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Republican John Lujan defeats Democrat Kristian Carranza in competitive race for Texas House District 118

Texas House District 118 election results for Nov. 5, 2024

KSAT 12 projects Republican incumbent John Lujan III to win the Texas House District 118 race (KSAT)

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Candidate

Votes

%

John Lujan III

John Lujan III*(R)

39,13152%
Kristian Carranza

Kristian Carranza(D)

36,46148%
*Incumbent
100% of Precincts Reporting

(88 / 88)

UPDATE AT 1:50 A.M. WEDNESDAY:

With 100% of Bexar County’s 302 voter precincts reporting, KSAT 12 is projecting Republican incumbent John Lujan III as the winner of the State House District 118 race.

He defeated Democratic challenger Kristian Carranza by 4 percentage points.

Lujan won the State House District 118 seat for the fourth time. In January 2016, following the resignation of then-Democratic incumbent Joe Farias, Lujan won a special election against Tomas Uresti (D) to finish out the rest of Farias’ term.

When Lujan ran for re-election in November 2016, Uresti defeated him, earning the two-year term.

Lujan returned to the winner’s circle with another special election victory in 2021 before winning the seat again outright in 2022 and Tuesday night.

UPDATE AT 12:05 A.M. WEDNESDAY:

With 243 of Bexar County’s 302 voter precincts reporting, Republican incumbent John Lujan III has restored his 4 percentage point lead over Democratic challenger Kristian Carranza.

UPDATE AT 9:55 P.M. TUESDAY:

With 82 of Bexar County’s 302 voter precincts reporting, Republican incumbent John Lujan III’s lead appears to be waning over Democratic challenger Kristian Carranza. According to the Bexar County Elections Department, Lujan’s lead is down to 3 percentage points over Carranza.

UPDATE AT 9:32 P.M. TUESDAY:

With 27 of Bexar County’s 302 voter precincts reporting, Republican incumbent John Lujan III continues to hold onto a 4 percentage point lead over Democratic challenger Kristian Carranza.

UPDATE AT 8:10 P.M. TUESDAY:

After early voting results were released Tuesday night in Bexar County, Republican incumbent John Lujan III is leading Democratic challenger Kristian Carranza by 4 percentage points in the race for Texas House District 118. Election Day votes are yet to be counted and will determine the outcome of the race in the coming hours.

Refresh this page for live updates on the embedded results. KSAT will update the text of this article as more votes are counted. Read below for background.

Texas House District 118 (KSAT)

BACKGROUND

The race for Texas House District 118 could be one of the most competitive in Texas this election.

The seat was controlled by Democrats for decades, but Republican John Lujan flipped it in a 2021 special election. He held on to it in the 2022 midterms. Now, he must fend off Democrat Kristian Carranza to keep it again.

The district encompasses South, East, and Northeast Bexar County, including Universal City, Selma, Von Ormy, Elmendorf, Somerset, Sandy Oaks, Saint Hedwig, and China Grove.

Rep. John Lujan (R)

Incumbent Rep. John Lujan was born and raised on the South Side of San Antonio.

He became a deputy for the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office for five years. He then joined the San Antonio Fire Department, where he served for over 25 years before starting an information technology business.

Currently serving in his second term, Lujan is the Vice Chair of the Juvenile Justice and Family Issues Texas House Committee and a member of the House Transportation Committee.

Lujan’s platform includes these topics:

  • Securing the border
  • Curbing fentanyl poisoning
  • Improving healthcare
  • Boosting economic development
  • Supporting schools: increase safety protocols and update safety infrastructure

Kristian Carranza (D)

Democrat Kristian Carranza is a South Side San Antonio native who graduated from Dillard McCollum High School.

The 33-year-old became a political organizer, working as a regional director for the Democratic National Committee and a national field director for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. She worked on both Hillary Clinton and Julián Castro’s presidential campaigns.

Her platform includes these topics:

  • Full funding for public schools, teacher pay increase
  • Women’s health rights
  • Access to health care, expanding Medicaid statewide
  • Fixing the immigration system, protecting Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Dreamers)

Differing Issues

There have been several issues Luhan and Carranza have publicly disagreed on and debated.

The first is public school funding and school vouchers.

Carranza staunchly opposes private school vouchers, saying the program would drain funding for public schools, including teacher pay.

Lujan said he wants public schools fully funded but also voted in favor of school vouchers during the last Legislature. Lujan has said he wouldn’t vote for a school voucher plan in the future if it doesn’t include better accountability for private schools.

The other hot-button issue is women’s right to choose, and specifically the current abortion bill.

Lujan has stated he is against abortion. Carranza supports abortion rights and the woman’s right to choose.

Lujan and Carranza also have differing opinions on Operation Lone Star, where Gov. Greg Abbott deployed the Texas National Guard and Texas Department of Public Safety to the southern border.

Carranza calls the operation tactics “cruel and a waste of taxpayer money,” suggesting a greater overhaul to the immigration system that protects Dreamers.

Lujan has voted to support Operation Lone Star and its goals on the Texas and Mexico border. He has also supported a bill for $6.6 million to continue building a wall along the border.


About the Authors
Courtney Friedman headshot

Courtney Friedman anchors KSAT’s weekend evening shows and reports during the week. Her ongoing Loving in Fear series confronts Bexar County’s domestic violence epidemic. She joined KSAT in 2014 and is proud to call the SA and South Texas community home. She came to San Antonio from KYTX CBS 19 in Tyler, where she also anchored & reported.

Nate Kotisso headshot

Nate Kotisso joined KSAT as a digital journalist in 2024. He previously worked as a newspaper reporter in the Rio Grande Valley for more than two years and spent nearly three years as a digital producer at the CBS station in Oklahoma City.

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