2020 Texas Republican presidential primary

March 3, 2020
 
Candidate Donald Trump Uncommitted
Home state Florida[1] N/A
Delegate count 117 0
Popular vote 1,898,664[2] 71,803
Percentage 94.13% 3.56%

The 2020 Texas Republican presidential primary took place in Texas, United States, on March 3, 2020, as one of 13 contests scheduled on Super Tuesday in the Republican Party primaries for the 2020 presidential election. The Texas primary was an open primary, with the state awarding 155 delegates towards the 2020 Republican National Convention.[3]

Candidates

Filing for the primary began in early November 2019.[4] The following candidates have filed and are on the ballot in Texas:[5]

Running

Withdrawn

Results

2020 Texas Republican Party presidential primary[6]
Candidate Popular vote Delegates
Count Percentage
Donald Trump 1,898,664 94.13% 117
Uncommitted 71,803 3.56% 0
Bill Weld 15,739 0.78% 0
Joe Walsh 15,824 0.78% 0
Rocky De La Fuente 7,563 0.38% 0
Bob Ely 3,582 0.37% 0
Matthew Matern 3,525 0.18% 0
Zoltan Istvan 1,447 0.07% 0
Total: 2,017,167 100% 155

Results by county

Donald J. Trump won in every county.

2020 Texas Republican primary
County De La Fuente Guerra  % Ely  % Istvan  % Matern  % Trump  % Walsh  % Weld  % Uncommitted  % Total votes cast Turnout
Anderson 16 0.20 1 0.01 1 0.01 15 0.19 7,646 96.63 30 0.38 24 0.30 180 2.27 7,913 28.07
Andrews 28 1.15 2 0.08 0 0.00 6 0.25 2,281 93.41 22 0.90 9 0.37 94 3.85 2,442 24.53
Angelina 20 0.16 23 0.18 5 0.04 21 0.16 12,166 94.97 79 0.62 59 0.46 437 3.41 12,810 24.82
Aransas 10 0.24 8 0.19 8 0.19 2 0.05 3,820 92.14 39 0.94 25 0.60 234 5.64 4,146 23.89
Archer 5 0.19 13 0.50 5 0.19 3 0.12 2,455 94.86 18 0.70 9 0.35 80 3.09 2,588 40.87
Armstrong 1 0.14 1 0.14 1 0.14 0 0.00 676 96.99 5 0.72 1 0.14 12 1.72 697 48.30
Atascosa 30 0.67 5 0.11 2 0.04 9 0.20 4,220 94.05 27 0.60 14 0.31 180 4.01 4,487 15.97
Austin 9 0.18 5 0.10 2 0.04 9 0.18 4,662 95.56 22 0.45 28 0.57 142 2.91 4,879 24.79
Bailey 16 1.74 1 0.11 1 0.11 1 0.11 832 90.73 9 0.98 6 0.65 51 5.56 917 26.21

See also

References

  1. Matthew Choi (October 31, 2019). "Trump, a symbol of New York, is officially a Floridian now". Politico. Retrieved February 3, 2020.
  2. "Primaries | Elections 2020". Fox News. February 21, 2021. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  3. Julie Fine (December 2, 2019). "Bloomberg to Skip Early Contests, Focus on Super Tuesday States, Like Texas". NBCDFW. Retrieved December 3, 2019.
  4. Ramsey, Ross (November 13, 2019). "Analysis: For Texas candidates, 2020 officially started last weekend". The Texas Tribune.
  5. "Candidate Information". candidate.texas-election.com.
  6. "Races". results.texas-election.com. Retrieved April 6, 2023.
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