ELECTION RESULTS
- Live election night coverage in our live blog.
- Federal and state races: All races | All federal races | President by county | U.S. Senate | U.S. Senate by county | U.S. House | All state races | RR Commissioner | Texas Senate | Texas House | State Board of Ed. | Texas Supreme Court
- All races by county: Collin | Dallas | Denton | Tarrant
- Commissioners Court races: Collin | Dallas | Denton | Tarrant
- Sheriff races: Dallas | Denton | Tarrant
- School propositions: Allen | Frisco | Everyone else (Argyle, Birdville, Celina, Coppell, GCISD, Highland Park, Northwest and Sunnyvale)
- Municipal propositions: Balch Springs | Dallas | McKinney | Everyone else (Burleson, Hutchins, Irving, Johnson County, Josephine, Mansfield, Ovilla, Shady Shores, University Hills MUD, Weston)
- How many people voted early? More than 1 million people voted early in North Texas. Click here to see daily early voting totals from Collin, Dallas, Denton and Tarrant counties and compare them to those from previous years.
Nationwide election updates: Follow the latest national election news here.
Results will be available on this page on election night.
Two Denton County Commissioners Court incumbents won reelection on Tuesday, but only one race was contested.
In Precinct 3, Republican Bobbie J. Mitchell was running unopposed. In Precinct 1, incumbent Republican Ryan Williams was seeking a second term representing the northern portion of Denton County and was running against Democrat Tommy Bedford.
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Williams's biography described him as a "conservative Christian, family man, successful businessman, sports coach, and law enforcement officer." Bedford is running on a platform that focuses on making voting easier for all eligible voters, lowering property taxes and insurance, improving veterans services, and tackling homelessness.
In Texas, each of the state's 254 counties has a commissioners court of five elected members, including the county judge and four commissioners. The commissioners court is the governing body of the county. It runs the county much like a city council runs a city, overseeing the county hospitals, sheriff's office, and other county offices. County judges are elected countywide and serve four-year terms. Commissioners represent a precinct; two are elected every two years on staggered four-year terms.