Colin Allred and Julie Johnson stand facing each other with hands on hips on a backdrop light and maps showing tension.

Allred Faces Johnson in March Primary After Redistricting Shake-Up

Former U.S. Congressman Colin Allred is set to face Congresswoman Julie Johnson in the March 3 primary, with early voting beginning in about two months. The matchup follows Republican-led redistricting that reshaped North Texas congressional boundaries, forcing several prominent Democrats to compete for fewer seats.

A Shift From Senate to House

Allred, who had dropped out of the U.S. Senate race to run for a newly drawn congressional seat, will now challenge Johnson, a Democrat from Farmer’s Branch in Dallas County. He said on NBC 5’s Lone Star Politics: “We need to have our best players on the field at a time like this.” Allred argues that he is the strongest candidate to represent the new majority-minority district and has criticized Johnson’s recent stock sales while serving in Congress. He added, “I take a real issue with that, because for six years in Congress, I never traded a single stock. Because I did not believe that it was ethical. We have access to insider information. And I thought, even though it was permissible under the rules that we had at that time, that we should change that.”

Allred built his Senate campaign around anti-corruption policies and has carried that message into the congressional race. “I think it’s gross,” he said. “She’s been there for less than a year, and she’s spent her time trading hundreds of stocks, making herself fantastically wealthier, while people out here in Texas in the real world are struggling to get by.”

Johnson’s Response and the Women’s Narrative

Johnson responded in the Dallas Morning News, saying she is divesting her finances to comply with legislation she has co-sponsored that would ban stock trading by members of Congress. “I have been divesting, liquidating, and selling off all of my stock accounts to be in compliance with the stock trading ban,” Johnson said.

Hands holding laptop with liquidation alert and gerrymandering grid in background

In a statement issued when Allred filed to run against her, Johnson framed the contest as a broader pattern she says women face in politics. “A lot of women have had a similar experience where men vacate, women get promoted, the men don’t succeed, and then they try to swoop back down and kick the women out of their spot,” she wrote.

Johnson also addressed Allred’s candidacy during an interview on Lone Star Politics. “He was soundly rejected by the voters in the last election cycle, and he’s been soundly rejected this cycle. And I think he needs to take some introspection and look at why he couldn’t poll more favorably,” Johnson said.

Redistricting, Gerrymandering, and Legal Battles

Allred previously served three terms representing the 32nd Congressional District before running unsuccessfully against Cruz in 2024. Voters later elected Johnson to succeed him. Republican lawmakers then redrew District 32 to extend into East Texas near the Louisiana border, making it far more favorable to Republicans.

Allred has said Johnson is not entitled to represent the newly configured district and argues he better understands voters in a majority-minority seat. “We are losing representation from Black and brown voices across the state because of this racist gerrymander by President Trump that was intended to squeeze out more seats but particularly to target majority-minority districts,” Allred told the News. “It’s kind of outrageous for anybody to think that they’re entitled to any district anywhere, especially one that’s not theirs, but particularly to a majority-minority one.”

Republican lawmakers redrew Texas’ congressional maps over the summer. While a lower court ruled the maps violated the U.S. Constitution by racially gerrymandering districts, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed them to remain in effect while appeals continue.

Shortly afterward, U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett entered the U.S. Senate race, prompting Allred to exit and seek a return to Congress.

Endorsements, Funding, and Analyst Insight

Johnson recently secured endorsements from several top Democratic leaders, including House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York, Democratic Whip Rep. Katherine Clark of Massachusetts, and Democratic Caucus Chair Rep. Pete Aguilar of California. “Julie Johnson is a trusted member of our caucus who delivers results,” the leaders said in a statement reported by the Dallas Morning News. “She has been an active legislator, advancing bills that focus on lowering costs, protecting health care, and strengthening the economy for working families. She shows up prepared, works across the caucus, and puts her constituents first.”

Both candidates point to their records of delivering federal resources to North Texas. Johnson cites $15 million in funding, including allocations in a recent spending bill, and says she has introduced more legislation than any other freshman member of Congress. Allred states that he secured $135 million in federal funding for the region during his tenure.

Political analysts predict that the race will likely draw significant attention. “This is going to be a primary election that lots of people will be watching for the show as well as for the result,” said Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University, in an interview with the News.

Key Takeaways

  • Allred, former U.S. Congressman, is challenging Julie Johnson in the March 3 primary after dropping out of a Senate race.
  • Johnson has divested her stock holdings to comply with a proposed congressional ban and frames the race as a broader women-vs-men dynamic.
  • Redistricting has reshaped District 32 into a more Republican-friendly map, sparking legal challenges and accusations of racial gerrymandering.

The primary, set for March 3 with early voting two months away, will decide who represents a majority-minority district in North Texas. With the district favoring Democrats, the winner is widely expected to win the general election.

Author

  • My name is Ryan J. Thompson, and I cover weather, climate, and environmental news in Fort Worth and the surrounding region. My goal is to help readers understand not only what the forecast says, but how weather patterns and environmental changes affect daily life, safety, and the local landscape.

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