While Biden still won
Latino voters in Texas with 58% and Latinos of
Mexican heritage with 63%, Trump significantly improved his numbers among
Hispanic voters in the state, particularly in the
Rio Grande Valley. Trump flipped
Jim Wells County and
La Salle County which had not voted Republican since
1972. He also flipped
Frio County,
Kleberg County,
Reeves County,
Val Verde County, and
Kenedy County; the first 4 having last voted Republican in
2004 and the last having last voted Republican in
2012. He also became the first Republican to win
Zapata County since
Warren G. Harding in
1920, flipping it by five points after losing it by 33 points in 2016. Trump's total of eight counties flipped in South Texas was the most flipped by any candidate in any state in 2020, and he flipped more counties in South Texas than he did in the rest of the nation combined. While Biden's lead in the Rio Grande Valley shrunk significantly compared to
Hillary Clinton's in
2016, he overwhelmingly won the Latino vote in the state's urban areas. Biden significantly outperformed
Clinton in
Greater Austin, which contributed to Trump's relatively weak performance statewide. He flipped
Hays County and
Williamson County, both of them suburban counties located outside of the
state capital that a Democrat had not won since
1992 and
1976, respectively. This is also the first election since
1956 when the latter voted for the statewide loser. Biden also became the first Democratic candidate to garner at least 50,000 votes in
Bell County, a county just outside of Greater Austin and had the center of Texas population within it in the 2010 census. At 44.76%, he outperformed Obama's record for the highest percentage of votes a Democratic presidential nominee received in Bell County since 1976, the last time the county voted for a Democrat. Also, Biden became the first Democrat to ever win the White House without
Jefferson County. Biden also became the first Democrat to win without
Frio County since it was formed in 1871, the first to win without
La Salle County since it was formed in 1880, the first to win without
Reeves County since it was formed in 1883, the first to win without
Val Verde County since it was formed in 1885, the first to win without
Jim Wells County since it was founded in 1911, the first to win without
Kleberg County since it was founded in 1913, and the first Democrat to win the White House without winning Zapata County since
Woodrow Wilson in
1916. Because of Trump's substantial gains in heavily Hispanic areas, Biden's best performance in Texas came not from the southern border region, but
Travis County, encompassing the college-educated, cosmopolitan, liberal bastion of Austin, home to the
University of Texas at Austin, where he won the highest percentage for a Democrat since
Harry S. Truman in
1948. Biden also improved throughout the three most significant metropolitan areas in Texas. While not significantly outperforming Clinton in
Harris and
Bexar counties, he did make considerable inroads into their surrounding suburbs, thus eking out narrow wins in
Greater Houston and
Greater San Antonio, the first time a Democratic presidential nominee had accomplished such a feat in the 21st century. However, in the former, gains were incredibly mixed. Trump saw substantial growth in Houston's north and east, home to large concentrations of Latinos. He also improved in diverse
Alief, along Harris County's southwest border, which is heavily Hispanic, Filipino, and Vietnamese. On the other hand, Biden continued Clinton's gains in the wealthy college-educated "
Houston Arrow" suburbs in the city's west, though his improvements were significantly more minor. Perhaps the biggest reason for Biden narrowing the Lone Star State's margin of victory was the surge of Democratic support in the
Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, the largest metropolitan area in the state, which he also narrowly won. He scored nearly 65% of the vote in
Dallas County, the highest percentage won by a Democrat since
1940. Additionally, Biden narrowly flipped
Tarrant County, winning by fewer than 2,000 votes. Tarrant County is home to the fifth-largest city in Texas,
Fort Worth, and had not been won by a Democrat since
1964, when
favorite son Lyndon B. Johnson carried it. His growth in the heavily Republican Fort Worth suburbs, which historically kept Democratic candidates from capturing Tarrant, was a critical factor in winning the county and the Metroplex as a whole. Biden improved substantially in the large DFW suburbs of
Collin County and
Denton County, which have rapidly grown and diversified in the past decade, narrowing Trump's victory margins from 16.57% and 20% in 2016, down to 4.37% and 8.08%, respectively. Both of their county seats (the two suburban cities of
McKinney and
Denton, respectively) have trended leftward since
2016 due to the influx of younger professionals and families in the past decade, which shifted to the Democrats in this election. Biden also won the city of
Plano, the largest city in Collin County, and narrowly won the city of
Allen. In 2021, Texas Attorney General
Ken Paxton stated on
Steve Bannon's podcast
War Room that without blocking Harris County from sending out applications for mail-in ballots to registered voters, Trump would have lost the state.
Edison exit polls ==See also==