Within the coronary heart of Acres House, a historic Black neighborhood newly positioned in Texas Congressional District 29, voters will not be ready for political mailers or scripted advertisements to make sense of the 2026 election cycle.
On the Better Zion Missionary Baptist Church, native leaders hosted a candidate discussion board that introduced Congresswoman Sylvia Garcia and her Democratic challengers, Jarvis Johnson and Robert Slater, face-to-face with residents navigating a political panorama reshaped by redistricting.
Martha Fierro, the only Republican candidate, was not in attendance.
For a lot of in Acres Houses, roughly 10 miles northwest of downtown Houston, public debates present an perception into candidate campaigns and an train in group company.
The brand new TX-29
Texas’ mid-decade redistricting, signed into legislation in August 2025, challenged in court docket, and upheld to be used within the 2026 elections, considerably altered the composition of the twenty ninth Congressional District.
Traditionally, a closely Latino district, eligible voter demographics below the brand new traces modified from about 63% Hispanic and 18% Black to roughly 43% Hispanic and 33% Black in TX-29, in keeping with Ballotpedia.
That demographic shift, spurred by Home Invoice 4 through the 89th legislative session and authorized wrangling over its implementation, signifies that traditionally Black neighborhoods like Acres Houses and Independence Heights, beforehand exterior TX-29, at the moment are a part of the dialog.
Beneath the brand new map,
The outdated TX-29 residents make up 37% of the brand new TX-29’s residents
The outdated TX-18 residents make up 26% of the brand new TX-18’s residents
The outdated TX-9 residents make up 3% of the brand new TX-9’s residents
TX-29 is now categorised as a strong Democratic district. Democrats maintain a baseline benefit better than 20 share factors, a brand new Texas Southern College research says. In current election modeling, the Democratic nominee is taken into account a digital lock in November 2026.
Longtime residents now discover themselves voting in a district whose identification and electoral historical past they’re simply starting to discover.
Political scientist Mark Jones, a co-author of the TSU research, stated, “We’re in a brand new world on the subject of limits positioned on redistricting.” He argues that current federal court docket rulings have weakened the Voting Rights Act’s limits on redistricting, particularly protections for “coalition districts” the place Black and Latino voters collectively type a majority.
Due to that shift, Republican mapmakers in 2025 felt freer than they did in 2021 to redraw Houston-area districts like TX-9, TX-18 and TX-29 extra aggressively for partisan benefit.
The end result, Jones says, was an effort to show three reliably Democratic districts into two protected Democratic seats and yet another aggressive or Republican-leaning seat.
“For those who needed to choose a gaggle to navigate this comparatively complicated scenario we discover ourselves in, we’re speaking about a few of our greatest knowledgeable voters and most motivated voters, however that doesn’t imply that there nonetheless gained’t be fairly a little bit of confusion,” he stated, referring to the redrawn traces.
Current Democratic Main voters (2022 & 2024 averages)
Race of voters:
Black voters: 44%
White voters: 31%
Hispanic voters: 22%
Though Hispanics are the biggest CVAP group, Black voters have been the biggest bloc in Democratic primaries.
Gender:
Age:
65+: 45%
35–64: 43%
18–34: 12%
Organizers say the discussion board was born out of concern that voter confusion, widespread after redistricting, might dampen civic engagement in neighborhoods usually missed between election cycles.

For residents like Felicia Gentle, confusion about boundaries has actual penalties.
As an election decide, a precinct chair, in addition to the vp of Tremendous Neighborhood 6, she tied unclear illustration to the group’s ongoing struggles with flooding, infrastructure wants, rising taxes, and housing insecurity.
Gentle additionally pointed to the confusion the redistricting saga has launched. What has traditionally been part of the 18th Congressional District is now within the twenty ninth.
“We’ve been so with out illustration for totally too, too lengthy for the reason that late congressman Sylvester Turner handed away,” Gentle informed the Defender. “As a result of they’ve divided us for thus lengthy, it’s prompted so many points…it additionally causes one other downside as a result of it confuses individuals from the 18th to the twenty ninth with all of the redistricting.”
She added that with out illustration, federal funds for storm restoration and infrastructure in Black neighborhoods go unaddressed.
