Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/united-states

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Texas House of Representatives

Lower house of Texas's legislature

Texas House of Representatives

Lower house of Texas's legislature

FieldValue
background_color
nameTexas House of Representatives
legislature89th Texas Legislature
coa_picSeal of Texas House of Representatives.svg
session_roomAustin Capitol Building (47391738632).jpg
house_typeLower house
bodyTexas Legislature
term_limitsNone
new_sessionJanuary 14, 2025
structure1
leader1_typeSpeaker
leader1Dustin Burrows (R)
election1January 14, 2025
leader2_typeSpeaker pro tempore
leader2Joe Moody (D)
election2February 13, 2025
leader3_typeMajority Leader
leader3Tom Oliverson (R)
election3April 3, 2024
leader4_typeMinority Leader
leader4Gene Wu (D)
election4January 14, 2025
term_length2 years
authorityArticle 3, Texas Constitution
salary$7,200/year + per diem
members150
last_election1November 5, 2024
next_election1November 3, 2026
voting_system1First-past-the-post
redistrictingLegislative control
*borderdarkgray}} Republican (88)
*borderdarkgray}} Democratic (62)
meeting_placeHouse of Representatives Chamber
Texas State Capitol
Austin, Texas
websiteTexas House of Representatives

Majority

  • Republican (88) Minority
  • Democratic (62) Texas State Capitol Austin, Texas

The Texas House of Representatives is the lower house of the bicameral Texas Legislature. It consists of 150 members who are elected from single-member districts for two-year terms. There are no term limits. The House meets at the State Capitol in Austin.

Leadership

The leadership for the 89th Legislature is as follows:

PositionNamePartyResidenceDistrict
Speaker of the HouseDustin BurrowsRepublicanLubbock83
Speaker Pro TemporeJoe MoodyDemocraticEl Paso78
Republican Caucus ChairTom OliversonRepublicanCypress130
Democratic House LeaderGene WuDemocraticHouston137

The Speaker of the House is the presiding officer and highest-ranking member of the House. The Speaker's duties include maintaining order within the House, recognizing members during debate, ruling on procedural matters, appointing members to the various committees and sending bills for committee review.

The Speaker pro tempore is primarily a ceremonial position, but does, by long-standing tradition, preside over the House during its consideration of local and consent bills.

Unlike other state legislatures, the House rules do not formally recognize majority or minority leaders. The unofficial leaders are the Republican Caucus Chairman and the Democratic House Leader, both of whom are elected by their respective caucuses.

Composition

Republicans currently hold a majority of seats in the House.

AffiliationParty (Shading indicates majority caucus)TotalRepublicanDemocraticIndVacantEnd 2010148Begin 2011150End 2012149Begin 2013150End 2014Begin 2015150End 2016Begin 2017150End 20182019–2020150Begin 2021149End 2022150Begin 2023150May 9, 2023149February 14, 2024150August 15, 2024149August 30, 2024Begin 2025150Latest voting share
Republican Party (United States)}}"Democratic Party (United States)}}"Independent}}"
757302
1014900
481
955500
985200
99501
955500
9456
836700
826701
85650
866400
851
860
851
8663
886200
Current House districts and party affiliation

]]

