1980 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas
The 1980 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas occurred on November 4, 1980, to elect the members of the state of Texas's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Texas had twenty-four seats in the House apportioned according to the 1970 United States census.[1] These elections occurred simultaneously with the United States Senate elections of 1980, the United States House elections in other states, the presidential election, and various state and local elections. Democrats maintained their majority of U.S. House seats from Texas, but they lost one seat to the Republicans, decreasing their majority to nineteen out of twenty-four seats on the coattails of president Ronald Reagan's election.[2][3] Overview
Congressional districtsDistrict 1Incumbent Democrat Sam B. Hall ran for re-election unopposed.
District 2Incumbent Democrat Charlie Wilson ran for re-election.
District 3Incumbent Republican James M. Collins ran for re-election.
District 4Incumbent Democrat Ray Roberts opted to retire rather than run for re-election.[2][5][6]
District 5Incumbent Democrat Jim Mattox ran for re-election.
District 6Incumbent Democrat Phil Gramm ran for re-election.
District 7Incumbent Republican Bill Archer ran for re-election.
District 8Incumbent Democrat Bob Eckhardt ran for re-election.
District 9Incumbent Democrat Jack Brooks ran for re-election unopposed.
District 10Incumbent Democrat J. J. Pickle ran for re-election.
District 11Incumbent Democrat Marvin Leath ran for re-election unopposed.
District 12Incumbent Democrat Jim Wright ran for re-election.
District 13Incumbent Democrat Jack Hightower ran for re-election.
District 14Incumbent Democrat Joseph Wyatt opted to retire rather than run for re-election.[2][7]
District 15Incumbent Democrat Kika de la Garza ran for re-election.
District 16Incumbent Democrat Richard Crawford White ran for re-election.
District 17Incumbent Democrat Charles Stenholm ran for re-election unopposed.
District 18Incumbent Democrat Mickey Leland ran for re-election.
District 19Incumbent Democrat Kent Hance ran for re-election.
District 20Incumbent Democrat Henry B. González ran for re-election.
District 21Incumbent Republican Tom Loeffler ran for re-election.
District 22Incumbent Republican Ron Paul ran for re-election.
District 23Incumbent Democrat Abraham Kazen ran for re-election.
District 24Incumbent Democrat Martin Frost ran for re-election.
References
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