Widespread gentrification, then again, is altering the face of Black neighborhoods.
“We cope with housing as a result of gentrification is actual,” Gentle stated. “With all of the developments out right here, we’re dropping our property at Acres House. It’s taxing us out of it. Our seniors are dropping their property to taxes and issues like that. The district itself is altering.”
For a lot of Houstonians, the discussion board was a uncommon alternative to really feel seen by congressional contenders.
“Well being care is essential. For lots of people, it’s additionally been housing,” stated Ashley Mosley, a long-time resident of Acres Houses, emphasizing the necessity for a powerful voter turnout.
Because the mom of a young person who attends personal college, she additionally expressed concern about schooling insurance policies.
“On the native stage, we’ve the vouchers. On the nationwide stage, we’ve the dismantling of the Division of Schooling, which has a trickle-down impact, and that’s regarding for me as a father or mother,” Mosley stated, including that there are a number of colleges that don’t settle for vouchers.

Whereas the problems took the forefront, the price of addressing them additionally surfaced. John Glenn, a 72-year-old native Houstonian, burdened the brand new consultant’s capability to usher in cash.
“That cash is unfold out the best way that folks can see enchancment,” he stated. “You go into Congress, you bought a battle, and we bought to remove linked individuals who don’t have any substance to themselves.”
Candidates making their case
Sylvia Garcia, the incumbent, leaned into her legislative expertise and committee seniority on the discussion board.
Elected in 2018 and the primary Latina to signify CD 29, Garcia highlighted her work on housing affordability and securing funding for infrastructure tasks and catastrophe resilience that have an effect on better Houston.
“I’m operating for reelection so I can proceed combating for working households to guarantee that we are able to decrease prices, that we’ve bought entry to healthcare for everybody, that we shield Obamacare and guarantee that these thousands and thousands of People that will be with out insurance coverage however for Obamacare proceed to have it,” Garcia stated.
She additionally pledged to deal with rising housing and grocery prices, promising to mitigate the influence of tariffs on common Houstonians and standing as much as Republican ideology.
“I wish to guarantee that we’ve an excellent economic system for all of us,” Garcia stated. “Individuals are uninterested in residing paycheck to paycheck.”
Jarvis Johnson, a former state consultant and Houston metropolis council member, centered his message on grassroots empowerment and voter turnout.
“I’m Acres Houses,” Johnson stated to emphasise his connection to the group. “I grew up on this group, bought married on this group. My youngsters have been raised on this group. I nonetheless stay on this group.”
Johnson stated the one who represents the district ought to perceive the heart beat of the district.
“You’ll be able to’t merely be an outsider who needs to return in and provides your concepts on what you assume the group wants,” he stated.
He stated he would tackle rising property taxes, touting earlier laws that created the Houston Land Financial institution, resist Republican insurance policies, and usher in federal {dollars} for drainage and flood mitigation.
Johnson highlighted his initiatives as a metropolis council member, explaining he had the biggest CIP (Capital Enchancment Initiatives) in Houston, getting “Wheatley Road carried out”, “ensuring that Backyard Metropolis had its fireplace hydrants,” and giving “highschool college students a chance to get their first job and for ex-felons to get a second likelihood.”
“I’ve been residing on the Texas Capitol, and I’m going to ship within the nation’s capital, as a result of this Democratic Social gathering wants new vitality,” Johnson concluded.
Robert Slater, a previously incarcerated businessman, provided a distinction, positioning himself as an outsider with out political expertise however with concepts to develop the district. He’s operating on decreasing property taxes and housing affordability,
“Folks have written off Acres Houses as a disqualified group,” Slater stated. “Folks have written off so many Black individuals as a disqualified group. I’ve lived these experiences…there’s so many instances that I used to be a statistic.”
He stated he made “unhealthy decisions” that didn’t mirror his upbringing and pointed to a scarcity of mentorship that would hold him “off the streets and out of jail.” “I don’t need different younger Black boys, younger Black and brown children to undergo the identical factor,” Slater added.
However, he later grew to become a “success story,” Slater stated, changing into a restaurateur and advocate for previously incarcerated people.



















