Everyone is talking about the massive early voting numbers in the Texas Democratic primary. Through Day 5, Harris County has already seen 76,555 Democratic ballots cast, more than double where we were at this point in 2024. Saturday alone brought in 15,247 voters, the strongest single Saturday in any recent Democratic primary.
But the raw numbers aren’t the story. The story is who is showing up.
I pulled the voter file and matched every early voter in Harris County against their participation in the last three Democratic primaries. What I found stopped me in my tracks.
Nearly Half the Electorate Has Little or No Primary History
47.7% of early voters so far have zero or minimal Democratic primary history. That’s 34,227 people. To be clear about what that means: these aren’t necessarily people who have never voted before. Many of them have voted in general elections. But they have not been showing up to Democratic primaries. About half of the 34,227 voted in one of the last three Democratic primaries. The other half voted in zero. These are voters that most campaigns aren’t targeting, aren’t modeling for, and in many cases don’t have in their voter contact universes at all.
Nearly half the people casting ballots right now are unfamiliar to the Democratic primary electorate.
And the share is growing. On Day 4, surge voters made up 43.6% of the electorate. By Day 5, it was 47.7%. New primary voters aren’t just arriving, they’re arriving faster than the regulars. The electorate is getting more unfamiliar by the day.
Who Are the Surge Voters?
I broke down the 34,227 surge voters by demographics. Here’s what stands out:
They are younger. Over 8,500 are under 35 and another 10,000+ are between 35 and 49. This is not an electorate driven by the 65+ base that typically dominates primaries.
They are more Latino. Latino voters make up nearly 29% of the surge compared to their historical share of the primary electorate, a significant jump. White voters still make up the largest share at 36%, followed by Black voters at 30%.
16,489 have never voted in a Democratic primary. Not in 2024. Not in 2022. Not in 2020. These are people entering the Democratic primary process for the first time.
This Is What a Competitive Primary Does
Crockett vs. Talarico is pulling tens of thousands of people into a Democratic primary for the first time. That is the takeaway. When you give voters a reason to show up, a real, competitive, high stakes race at the top of the ticket, they show up. And they bring an electorate that looks fundamentally different from the one campaigns are used to seeing.
The daily pace tells the story clearly. Through Day 5, Harris County’s Democratic primary is running 96% ahead of 2024’s daily average and 63% ahead of 2022. The only cycle that comes close is 2020, and even that comparison is trending in 2026’s favor.
What This Means and What It Doesn’t
I want to be clear about what this data tells us and what it doesn’t.
This is a primary surge. The Crockett vs. Talarico race is driving enormous participation in the Democratic primary, and the data makes that undeniable. A competitive race for Senate race is giving voters a reason to pull a Democratic ballot, and the composition of who is showing up is reshaping the electorate in real time.
But this is not necessarily a preview of November. Primary voters and general election voters are different animals. Some of these surge voters may be engaged Democrats who simply never had a reason to vote in a primary before. Others may be independents drawn in by a specific race.
What we do know is this: when the race matters, people show up. And when people show up, the electorate changes. That’s not a small thing. Building a bigger, more diverse primary electorate has downstream consequences that can benefit Democrats in November.
Track It Live
I built a live dashboard tracking all of this: vote history breakdowns, surge demographics, daily pace against three prior cycles, and ethnicity and age comparisons across every election. I’ll be updating it daily through the end of early voting.