List of current representatives

DistrictMemberPartyAssumed officeResidenceCounties represented
1Republican2015New BostonBowie, Cass, Lamar, Morris, Red River
2Republican2025GreenvilleHopkins, Hunt, Van Zandt
3Republican2013MagnoliaMontgomery
4Republican2019ForneyHenderson, Kaufman
5Republican2017Mount PleasantCamp, Rains, Smith, Titus, Upshur, Wood
6Republican2025TylerSmith
7Republican2017LongviewGregg, Harrison, Marion
8Republican2019PalestineAnderson, Cherokee, Henderson, Navarro
9Republican2013LufkinAngelina, Houston, Polk, San Augustine, Trinity, Tyler
10Republican2021MidlothianEllis
11Republican2025NacogdochesNacogdoches, Newton, Panola, Rusk, Sabine, Shelby
12Republican2025HuntsvilleBrazos, Grimes, Madison, Robertson, Walker, Washington
13Republican2023ItascaBosque, Falls, Freestone, Hill, Leon, Limestone, McLennan
14Republican2025BryanBrazos
15Republican2019ConroeMontgomery
16Republican2015ConroeMontgomery
17Republican2023SmithvilleBastrop, Burleson, Caldwell, Lee, Milam
18Republican2025SilsbeeHardin, Liberty, Montgomery, San Jacinto
19Republican2023LakeviewBlanco, Burnet, Gillespie, Kendall, Travis
20Republican2017GeorgetownWilliamson
21Republican2015BeaumontJasper, Jefferson, Orange
22Democratic2023BeaumontJefferson
23Republican2023GalvestonChambers, Galveston
24Republican2013FriendswoodGalveston
25Republican2021AngletonBrazoria
26Republican2025RichmondFort Bend
27Democratic2011Missouri CityFort Bend
28Republican2020RichmondFort Bend
29Republican2025PearlandBrazoria
30Republican2025VictoriaDe Witt, Goliad, Jackson, Lavaca, Matagorda, Victoria
31Republican2003Rio Grande CityBrooks, Duval, Jim Hogg, Karnes, Kenedy, La Salle, Live Oak, McMullen, Starr, Wilson, Zapata
32Republican2009Corpus ChristiAransas, Nueces
33Republican2025RockwallCollin, Rockwall
34Republican2025Corpus ChristiNueces
35Democratic2013MissionCameron, Hidalgo
36Democratic2011MissionHidalgo
37Republican2023San BenitoCameron, Willacy
38Democratic2022BrownsvilleCameron
39Democratic2005WeslacoHidalgo
40Democratic2013EdinburgHidalgo
41Democratic2012MissionHidalgo
42Democratic2001LaredoWebb
43Republican2011KingsvilleBee, Calhoun, Jim Wells, Kleberg, Refugio, San Patricio
44Republican2025McQueeneyGonzalez, Guadalupe
45Democratic2019DriftwoodHays
46Democratic2019AustinTravis
47Democratic2019AustinTravis
48Democratic2006AustinTravis
49Democratic2017AustinTravis
50Democratic2018AustinTravis
51Democratic2023AustinTravis
52Republican2023Round RockWilliamson
53Republican2025BradyBandera, Crane, Crockett, Edwards, Kerr, Kimble, Llano, Mason, McCulloch, Medina, Menard, Pecos, Real, Schleicher, Sutton, Upton
54Republican2019SaladoBell
55Republican2025BeltonBell
56Republican2024WacoMcLennan
57Republican2023Hickory CreekDenton
58Republican2025Glen RoseJohnson, Somervell
59Republican2021StephenvilleCoryell, Erath, Hamilton, Hood
60Republican2025Fort WorthPalo Pinto, Parker, Stephens
61Republican2025McKinneyCollin
62Republican2025Tom BeanDelta, Fannin, Franklin, Grayson
63Republican2023Flower MoundDenton
64Republican2025DecaturDenton, Wise
65Republican2025LewisvilleDenton
66Republican2015PlanoCollin
67Republican2013PlanoCollin
68Republican2021JacksboroBrown, Cooke, Eastland, Jack, Lampasas, Mills, Montague, San Saba, Shackelford, Throckmorton, Young
69Republican2013Wichita FallsArcher, Baylor, Clay, Cottle, Fisher, Foard, Hardeman, Haskell, King, Knox, Motley, Stonewall, Wichita, Wilbarger
