4 published verifications about Texas's 23rd Congressional District Texas's 23rd Congressional District ×
“ZIP Code 78015 (Fair Oaks Ranch/Boerne area, Texas) lies at least partly within Texas's 23rd congressional district.”
Official district-reference sources support the claim. Texas Legislative Council data shows ZIP 78015 is split and includes a portion in Congressional District 23, and the U.S. House address lookup confirms that some 78015 addresses map to TX-23. The wording is modest and matches the evidence.
“As of April 2026, the Texas delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives consisted of 24 Republicans, 13 Democrats, and one vacant seat in Texas's 23rd congressional district.”
The claim gets the vacant district right but the partisan breakdown wrong. As of April 2026, official House sources showed Texas’s delegation as 25 Republicans, 12 Democrats, and one vacancy, not 24 Republicans and 13 Democrats. The stated numbers appear to come from mixing an older party split with the later TX-23 vacancy.
“Texas's 23rd congressional district runs along much of Texas's border with Mexico from the San Antonio area toward El Paso.”
Official Texas and federal district maps support this description. Texas’s 23rd Congressional District includes areas near San Antonio and then follows a long stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border westward to part of El Paso County. The claim accurately summarizes the district’s geography.
“Texas's 23rd congressional district had a Cook Partisan Voting Index (PVI) rating of R+7 heading into the 2026 elections.”
Available evidence points to TX-23 being rated R+7 for the 2026 cycle, but the support is not as clean as it should be for an exact Cook PVI figure. Recent 2026 references cite R+7 after Cook’s post-2024 update, while sources showing R+5 or R+1 appear to reflect older cycles. The main caveat is that the strongest direct Cook confirmation in this record is inaccessible or non-explicit.