Texas's 19th congressional district of the United States House of Representatives includes the upper midwestern portion of the state of Texas. The district includes portions of the State from Lubbock to Abilene. The current Representative from the 19th district is Republican Jodey Arrington. With a Cook Partisan Voting Index rating of R+25, it is one of the most Republican districts in Texas.
|-
||2008
| President
| align="right" |McCain 71% - 28%
|-
||2012
| President
| align="right" |Romney 75% - 25%
|-
|rowspan=2|2014
| Senate
| align="right" |Cornyn 84% - 16%
|-
| Governor
| align="right" |Abbott 82% - 18%
|-
||2016
| President
| align="right" |Trump 72% - 23%
|-
|rowspan=5|2018
| Senate
| align="right" |Cruz 71% - 28%
|-
| Governor
| align="right" |Abbott 74% - 24%
|-
| Lt. Governor
| align="right" |Patrick 68% - 29%
|-
| Attorney General
| align="right" |Paxton 70% - 27%
|-
| Comptroller of Public Accounts
| align="right" |Hegar 73% - 24%
|-
|rowspan=2|2020
| President
| align="right" |Trump 72% - 26%
|-
| Senate
| align="right" |Cornyn 73% - 24%
|-
|rowspan=4|2022
| Governor
| align="right" |Abbott 77% - 22%
|-
| Lt. Governor
| align="right" |Patrick 75% - 22%
|-
| Attorney General
| align="right" |Paxton 75% - 23%
|-
| Comptroller of Public Accounts
| align="right" |Hegar 77% - 21%
|-
|rowspan=2|2024
| President
| align="right" |Trump 75% - 24%
|-
| Senate
| align="right" |Cruz 73% - 25%
|}
2027–2033 boundaries
{| class=wikitable
! Year
! Office
! Results
|-
||2008
| President
| align="right" |McCain 71% - 28%
|-
||2012
| President
| align="right" |Romney 75% - 25%
|-
|rowspan=2|2014
| Senate
| align="right" |Cornyn 84% - 16%
|-
| Governor
| align="right" |Abbott 82% - 18%
|-
||2016
| President
| align="right" |Trump 72% - 23%
|-
|rowspan=5|2018
| Senate
| align="right" |Cruz 71% - 28%
|-
| Governor
| align="right" |Abbott 74% - 24%
|-
| Lt. Governor
| align="right" |Patrick 68% - 29%
|-
| Attorney General
| align="right" |Paxton 70% - 27%
|-
| Comptroller of Public Accounts
| align="right" |Hegar 73% - 24%
|-
|rowspan=2|2020
| President
| align="right" |Trump 72% - 26%
|-
| Senate
| align="right" |Cornyn 73% - 24%
|-
|rowspan=4|2022
| Governor
| align="right" |Abbott 77% - 22%
|-
| Lt. Governor
| align="right" |Patrick 75% - 22%
|-
| Attorney General
| align="right" |Paxton 75% - 23%
|-
| Comptroller of Public Accounts
| align="right" |Hegar 77% - 21%
|-
|rowspan=2|2024
| President
| align="right" |Trump 75% - 24%
|-
| Senate
| align="right" |Cruz 73% - 25%
|}
Composition
For the 118th and successive Congresses (based on redistricting following the 2020 census), the district contains all or portions of the following counties and communities:
Andrews County (2)
: Andrews, McKinney Acres
Bailey County (1)
: Muleshoe
Borden County (1)
: Gail
Callahan County (1)
: Clyde (part; also 25th)
Castro County (6)
: All 6 communities
Cochran County (3)
: All 3 communities
Crosby County (3)
: All 3 communities
Dawson County (5)
: All 5 communities
Fisher County (5)
: All 5 communities
Floyd County (2)
: Floydada, Lockney
Gaines County (4)
: All 4 communities
Garza County (1)
: Post
Hale County (6)
: All 6 communities
Haskell County (6)
: All 6 communities
Hockley County (7)
: All 7 communities
Howard County (5)
: All 5 communities
Jones County (6)
: All 6 communities
Kent County (2)
: Girard, Jayton
Lamb County (7)
: All 7 communities
Lubbock County (9)
: All 9 communities
Lynn County (4)
: All 4 communities
Martin County (2)
: Midland (shared with Midland County), Stanton
Mitchell County (4)
: All 4 communities
Nolan County (3)
: All 3 communities
Parmer County (3)
: All 3 communities
Scurry County (3)
: All 3 communities
Shackelford County (3)
: All 3 communities
Stonewall County (1)
: Aspermont
Swisher County (3)
: All 3 communities
Taylor County (9)
: All 9 communities
Terry County (3)
: All 3 communities
Throckmorton County (3)
: All 3 communities
Yoakum County (2)
: Denver City (shared with Gaines County), Plains
List of members representing the district
{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center"
! Member
! Party
! Years
! Cong<br />ress
! Electoral history
|- style="height:3em"
| colspan=5 | District established January 3, 1935
|- style="height:3em"
| align=left | 100px<br />George H. Mahon<br>
| | Democratic
| nowrap | January 3, 1935 –<br />January 3, 1979
|
| Elected in 1934.<br />Re-elected in 1936.<br />Re-elected in 1938.<br />Re-elected in 1940.<br />Re-elected in 1942.<br />Re-elected in 1944.<br />Re-elected in 1946.<br />Re-elected in 1948.<br />Re-elected in 1950.<br />Re-elected in 1952.<br />Re-elected in 1954.<br />Re-elected in 1956.<br />Re-elected in 1958.<br />Re-elected in 1960.<br />Re-elected in 1962.<br />Re-elected in 1964.<br />Re-elected in 1966.<br />Re-elected in 1968.<br />Re-elected in 1970.<br />Re-elected in 1972.<br />Re-elected in 1974.<br />Re-elected in 1976.<br />Retired.
|- style="height:3em"
| align=left | 100px<br />Kent Hance<br>
| | Democratic
| nowrap | January 3, 1979 –<br />January 3, 1985
|
| Elected in 1978.<br />Re-elected in 1980.<br />Re-elected in 1982.<br />Retired to run for US Senate.
|- style="height:3em"
| align=left | 100px<br />Larry Combest<br>
| | Republican
| nowrap | January 3, 1985 –<br />May 31, 2003
|
| Elected in 1984.<br />Re-elected in 1986.<br />Re-elected in 1988.<br />Re-elected in 1990.<br />Re-elected in 1992.<br />Re-elected in 1994.<br />Re-elected in 1996.<br />Re-elected in 1998.<br />Re-elected in 2000.<br />Re-elected in 2002.<br />Resigned.
|- style="height:3em"
| colspan=2|Vacant
| nowrap | May 31, 2003 –<br />June 3, 2003
|
|
|- style="height:3em"
| align=left | 100px<br />Randy Neugebauer<br>
| | Republican
| nowrap | June 3, 2003 –<br />January 3, 2017
|
| Elected to finish Combest's term.<br />Re-elected in 2004.<br />Re-elected in 2006.<br />Re-elected in 2008.<br />Re-elected in 2010.<br />Re-elected in 2012.<br />Re-elected in 2014.<br />Retired.
|- style="height:3em"
| align=left | 100px<br />Jodey Arrington<br>
| | Republican
| nowrap | January 3, 2017 –<br />present
|
| Elected in 2016.<br />Re-elected in 2018.<br />Re-elected in 2020.<br />Re-elected in 2022.<br />Re-elected in 2024.<br />Retiring.
|}
Election results
Historical district boundaries
thumb|left|
thumb|left|
See also
- List of United States congressional districts
Notes
References
- Congressional Biographical Directory of the United States 1774–present
