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Democrat Taylor Rehmet and Republican Leigh Wambsganss are headed to a runoff in the special election for the North Texas Senate seat vacated by Acting Comptroller Kelly Hancock.

Hancock resigned from the Tarrant County-based district in June to become the interim head of the stateโ€™s budget and tax collecting agency.

Rehmet, a union leader, machinist and Air Force veteran, and Wambsganss, a conservative activist, finished with the two highest vote totals in Tuesday’s election, running well ahead of a third candidate, former Republican Southlake Mayor John Huffman. But nobody secured a majority of the votes, meaning that a January runoff will decide who serves out the rest of Hancock’s term through the end of 2026.

The district covers about half of Fort Worth and much of Tarrant Countyโ€™s northern suburbs, including Keller, North Richland Hills and Southlake.

With all polling locations reporting, Rehmet led with 47.6% to Wambsganssโ€™ 36% โ€” a striking finish in a district that voted for President Donald Trump by over 17 percentage points last year. Rehmet was also vastly outspent by his GOP foes, with his $68,000 dwarfed by Wambsganss’ nearly $1.4 million campaign outlay.

Rehmet credited his plurality of votes to working people organizing and making their voices heard at the polls.

Tuesday’s outcome is what happens, he said in a statement,โ€œwhen Texans refuse to let their future be dictated by extremists or the loudest voices in the MAGA echo chamber. This campaign was built by the people whoย keep this state runningย and last night they reminded everyone exactly who this government belongs to.โ€

But while he finished atop the field, Rehmetโ€™s support was outpaced by the combined GOP vote for Huffman, who captured the remaining 16%, and Wambsganss, who will have an easier time consolidating Republican votes in the one-on-one runoff. One of her most influential backers, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, predicted Tuesday night that Wambsganss would prevail in the end.

โ€œLeigh is an outstanding candidate, a hard worker, and committed Christian,โ€ Patrick, the president and power broker of the upper chamber, posted on social media. โ€œI need her in the Texas Senate!โ€

In an interview with Dallas conservative radio host Mark Davis Wednesday morning, Wambsganss said she believed Republican voters would come together to support her in the runoff.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to fight together to keep Texas red, because ultimately, the goal is to not let Texas become New York,โ€ she said. โ€œWeโ€™re going to fight together for conservative policies and principles, for faith, family and freedom.โ€

If Wambsganss wins, the state Senate will break down to 19 Republicans and 11 Democrats, with another vacant seat in a dark-red district based in Conroe to be filled in May.

The first round primarily pitted Huffman and Wambsganss against each other, with both touting their experience in conservative politics and commitment to reining in property taxes. Despite their similar positions on the top issues in GOP politics, Huffman occupied the more establishment conservative lane in the race, drawing support from newspapers and moderate elected officials, while Wambsganss won support from figures on the rightmost end of the party.

Wambsganss, a former congressional staffer and longtime conservative activist on the Tarrant County GOP Executive Committee, led Huffman in major endorsements, with Trump, Patrick, U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, Tarrant County Judge Tim Oโ€™Hare and West Texas billionaire and Christian nationalist Tim Dunnโ€™s PAC all in her corner. 

Wambsganss serves as the chief communications officer at Patriot Mobile, a Christian conservative wireless provider. The companyโ€™s PAC, Patriot Mobile Action, led the charge under Wambsganssโ€™s leadership to elect conservative candidates to several North Texas school boards in 2022, making national waves. 

โ€œI have spent my entire adult life as a volunteer public servant, not for a title, but out of conviction,โ€ she said in her campaign announcement. โ€œMy mission has always been clear: to defend conservative Christian family values, safeguard our freedoms and ensure Texas remains a stronghold for faith, family and freedom.โ€

Huffman leaned into his governing experience as a former Southlake City Council member and mayor. His top priorities included property taxes, education and funding for law enforcement and first responders, he said in a statement to The Tribune.

โ€œWhat sets me apart from my opponents is that Iโ€™ve done the job. Iโ€™ve lowered taxes, balanced budgets and defended law enforcement when others stayed silent,โ€ Huffman said. โ€œVoters arenโ€™t talking about online noise or political sideshows. Theyโ€™re talking about the cost of living, the pressure of rising taxes, and the kind of Texas their kids will inherit. The attacks and distractions weโ€™ve seen only prove that some candidates donโ€™t have a plan to address those challenges.โ€

Huffman was endorsed by Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker, the Fort Worth Police Officers Association, the editorial boards of the Dallas Morning News and Fort Worth Star-Telegram โ€” and billionaire casino tycoon Miriam Adelson, whose pro-gambling groups poured over $2.7 million into the race in Huffmanโ€™s favor. The funding gave Huffman a financial advantage over Wambsganss and turned the off-year race into an unusually expensive affair.

Wambsganssโ€™ campaign blasted the Adelson contributions to Huffmanโ€™s campaign, calling them an โ€œaffront to the very concept of democracy.โ€ 

โ€œNaked ambition!โ€ Wambsganss campaign advisor Allen Blakemore said in a statement. โ€œJohn Huffman has revealed himself.โ€

Wambsganss told CBS News Texas that she opposed legalizing casinos in the state, aligning herself with Patrick, who has shot down all efforts to bring the gambling industry to Texas.

Huffman, on the other hand, said heโ€™d support letting Texas voters decide via a statewide ballot initiative whether to issue a limited number of licenses to large casinos.

The race also grew tense when Wambsganss and Patrick accused Huffmanโ€™s campaign of altering an image of her in campaign materials, turning her cross necklace upside down.

โ€œThis is demonic!โ€ Wambsganss posted on social media. โ€œThis is not a political battle – itโ€™s a spiritual one.โ€

Patrick added: โ€œIโ€™ve never seen a campaign do anything this despicable and disgraceful.โ€

Huffmanโ€™s campaign denied any involvement in altering the image.

Rehmet, meanwhile, focused his campaign on kitchen-table issues and working-class interests.

โ€œYou canโ€™t feed your family or pay your mortgage with partisanship,โ€ he said in a statement. โ€œAfter thirty years of empty promises and culture wars, voters in this district are ready for someone who shows up for them, not someone who uses them for a sound bite. The ground is shifting because Texans are tired of extremism and hungry for tangible results.โ€

The race could be a precursor to next yearโ€™s March primary, when voters will pick the nominees for a full, four-year term representing Senate District 9, starting in 2027. Wambsganss said Tuesday night that she planned to run for a full term.

โ€œThe conservative voters of SD 9 have spoken clearly and distinctly,โ€ she said in a statement. โ€œThey want to send a conservative patriot to Austin to represent them.โ€ 

GOP pollster Chris Wilson said last week that the primary electorate favors Wambsganss โ€” and the special election โ€œis not the end of the story.โ€

โ€œIf Democrats and independents dominate turnout, they may shape the runoff,โ€ Wilson wrote on social media. โ€œBut if GOP voters show up โ€” Leigh wins, now and in March.โ€

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Kayla Guo covers state politics and government. Before joining the Tribune, she covered Congress for The New York Times as a reporting fellow based in Washington, D.C. Kayla has also covered transportation...