70Democratic2023DallasCollin
71Republican2017AbileneCallahan, Jones, Nolan, Taylor
72Republican2007San AngeloCoke, Coleman, Concho, Glasscock, Howard, Irion, Reagan, Runnels, Sterling, Tom Green
73Republican2023Dripping SpringsComal, Hays
74Democratic2021Eagle PassBrewster, Culberson, El Paso, Hudspeth, Jeff Davis, Kinney, Maverick, Presidio, Reeves, Terrell, Val Verde
75Democratic2013ClintEl Paso
76Democratic2023Sugar LandFort Bend
77Vincent PerezDemocratic2025El PasoEl Paso
78Democratic2013El PasoEl Paso
79Democratic2021El PasoEl Paso
80Don McLaughlinRepublican2025UvaldeAtacscosa, Dimmit, Frio, Uvalde, Webb, Zavala
81Republican2015OdessaEctor, Loving, Ward, Winkler
82Republican1969MidlandDawson, Martin, Midland
83Republican2015LubbockBorden, Crosby, Dickens, Floyd, Garza, Kent, Lubbock, Lynn, Mitchell, Scurry, Terry
84Republican2023LubbockLubbock
85Republican2023PattisonAustin, Colorado, Fayette, Fort Bend, Waller, Wharton
86Republican1985AmarilloArmstrong, Dallam, Deaf Smith, Hartley, Oldham, Parmer, Randall
87Republican2025AmarilloCarson, Hansford, Hutchinson, Lipscomb, Moore, Ochilitree, Potter, Sherman
88Republican2013CanadianAndrews, Bailey, Briscoe, Castro, Childress, Cochran, Collingsworth, Donley, Gaines, Gray, Hale, Hall, Hansford, Hemphill, Hockley, Lamb, Roberts, Swisher, Wheeler, Yoakum
89Republican2019LucasCollin
90Democratic2015Fort WorthTarrant
91Republican2025North Richland HillsTarrant
92Democratic2023EulessTarrant
93Republican2023Fort WorthTarrant
94Republican2015ArlingtonTarrant
95Democratic2013Fort WorthTarrant
96Republican2021MansfieldTarrant
97Republican2025Fort WorthTarrant
98Republican2013SouthlakeTarrant
99Republican2001Fort WorthTarrant
100Democratic2023DallasDallas
101Democratic2013Grand PrairieTarrant
102Democratic2019RichardsonDallas
103Democratic2005DallasDallas
104Democratic2019DallasDallas
105Democratic2019IrvingDallas
106Republican2019FriscoDenton
107Democratic2025MesquiteDallas
108Republican2015University ParkDallas
109Democratic2025DallasDallas
110Democratic2013DallasDallas
111Democratic1993DallasDallas
112Republican2009GarlandDallas
113Democratic2019RowlettDallas
114Democratic2023DallasDallas
115Democratic2025Farmers BranchDallas
116Democratic2019San AntonioBexar
117Democratic2017San AntonioBexar
118Republican2021San AntonioBexar
119Democratic2021San AntonioBexar
120Democratic2017San AntonioBexar
121Republican2025San AntonioBexar
122Republican2023San AntonioBexar
123Democratic2015San AntonioBexar
124Democratic2023San AntonioBexar
125Democratic2019San AntonioBexar
126Republican2019SpringHarris
127Republican2023HumbleHarris
128Republican2017Deer ParkHarris
129Republican2015HoustonHarris
130Republican2017CypressHarris
131Democratic2005HoustonHarris
132Republican2021KatyHarris
133Republican2023HoustonHarris
134Democratic2021HoustonHarris
135Democratic2019HoustonHarris
136Democratic2019AustinWilliamson
137Democratic2013HoustonHarris
138Republican2021HoustonHarris
139Democratic2025HoustonHarris
140Democratic2009HoustonHarris
141Democratic1973HoustonHarris
142Democratic1985HoustonHarris
143Democratic2005HoustonHarris
144Democratic2017HoustonHarris
145Democratic2019HoustonHarris
146Democratic2025HoustonHarris
147Democratic2022HoustonHarris
148Democratic2021HoustonHarris
149Democratic2005HoustonHarris
150Republican2017SpringHarris

