Live election results for Texas constitutional amendments, Travis County propositions
Election Day #ElectionDay
The Nov. 7 election has arrived and Texans who haven’t cast an early or absentee ballot are heading to the polls to vote.
Texas residents will vote on 14 constitutional amendments. Travis County voters will decide the fate of propositions A and B.
In the surrounding areas, several bond packages are proposed, including Georgetown’s $130 million proposed bond package and Lake Travis’ $143.1 million bond proposal.
Polls close at 7 p.m. in Texas.
As Texas tallies up the votes, this is where you can find live results and real-time data on the statewide and local races. Please check back here for updates.
Real-time Texas November election results
Live results: Local live election results can be found by clicking here.
Here’s a look at some key Austin and state races:
14 constitutional amendments in Texas
Proposition 1: Limiting regulations on farming
Proposition 2: Tax breaks for child care centers
Proposition 3: Barring an individual wealth tax
Proposition 4: Authorizing property tax cuts
Proposition 5: Research at public universities
Proposition 6: Funding for water projects
Proposition 7: Funding for electricity plants
Proposition 8: Expanding high-speed internet
Proposition 9: Cost-of-living increase for teachers
Proposition 10: Tax breaks for medical manufacturers
Proposition 11: El Paso County parks
Proposition 12: Abolishing the Galveston County treasurer’s office
Proposition 13: Retirement age for judges
Proposition 14: $1 billion for state parks
Travis County
What is Proposition A? It would authorize the county to issue $233.06 million in bonds for road and infrastructure improvements.
What is Proposition B? It seeks approval for $276.44 million in bonds for parks and land acquisition.
Georgetown
$130 million proposed bond package: The package has four propositions that, if approved, would not raise the tax rate, officials said.
Lake Travis
$143.1 million bond election: The Lake Travis school board has called a $143.1 million bond election to build athletic facilities at a planned second high school and to upgrade those at Lake Travis High School and the district’s three middle schools.
This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Live election results: The latest for Travis County, Central Texas
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