Hispanics are officially the largest ethnic group in Texas, accounting for 12 million residents against 11.9 million non-Hispanic whites. Census data shows roughly 223,000 Hispanic residents were added to the Lone Star state’s population between July 2021 and July 2022, with a Census Bureau demographer telling local media the Hispanic population rose by 1.9 percent last year.
Latinos make up the largest ethnic bloc in 77 of 254 counties in Texas, accounting for 45 percent of residents in Harris County, which is home to Houston and the most populous in the state, and 41 percent of residents in Dallas County, for example. As Texas is a border state subject to large influxes of illegals, these percentages could in fact be even higher than the census data suggests.
The demographic shift could have significant implications not just for Texas but the wider U.S., given its status as the second-largest state by population and electoral college votes after California.
The Democrats received 60 percent of Latino votes in the 2022 mid-terms, and have received a large majority of Latino votes in every mid-term and presidential election for decades.






