Texas Gov. Greg Abbott will face Democrat Beto O’Rourke this fall in his bid for a third term in November after the two won their respective primaries, NBC News projects.
Abbott, a Republican, faced several challengers on his right but was able to easily secure the nomination, thanks in part to the support of former President Donald Trump. O’Rourke, a former presidential candidate who lost a close Senate race in 2018, easily won his primary.
“Tonight, Republicans sent a message that they want to keep Texas the land of opportunity and prosperity for absolutely everybody — the prosperity that we have delivered over the past eight years,” Abbott told supporters gathered at an event late Tuesday.
O’Rourke, addressing his own supporters Tuesday, offered himself as a candidate who could win over independents and Republicans.
“I want to be the governor for each and every single one of you,” he said. “And I want to bring us together to do the big things that we are truly capable of once we get past the smallness and the cruelty and the divisiveness of this moment.”
Republican Attorney General Ken Paxton will finish with less than 50 percent of the vote and advance to a runoff in his re-election bid. Paxton’s opponent is not yet determined, with state Land Commissioner George P. Bush and Eva Guzman, a former state Supreme Court justice, in a close fight for second place.
In the Democratic primary for attorney general, Rochelle Garza will advance to a runoff, NBC News projects, with her opponent yet to be determined.
NBC News also projects incumbent Dan Patrick as the winner of the GOP primary for lieutenant governor. In the Democratic primary, accountant Mike Collier will advance to a runoff, his opponent not yet determined. And in the GOP primary for land commissioner, state Sen. Dawn Buckingham is headed to a runoff against a yet-to-be-determined opponent.
Tuesday’s primary results will test the influence of Trump, who has issued more than 30 endorsements in the Lone Star State, including one for Abbott.
Follow real-time Texas primary results on NBCNews.com.
One of Abbott’s GOP rivals, Don Huffines, conceded before all polling sites had closed and before a winner had been declared. In a statement from his campaign, Huffines “declared victory on forcing the incumbent governor to the right.” One example Huffines cited: Abbott’s directive last week that a state agency investigate reports of minors undergoing “elective procedures for gender transitioning.”
“Though I will not be contesting the outcome of this election, I will not be going away,” said Huffines, a former state senator. “I will always fight to defend the God-given rights and liberties of Texans.”
On the Democratic side, the battle between centrist Rep. Henry Cuellar and progressive attorney Jessica Cisneros in the 28th Congressional District is the key House race to watch. Cisneros lost to Cuellar in 2020, but this year’s rematch has been rocked by FBI raids on the incumbent’s home and campaign office as part of an investigation into US businessmen’s ties to Azerbaijan.
Cuellar, 66, has denied any wrongdoing. The race between him and Cisneros, 28, has played out on generational and ideological lines. National leaders in both parties are keeping an eye on the district, which leans Democratic but is one where Republicans are hopeful they can gain ground in the general election.
The race to succeed Bush as land commissioner has also caught Trump’s attention. The former president endorsed Buckingham, who has made the future of the Alamo, the famed battle site of the Texas Revolution, central to her campaign.
The Alamo, which is overseen by the land commissioner, is in the midst of a major redevelopment project and the subject of debate over how the revolution — and the role of slavery — should be remembered.
www.nbcnews.com
George is Digismak’s reported cum editor with 13 years of experience in Journalism