Houston City Council Edwards ran for Houston City Council in 2015 for At-Large Position 4 and won, succeeding
C.O. Bradford. In the runoff, she received more votes than anyone in the municipal election, including the mayor,
Sylvester Turner. During her tenure, Edwards served on the Transportation, Technology, and Infrastructure Committee and the Economic Development Committee; additionally, she was the Vice Chair of the Budget and Fiscal Affairs Committee. In the spring of 2016, Edwards authored an amendment for the city's annual budget process to create a task force for innovation and technology. She helped lead the efforts of the Task Force, which recommended, among other things, the creation of an innovation district. This new site, The Ion, supports the business district and accelerate investment in innovative technologies. She also pushed efforts for the City of Houston to commence smart city planning. In addition to her work to support the innovation economy, Edwards initiated the creation of and led the Women- and Minority-Owned Business Task Force to identify ways to increase access to capital for women- and minority-owned businesses. Edwards also served as the Co-Vice Chair of the High-Capacity Transit Task Force (a group organized under the
Houston-Galveston Area Council) where she advocated for high capacity transit options for the 8 county Houston-Galveston region. This was alongside her proposal for the addition of light rail and rapid transit options to ease congestion on Houston's highways. While on the Houston City Council, Edwards continued in disaster relief efforts after Houston was struck by
Hurricane Harvey. She mobilized hundreds of volunteers to assist Harvey survivors by connecting them with help for flood damage, providing emergency supplies, case management and more. Edwards launched the Council Member Edwards’ Community Empowerment Signature Series to empower Houstonians to “be the solution” with respect to issues impacting their respective communities.
2020 U.S. Senate race In 2020, Edwards announced that she was running for
John Cornyn's US Senate seat in the
2020 United States Senate election in Texas. After announcing, she was identified by local media as one of the seven candidates to watch in a crowded race with 12 declared candidates. Edwards placed fifth in the primary election with 10.14% of the vote.
2023 Houston mayoral campaign and 2024 U.S. House campaigns Edwards entered the
2023 Houston mayoral election but withdrew and endorsed
U.S. Representative Sheila Jackson Lee following her campaign announcement. Edwards instead pivoted to
run for the U.S. House; stating that she intended to remain a candidate even after Jackson Lee announced her intention to run for re-election. Edwards lost in the second round of the nomination convention, four votes behind former
Mayor of Houston Sylvester Turner— who died while in office on March 5, 2025.
2025 U.S. House campaign Following Turner's death, Edwards announced her third campaign for the U.S. House in the
2025 special election to replace him. Her campaign was endorsed by
EMILY's List. She advanced to a runoff election along with fellow candidate
Christian Menefee, current
Harris County Attorney. She was defeated by Menefee on January 31, 2026. == Personal life ==