vote, while 30% believe that the state’s election rules make it too easy and 25% believe the rules make it too hard.
77% of Harris County likely voters believe that all Texans should be required to show a state-approved photo ID in order to be able to vote in person, while 13% do not.
64% of Harris County likely voters believe that all Texans should be allowed to register to vote online, while 23% do not.
74% of Harris County likely voters believe that once every state has certified its vote for president, the losing presidential candidate has an obligation to accept the results and concede, with 10% disagreeing and 16% indicating that they were unsure.
Read Report 4 to learn more about where likely voters in Harris County stand on issues surrounding election integrity and administration, threats to democracy and election policies, including differences of opinion when considering gender, age, race/ethnicity, education, partisanship and 2024 presidential vote intention.
Research Team
Renée Cross, Senior Executive Director & Researcher, Hobby School of Public Affairs
Mark P. Jones, James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy's Fellow in Political Science, Rice University; Senior Research Fellow, Hobby School of Public Affairs
Maria P. Perez Argüelles, Research Associate, Hobby School of Public Affairs
Savannah Sipole, Research Associate, Hobby School of Public Affairs
Additional Texas Election Reports
Texas Trends Survey: General Election 2024
Texas Trends Survey: A Second Look at the 2024 Election
Texas Democratic Primary Election 2020 Survey
The Texas Voter ID Law and the 2016 Election: A Study of Harris County and Congressional District 23
The Texas Voter ID Law and the 2014 Election: A Study of Texas’s 23rd Congressional District