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El Paso Matters – Some El Paso candidates face no opposition in March primary elections. Who they are and what’s next.

Posted on January 12, 2026

Primary elections are the first round in the race for public office — a process that determines which candidates will appear on the November general election ballot.

In El Paso County, voters will cast ballots in the Democratic and Republican primaries on March 3, with early voting running Feb. 17–27.

Think of the primaries like the opening round of a tournament: Candidates compete within their own party, and the winners advance to the general election, where Democrats and Republicans face off in November. To move on, a candidate must win a majority of their party’s votes. If no one clears 50% in races with three or more candidates, the top two advance to the May 26 primary runoff elections.

In the primaries, you can only vote in one party – though you can vote for candidates of any party in the November general election regardless of which party primary you voted in.

But in some races, there’s no competition at all.

Several local, state and federal candidates in El Paso drew no opponents in their party’s primary, meaning they automatically move on to November — and in some cases, are effectively elected because no opposing party candidate filed. 

READ MORE: Who’s running? Republicans look to challenge El Paso Democratic stronghold in 2026 elections

Third-party groups such as Libertarians don’t have primary elections and instead name their nominees at party conventions. Their candidates will appear on the November general election ballot.

Below is a look at the uncontested races and candidates on the Democratic and Republican primary ballots.

DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY

U.S House of Representatives

  • District 16: Veronica Escobar, incumbent

Texas House of Representatives

  • District 74: Eddie Morales, incumbent
  • District 75: Mary González, incumbent
  • District 77: Vincent Perez, incumbent
  • District 78: Joe Moody, incumbent
  • District 79: Claudia Ordaz, incumbent

El Paso County judge

  • Ricardo Samaniego, incumbent

District clerk

  • Norma Favela Barceleau

County clerk

  • Delia Briones, incumbent

District Court judges

  • 327th District Court: Monique Velarde Reyes, incumbent
  • 243rd District Court: Selena Solis, incumbent
  • 210th District Court: Alyssa G. Perez, incumbent
  • 205th District Court: Francisco X. Dominguez, incumbent

County Court at Law judges

  • County Court at Law 1: Ruth Reyes, incumbent
  • County Court at Law 3: Melissa A. Baeza, incumbent
  • County Court at Law 5: Jesus Rodriguez, incumbent
  • County Court at Law 6: Sue Kurita, incumbent
  • County Court at Law 7: Ruben Morales, incumbent

County Criminal Court judges

  • County Criminal Court 1: Linda S. Perez, incumbent
  • County Criminal Court 2: Robert S. Anchondo, incumbent

County Probate Court judges

  • County Probate Court No. 1: Patricia Chew, incumbent

Justice of the peace

Precinct 3: Josh Herrera, incumbent

Precinct 4: Rebecca Bustamante, incumbent

Party chair

  • Michael Apodaca, incumbent

REPUBLICAN PRIMARY

Texas House of Representatives

  • District 77: Humberto Perez
  • District 79: Jesus Romero

El Paso County commissioner 

  • Precinct 2: Thomas M. Matt Sistrunk
  • Precinct 4: Leo Arcos

168th District Court

  • Richard Pitchard

120th District Court

  • Ben Ivey, appointed incumbent

The post Some El Paso candidates face no opposition in March primary elections. Who they are and what’s next. appeared first on El Paso Matters.

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