Mar 03, 2026
North Texans showed up in greater numbers for early voting in the 2026 midterm primary compared to recent election cycles, with the number of early voters surging across the region’s four largest counties: Dallas, Tarrant, Collin and Denton. A look at voter turnout from 2018, 2022 and 2026 show ed the same pattern each time: more people are taking part, and both parties are seeing increases in turnout. Data showed that Democrats are making noticeable progress in counties that have traditionally leaned Republican. At the same time, voter registration has grown significantly, giving both sides a larger pool of potential voters. Data from the Texas Secretary of State were used to compile Election Day totals for 2018 and 2022. For the remaining dates, Early Voting totals were derived from the county websites themselves, including Dallas, Tarrant, Collin, and Denton. What do the numbers show? The bigger picture Across all four counties, the numbers point to a clear trend: voter participation is growing on both sides of the political divide. Early voting is especially strong in 2026, driven by population growth, competitive primaries and heightened political interest. Although Republicans still dominate turnout in Collin and Denton, Democrats’ early‑voting surges, including taking the lead in Tarrant, suggest that the region’s electoral map continues to evolve. The full impact will come into focus once Election Day results are final, but for now, 2026 is shaping up to be the most energized North Texas primary in at least a decade. Primary turnout surges as 2.8 million vote early statewide Ahead of Election Day on Tuesday, Texas is already seeing what voter data experts are calling a historic primary turnout. During the 10 days of early voting, roughly 2.8 million people have voted so far in either the Republican or Democratic primary. More people have cast ballots than in any other recent midterm primary, and voter data experts say they expect about the same number of people to show up on Election Day. The surge appears to be tied, in part, to a highly competitive Democratic primary that voter data analysts say is too close to call based on early vote numbers alone. Garrett Herrin, CEO of Votehub, said the contest remains exceptionally tight. “I’m not telling you anything you don’t know, right? But the race is razor thin,” Herrin said. Herrin said early vote patterns do not show one side dominating geographically, making the outcome difficult to predict. “There isn’t any sort of dramatic geographic imbalance that clearly signals that one side is running away with it. Instead, turnout looks broad and competitive, and that’s what makes it difficult to call based on early vote data alone,” Herrin said. County-by-county data compiled by Ryan Data suggested the jump in turnout is not being driven mainly by first-time voters. Instead, analysts said it is coming from voters who typically only participate in November elections but now want a say in the primary. The data shows 13% of GOP primary voters have only voted in November elections. On the Democratic side, that share is much higher — 28% of early voters in the Democratic primary have only voted in November elections. Derek Ryan, who compiled the data, said that shift is the defining feature of the race so far. “Now they’ve decided that, ‘Hey, there’s a contested Senate race in the Democratic primary. Maybe now is the time for me to make my voice heard in that race,'” said Ryan. Ryan’s data also suggests the age breakdown of early voters has not changed much this year. Just 17% of Republican primary voters are under 50. The Democratic primary electorate is younger, with 41% of early voters so far under the age of 50. This story was originally reported for broadcast by NBC DFW. AI tools helped convert the story into a digital article, and an NBC DFW journalist edited it again before publication. politics 8 hours ago What we learned from primary election early voting statistics Decision 2026 9 hours ago Do you get paid time off to go vote? NBC 5 Responds 4 hours ago Why political texts feel personal — and what campaigns can actually know This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser. ...read more read less
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