Special election results in a dramatic party flip in Texas Senate District 9
Date Posted: 2/02/2026 | Author: Monty Exter
The special election runoff to fill the remainder of former Sen. Kelly Hancock’s term in Texas Senate District (SD) 9 concluded Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. Democrat Taylor Rehmet prevailed over Republican Leigh Wambsganns in the Tarrant County race.
SD 9 voters had not elected a Democratic senator over the last three decades, even under the modern iterations of the SD 9 map. Despite that history, Rehmet bested his opponent by more than 17 points, 57 to 42 percent. He did so while being outspent 12:1; Rehmet spent $200,000 to Wambsganss’s $2.4 million. The win means Rehmet will now serve the remainder of Hancock’s term, which runs through the end of 2026. Rehmet and Wambsganss will face off again in a rematch in the November general election, which will determine who will serve as the Senator from SD 9 for the next four years.
Much is likely to be speculated about the reasons for Rehmet’s win and Wambsganss’s loss in the coming days, weeks, and months. It is uncertain whether the larger electorate that tends to turn out in November will reelect Rehmet, but there is nothing about the makeup of the voters in this past weekend’s special election that would suggest a repeat is not a real possibility. Even more interesting will be whether this shift, if it is indeed a trend, is confined to Tarrant County, perhaps indicating that the SD 9 race was largely shaped by local political issues, or if it is more widespread. Also, it remains to be seen whether election outcomes in November will impact the policy agendas of Gov. Greg Abbott (R), Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R), or the Republican Party of Texas going into the 2027 legislative session, as was the case in the 2019 legislative session that followed a significant narrowing of the state’s partisan gap during the 2018 general election.
CONVERSATION
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
04/10/2026
Teach the Vote’s Week in Review: April 10, 2026
SBOE receives a deep dive look at teacher workforce issues from Commissioner of Education Mike Morath, plus a summer professional development opportunity on genocide education.
04/09/2026
Commissioner Morath updates SBOE on the teacher workforce
Texas is entering a transition period, with significant investments in the teacher pipeline, but these changes will take years to fully materialize.
04/02/2026
Teach the Vote’s Week in Review: April 2, 2026
More Senate interim charges are released, and the Trump administration moves closer to dismantling the U.S. Department of Education.
I hope Texas becomes a Blue State once again! A good house cleaning is what Congress needs now!!! It has been an ineffective group of not standing up for the job! The Republicans have let Donald Trump walk all over them. They have not represented the Constitution, and do not deserve their status or salaries! They have legislated nothing and have continued to allow Donald Trump to serve as Executive and Legislative branches of the government. They have been fearful to stand up to him and , by their non exemplary cowardice and weakness, have allowed the Country to sink into a deep depression as a whole!