Texas House of Representatives, District 137

Last updated
Texas's 137th State
House of Representatives
district
Representative
  Gene Wu
D Houston
Demographics14.7%  White
19.8%  Black
55%  Hispanic
10.9%  Asian
Population187,081

District 137 of the Texas House of Representatives, is located in southwestern Houston, Texas. The population of this district is 170,652, of which 57.5% are considered Hispanic. [1]

In the 2010 general election, 15,057 total Ballots were cast, out of a registered voter base of 48,859 Registered Voters, 9,715 of which were Spanish-Surnamed Registered Voters. At the top of the ballot, Democratic candidate for Governor, Bill White, obtained over 60% of the vote. In the 2002 general election, Democratic candidate for Governor, Tony Sanchez, obtained only 49.2% of the vote, losing in the district to Rick Perry. [1]

District 137 is represented by Gene Wu. The seat was previously held by Scott Hochberg Scott Hochberg, known as the "man who knows more about public school finance than anyone in the Texas House". In announcing his decision to retire, Hochberg pointed to a $5 billion cut in public school funding, which he found very discouraging. [2]

Four candidates were listed on the May 2012 Democratic primary ballot. [3]

The candidates were:

In the nomination election for the Texas Democratic Party, Gene Wu and Jamaal Smith went to a runoff election on July 31, 2012. In the runoff, Gene Wu won with 61.6% of the vote. In November 2012, Wu was to face Republican nominee, M.J. Khan who was unopposed in the Republican Primary.

May 29 Democratic Primary

CandidateVotes %
Joseph Carlos Madden39121.8%
Gene Wu77343.1%
Jamaal Smith43124.1%
Sarah Winkler19711.0%
Total Votes1,792

July 31 Democratic Primary Runoff

CandidateVotes %
Gene Wu69561.6%
Jamaal Smith43338.4%
Total Votes1,128

List of representatives

Leg.RepresentativePartyTerm startTerm endCounties they represented
68th Debra Danburg Democratic January 11, 1983January 8, 1985 Harris
69th January 8, 1985January 13, 1987
70th January 13, 1987January 10, 1989
71st January 10, 1989January 8, 1991
72nd January 8, 1991January 12, 1993
73rd January 12, 1993January 10, 1995
74th January 10, 1995January 14, 1997
75th January 14, 1997January 12, 1999
76th January 12, 1999January 9, 2001
77th January 9, 2001January 14, 2003
78th Scott Hochberg January 14, 2003January 11, 2005
79th January 11, 2005January 11, 2007
80th January 11, 2007January 13, 2009
81st January 13, 2009January 11, 2011
82nd January 11, 2011January 8, 2013
83rd Gene Wu January 8, 2013January 13, 2015
84th January 13, 2015January 10, 2017
85th January 10, 2017January 8, 2019
86th January 8, 2019January 12, 2021
87th January 12, 2021Present

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References

  1. 1 2 "Texas Political Almanac". TXPoliticalAlmanac. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  2. "Houston state lawmaker Hochberg calling it quits". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  3. "2012 Democratic Party Primary Election Candidates". Texas Secretary of State. Retrieved 23 March 2012.