Notable past members

  • Eligio (Kika) De La Garza, II, first Mexican-American to represent his region in the US House and the second Mexican-American from Texas to be elected to Congress (1965–1997).
  • Ray Barnhart, Federal Highway Administrator (1981–1987)
  • Anita Lee Blair, first blind woman elected to a state legislature
  • Jack Brooks, U.S. Representative (1953–1995)
  • Dolph Briscoe, Governor of Texas (1973–1979)
  • Frank Kell Cahoon, Midland County oilman and representative from 1965 to 1969; only Republican member in 1965 legislative session
  • Joaquin Castro, U.S. Representative (2013–present)
  • Jasmine Crockett, U.S. Representative (2023–present)
  • Henry Cuellar, U.S. Representative (2005–present)
  • Tom DeLay, U.S. Representative (1985–2006) and House Majority Leader (2003–2005)
  • Jake Ellzey, U.S. Representative (2022–present)
  • Pat Fallon, U.S. Representative (2021–present)
  • John Nance Garner, U.S. Representative (1903–1933), Speaker of the House (1931–1933), and Vice President of the United States (1933–1941)
  • Craig Goldman, U.S. Representative (2025-present)
  • Lance Gooden, U.S. Representative (2019–present)
  • Sarah T. Hughes, United States district court judge
  • Suzanna Hupp, House of Representatives (1997–2007), survived the Luby's shooting, went on to champion individual gun ownership and carry rights.
  • Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Senator (1993–2013)
  • Ray Hutchinson, husband of Kay Bailey Hutchison
  • Eddie Bernice Johnson, first Black woman ever elected to public office from Dallas, first woman in Texas history to lead a major Texas House committee (the Labor Committee), and the first registered nurse elected to Congress.
  • Julie Johnson, U.S. Representative (2025-present)
  • Samuel Ealy Johnson, Jr., father of President Lyndon B. Johnson (1963–1969)
  • Mickey Leland, U.S. Representative (1979–1989), died in a plane crash.
  • Charles Henry Nimitz (1826–1911) Born in Bremen. In 1852, built the Nimitz Hotel in Fredericksburg, which now houses the National Museum of the Pacific War. Grandfather of United States Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz. Elected to the Texas Legislature 1890.
  • Rick Perry, longest serving Governor of Texas, (2000–2015) and former U.S. Secretary of Energy (2017–2019).
  • Colonel Alfred P.C. Petsch (1925–1941) Lawyer, legislator, civic leader, and philanthropist. Veteran of both World War I and World War II.
  • Sam Rayburn, U.S. Representative (1913–1961) and longest served Speaker of the House (1940–1947, 1949–1953, 1955–1961)
  • Coke R. Stevenson, Governor of Texas (1941–1947)
  • Marc Veasey, U.S. Representative (2013–present)
  • Randy Weber, U.S. Representative (2013–present)
  • Sarah Weddington, attorney for "Jane Roe" for the 1973 Roe v. Wade case in the U.S. Supreme Court
  • Ferdinand C. Weinert, coauthored bill to establish the Pasteur Institute of Texas, authored resolution for humane treatment of state convicts, coauthored the indeterminate sentence and parole law. Also served as Texas Secretary of State
  • Charlie Wilson, U.S. Representative (1973–1996), subject of the book and film Charlie Wilson's War

Officials

Speaker of the House

The Speaker of the House of Representatives has duties as a presiding officer as well as administrative duties. As a presiding officer, the Speaker must enforce, apply, and interpret the rules of the House, call House members to order, lay business in order before the House and receive propositions made by members, refer proposed legislation to a committee, preserve order and decorum, recognize people in the gallery, state and hold votes on questions, vote as a member of the House, decide on all questions to order, appoint the Speaker Pro Tempore and Temporary Chair, adjourn the House in the event of an emergency, postpone reconvening in the event of an emergency, and sign all bills, joint resolutions, and concurrent resolutions. The administrative duties of the Speaker include having control over the Hall of the House, appointing chair, vice-chair, and members to each standing committee, appointing all conference committees, and directing committees to make interim studies.

