The 2025–26 Texas's 18th congressional district special election to determine the member of the United States House of Representatives for Texas's 18th congressional district was held on November 4, 2025. The seat became vacant following the death of Democrat Sylvester Turner on March 5, 2025. It is considered a safely Democratic district. This was the second special election to this seat in almost one year, the first being held in November 2024 after the July 2024 death of Representative Sheila Jackson Lee.

No candidate received a majority of the vote in the first round, leading to a runoff between the top two candidates: county attorney Christian Menefee and former city councilwoman Amanda Edwards. The runoff election was held on January 31, 2026 and Menefee was selected to succeed Turner to finish the term.

Due to Texas' 2025 redistricting, Menefee will face incumbent Democratic Representative Al Green in the upcoming March primary.

Background

Incumbent Sylvester Turner died in office on March 5, 2025 from health complications, according to a statement released by his family. Turner was elected in 2024 to Congress after serving as a two-term mayor of Houston. District 18 is a deeply blue urban district, with Turner winning the district with 69.4% of the vote. More than a month later, Governor Greg Abbott called for the special election to take place on November 4. Texas has no legal deadline for when special elections must take place, and many Democrats criticized Abbott, alleging he intentionally delayed the election to aid congressional Republicans, who hold a narrow majority in the House of Representatives. The special election was conducted with all candidates on the ballot and was followed by a runoff because no candidate received a majority of the vote in the first round.

Candidates

Democratic Party

Advanced to runoff

Eliminated in primary

  • Feldon Bonner II, minister
  • Stephen Huey, healthcare software engineer
  • Jolanda Jones, state representative from the 147th district (2022–present) (endorsed Edwards in runoff)
  • Isaiah Martin, government contract consultant and candidate for this district in 2024
  • Valencia Williams, philanthropist

Withdrawn

  • Zoe Cadore, former director of federal and regulatory affairs for Calpine
  • Ebony Rain Eatmon, community advocate (endorsed Menefee)
  • James Joseph, former director of civic engagement and community outreach for state senator Borris Miles (running for state house in 2026)
  • Corisha Rogers, political organizer (endorsed Menefee)
  • Robert Slater, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference Texas Chapter and candidate for this district in 2024 (running for the 29th district in 2026)

Declined

Republican Party

Eliminated in primary

Green Party

Eliminated in primary

  • Tammie Rochester, social worker

Independents

Eliminated in primary

Primary

Endorsements

U.S. representatives

Organizations

U.S. representatives

Organizations

U.S. representatives

State legislators

County officials

Local officials

Party officials

Labor unions

Organizations

Newspapers

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of October 15, 2025
CandidateRaisedSpentCash on hand
Amanda Edwards (D)$1,266,234$935,650$331,799
Stephen Huey (D)$37,857$26,092$11,764
Jolanda Jones (D)$341,647$314,314$27,333
Isaiah Martin (D)$1,054,746$961,678$267,702
Christian Menefee (D)$1,539,610$1,146,989$392,621
Carmen María Montiel (R)$61,174$41,065$20,551
Reyna Anderson (I)$8,225$3,616$4,609
George Foreman IV (I)$8,454$759$7,695
Source: Federal Election Commission

Polling

Poll sourceDate(s) administeredSample sizeMargin of errorAmanda Edwards (D)George Foreman IV (I)Jolanda Jones (D)Isaiah Martin (D)Christian Menefee (D)Carmen Maria Montiel (R)OtherUndecided
University of Houston/YouGovOctober 7–11, 20251,200 (LV)± 2.8%23%4%15%4%27%6%8%13%
Blueprint Polling (D)September 8–9, 2025454 (V)± 4.6%10%2%25%4%14%19%2%25%
Lake Research Partners (D)August 20–25, 2025400 (LV)± 4.9%15%4%22%5%22%15%14%
Brilliant Corners Research & Strategies (D)July 20–23, 2025500 (LV)± 4.4%18%6%11%3%10%12%4%36%
University of HoustonJuly 9–18, 2025400 (LV)± 4.9%19%4%14%3%19%14%27%

Results

Special election results
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticChristian Menefee22,02228.90
DemocraticAmanda Edwards19,46725.55
DemocraticJolanda Jones14,54919.10
RepublicanCarmen María Montiel5,1106.71
DemocraticIsaiah Martin4,3375.69
RepublicanOllie Knox3,1314.11
DemocraticStephen Huey1,4151.86
RepublicanRonald Whitfield1,1751.54
RepublicanCarter Page9431.24
RepublicanTheodis Daniel9371.23
DemocraticValencia Williams9151.20
IndependentGeorge Foreman IV8281.09
DemocraticFeldon Bonner II5550.73
IndependentVince Duncan4070.53
IndependentReyna Anderson2630.35
GreenTammie Rochester1350.18
Total votes76,189100.00

Per his constitutional duties as Governor of Texas, Greg Abbott announced January 31, 2026, as the date for the runoff election. The announcement was made two weeks after the first round was held.

Runoff

Post-primary endorsements

State legislators

Labor unions

Organizations

Newspapers

Fundraising

Campaign finance reports as of January 11, 2026
CandidateRaisedSpentCash on hand
Amanda Edwards (D)$1,740,159$1,460,807$280,565
Christian Menefee (D)$2,225,235$1,836,495$388,739
Source: Federal Election Commission

Polling

Poll sourceDate(s) administeredSample sizeMargin of errorAmanda Edwards (D)Christian Menefee (D)OtherUndecided
Lake Research Partners (D)December 8–14, 2025437 (LV)± 4.7%30%43%13%
University of Houston/YouGovOctober 7–11, 20251,200 (LV)± 2.8%34%36%10%20%

Amanda Edwards vs. Jolanda Jones

Poll sourceDate(s) administeredSample sizeMargin of errorAmanda Edwards (D)Jolanda Jones (D)OtherUndecided
University of Houston/YouGovOctober 7–11, 20251,200 (LV)± 2.8%44%26%11%19%

Jolanda Jones vs. Christian Menefee

Poll sourceDate(s) administeredSample sizeMargin of errorJolanda Jones (D)Christian Menefee (D)OtherUndecided
University of Houston/YouGovOctober 7–11, 20251,200 (LV)± 2.8%26%43%12%19%

Results

Special election runoff results
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticChristian Menefee18,64668.86
DemocraticAmanda Edwards8,43431.14
Total votes27,080100.00
Democratic hold

See also

Notes

Partisan clients

External links

Official campaign websites