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Democrat Nydia C谩rdenas looks to face Republican Manny Ramirez for northwest Tarrant seat

Nydia C谩rdenas, candidate for Tarrant County Precinct 4, speaks at her Democratic primary election watch party at Azle Hall in Fort Worth鈥檚 northside on March 3, 2026.
Drew Shaw
/
Fort Worth Report
Nydia C谩rdenas, candidate for Tarrant County Precinct 4, speaks at her Democratic primary election watch party at Azle Hall in Fort Worth鈥檚 northside on March 3, 2026.

Nydia C谩rdenas appeared to secure the Democratic nomination to face Republican incumbent Manny Ramirez in the race to represent the northwest area of Tarrant County on the commissioners court, according to unofficial results from Tarrant County.

As of 12:30 a.m., C谩rdenas, a leadership coach and grassroots activist, had about 59% of the votes in the three-way primary race for Precinct 4. Cedric Kanyinda, who owns a consulting business, followed with 24% of the vote, leaving Perla Bojorquez, an educator and community organizer, with about 18%.

The race to represent Precinct 4, which covers Fort Worth鈥檚 northside up through Lake Worth, Saginaw and Azle, will be decided in November. Ramirez, who was elected in 2022, ran unopposed for the GOP nomination.

鈥淟et鈥檚 call this the easy part,鈥 said C谩rdenas, surrounded by bright balloons and colorful campaign graphics in front of a room of about 75 people at 9 p.m. Tuesday night.

C谩rdenas, a Fort Worth native, told the Report that she plans to scale up the strong momentum she and her team have built heading toward November. She said she鈥檚 excited to expand her base through continued voting engagement efforts and events.

To her, the primary win signals that Democratic voters want to support an openly progressive campaign.

鈥淥ur strategy is not to try to get Republicans to vote for us in November,鈥 C谩rdenas said. 鈥淥ur goal is to get the people who are already aligned with us but aren鈥檛 active voters out to vote in November. And I think that the only way to do that is to be very clear about what our values are.鈥

Precinct 4 historically votes red, with Ramirez winning the seat by about 18 percentage points in 2022. Democrats hope they can flip the seat by mobilizing more voters, particularly in Hispanic and Latino communities, and carrying forward momentum from on Jan. 31 in Senate District 9, which covers much of north and west Tarrant County and overlaps with Precinct 4.

In a trend that , unofficial results show Tuesday鈥檚 Tarrant County Democratic primary saw historic turnout during early voting. Over 122,000 people voted early in the Democratic primary 鈥 nearly 3.5 times the 35,337 that voted early in the 2022 primary. The GOP saw nearly 91,700 early voters compared to 67,557 in 2022.

After C谩rdenas took the lead, Kanyinda told the Report that he supports her moving forward. He feels he had a 鈥渟trong base鈥 of voters and will 鈥渃ontinue to fight the good fight鈥 he started when he first ran for election in 2021.

Bojorquez did not respond to requests for comment on election night. She previously told the Report she was not 鈥済oing into this as partisan games鈥 or to 鈥渢wist the court more left.鈥 Rather, her priority was to save taxpayer dollars by pushing back against what she sees as mismanagement from the Republicans on the court.

C谩rdenas previously said at the Fort Worth Report鈥檚 Feb. 12 that her deep connections to Tarrant County鈥檚 communities will help mobilize and win over enough voters to flip the seat in November. She noted her campaign鈥檚 proven ability to fundraise, arguing that money will be necessary in the lead-up to November.

She reported raising and spending far more than her opponents in the Democratic primary race, with small individual donations making up most of her funds.

Ramirez, the incumbent, reported having $244,688 in cash on hand in the most recent campaign finance reports, said he鈥檚 looking forward to running in November. He said he 鈥渨elcome(s) anybody who wants to introduce ideas into a campaign.鈥

鈥淭aylor Rehmet showed us that we don鈥檛 have to outraise, but we have to at least have enough money to really combat,鈥 C谩rdenas said Feb. 12.

While the three Democrats differed slightly in priorities over their campaigns, they broadly supported investing in the county鈥檚 infrastructure and re-funding county-run programs that have been trimmed down or eliminated by the commissioners court鈥檚 Republican majority.

C谩rdenas argued that her career in leadership coaching and education in mechanical engineering honed her critical thinking skills. Her campaign was advised and backed by members of prominent local progressive groups, including the 鈥 a grassroots organization focused on Tarrant County 鈥 and , a local organization formed to understand and fight 鈥渢he ideology of Christian nationalism.鈥

鈥淎 year ago, I started attending commissioners court meetings and seeing absolutely the decision-making that does not lead to good decisions, that doesn鈥檛 follow good research practices around decision-making,鈥 C谩rdenas said at the Report鈥檚 forum.

Changing the court鈥檚 culture was also top of mind for the primary candidates, after a year of high-profile, Republican-led changes to Tarrant County, including to better favor the GOP in Precinct 2; ; during meetings; and reducing meetings to once a month.

These decisions and others have led to routine party-line votes and arguments flaring up across the dais.

On the campaign trail, C谩rdenas said Tarrant County Judge Tim O鈥橦are鈥檚 recent was a catalyst triggering her candidacy. She said she鈥檚 watched the court鈥檚 Republicans become increasingly divisive over 鈥渃ulture war topics鈥 and partisan issues, and she wants to refocus the court on 鈥渢he actual functioning of the government.鈥

Improving northwest Tarrant County鈥檚 infrastructure, especially roadways, was another shared priority of the candidates. The county is responsible for constructing, maintaining and repairing roads, particularly in unincorporated areas that lie outside of city limits.

As ripples into surrounding cities and unincorporated areas, new subdivisions, schools and stores are quickly filling the once-sprawling ranchland. Increased traffic can now create hourlong logjams like .

All three candidates mentioned that more accountability and transparency are needed in the Tarrant County jail, which has undergone scrutiny for having .

C谩rdenas said her campaign has and will continue to focus on voter engagement, primarily through phone-banking, door-knocking and public events.

鈥淲e just have to keep earning people鈥檚 trust, proving that what we鈥檙e talking about is actually possible if you have the right leaders in place,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think sometimes what feels like a progressive agenda feels out of reach, but it鈥檚 only out of reach because we don鈥檛 have the people on the dais to make those to vote in that way.鈥

Drew Shaw is a government accountability reporter for the Fort Worth Report. Contact him at drew.shaw@fortworthreport.org or