Chief Clerk

The Chief Clerk is the head of the Chief Clerk's Office which maintains a record of all authors who sign legislation, maintains and distributes membership information to current house members, and forwards copies of legislation to house committee chairs. The Chief Clerk is the primary custodian of all legal documents within House. Additional duties include keeping a record of all progress on a document, attesting all warrants, writs, and subpoenas, receiving and filing all documents received by the house, and maintaining the electronic information and calendar for documents. When there is a considerable update of the electronic source website, the Chief Clerk is also responsible for noticing House members via email.

Committee structure

The committee structure below is valid for the 88th Legislature (numbers in parentheses are the number of committee members; under House rules 1/2 of each committee's membership is determined by seniority and the remaining 1/2 by the Speaker of the House, excluding Procedural Committees the membership of which are wholly chosen by the Speaker).

  • Agriculture and Livestock (9)
  • Appropriations (27)
    • Subcommittee on Articles I, IV & V
    • Subcommittee on Article II
    • Subcommittee on Article III
    • Subcommittee on Articles VI, VII & VIII
    • Subcommittee on Strategic Fiscal Review
  • Business & Industry (9)
  • Calendars (11)
  • Community Safety (select)
  • Corrections (9)
  • County Affairs (9)
  • Criminal Jurisprudence (9)
  • Culture, Recreation & Tourism (9)
  • Defense & Veterans' Affairs (9)
  • Elections (9)
  • Energy Resources (11)
  • Environmental Regulation (9)
  • General Investigating (5)
  • Health Care Reform (select)
  • Higher Education (11)
  • Homeland Security & Public Safety (9)
  • House Administration (11)
  • Human Services (9)
  • Insurance (9)
  • International Relations & Economic Development (9)
    • the committee examines the Texas Workforce Commission. That year, Christopher Hooks, R.G. Ratcliffe and Andrea Zelinski of Texas Monthly stated that the competencies are "vital" even though there is a lack of prestige in being assigned to this committee, stating that it is "not a sexy assignment" and comparing being placed on it to "getting cast as a tree in your high school play." Some lawmakers are placed on the committee as a means of disciplining them.
  • Judiciary & Civil Jurisprudence (9)
  • Juvenile Justice & Family Issues (9)
  • Land & Resource Management (9)
  • Licensing & Administrative Procedures (11)
  • Local & Consent Calendars (11)
  • Natural Resources (11)
  • Pensions, Investments & Financial Services (9)
  • Public Education (13)
  • Public Health (11)
  • Redistricting (15)
  • Resolutions Calendars (11)
  • State Affairs (13)
  • Transportation (13)
  • Urban Affairs (9)
  • Ways & Means (11)
  • Youth Health & Safety (select)

In addition to these committees, there are also six joint committees composed of members of both the State House and Senate:

  • Criminal Justice Legislative Oversight
  • Legislative Audit Committee
  • Legislative Budget Board
  • Legislative Reference Library Board
  • Sunset Advisory Commission
  • Texas Legislative Council

Past composition

Main article: Political party strength in Texas

Notes

References

References

  1. (14 January 2025). "Rep. Dustin Burrows voted Texas House speaker in blow to insurgent GOP movement".
  2. (18 February 2025). "El Paso delegation receives committee assignments; Moody named speaker pro tempore". El Paso Times.
  3. (11 December 2024). "Texas House Democratic Caucus elects Gene Wu to lead party". Spectrum News.
  4. (5 December 2024). "Houston Rep. Gene Wu to lead Texas House Democrats through GOP-dominated legislative session". Texas Tribune.
  5. Scherer, Jason. (August 30, 2024). "State Rep. Shawn Thierry switches to GOP, says Democratic Party has "lost its way"". The Texas Tribune.
  6. (2013). "Hispanic Americans in Congress, 1822–2012". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  7. "Texas House Rules".
  8. "Texas Legislature Online – House Committees".
  9. (July 2021). "2021: The Best and Worst Legislators".
  10. "Texas State Auditor's Office - Legislative Audit Committee".
  11. "Legislative Budget Board".
  12. "Legislative Reference Library |".
  13. "Texas Legislative Council".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Texas House of Representatives — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report