Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican candidate for the...

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate, addresses supporters during a campaign stop, Monday, March 2, 2026, in Waco, Texas. Credit: AP/Tony Gutierrez

WACO, Texas — Candidates in Texas’ tightly competitive U.S. Senate primary were treading carefully in response to U.S. and Israeli strikes against Iran, with some giving the war a glancing mention in the final hours of campaigning before Tuesday's election. Others didn't raise it at all.

Asked about the strikes Monday, Republican candidates and voters were more robust in their support of the Trump administration's action than Democrats were. But with many unknowns about the attacks and the United States' long-term plans, candidates were cautious in discussing details or opinions about what may happen next in the fast-moving military action.

Republican state Attorney General Ken Paxton breezed through his 15-minute remarks with scarcely a mention during a lunchtime event at a restaurant in Waco, his last campaign event before Tuesday's election.

Talking to reporters afterward, Paxton stood by President Donald Trump's actions. He suggested that as a Texas official he had no information about the long-range plan. But Paxton said the action would have little effect on the MAGA base, whom the president promised he would avoid what he calls “forever wars,” those without clear exit strategies.

But when asked whether Trump had been clear in communicating the objectives of the strikes, Paxton declined to answer.

“An open-ended war? I don’t have any intelligence, but I don’t think that’s Trump’s idea,” Paxton said. “He wants to get this over with.”

‘Good for the whole world’

At George's Restaurant and Bar in Waco, plenty of Paxton's supporters said they applaud the administration's actions.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, speaks during a campaign stop in...

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, speaks during a campaign stop in The Woodlands, Texas, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026. Credit: AP/Annie Mulligan

Connie Stamps of Waco said the action, notably killing Iranian leadership, “is going to be good for the whole world.”

“I'm very thankful we have a president who does what he says he's going to do," she said, dismissing the question that Trump was starting an overseas conflict he campaigned against. “He cares about the whole world. He's the peace president.”

In all three of his presidential campaigns, Trump campaigned against prolonged foreign military entanglements, although he and his administration have provided little information about long-term goals beyond eliminating Iran's power structure. U.S. talks with Iran on reaching an agreement about its nuclear program had been ongoing in recent weeks.

Cornyn says Congress will debate the action

Four-term Republican Sen. John Cornyn, challenged in a competitive primary campaign by Paxton and U.S. Rep Wesley Hunt, also talked little about Iran during his remarks at an event in Schertz, a suburb of San Antonio.

James Talarico, a Texas Democratic primary candidate for U.S. Senate,...

James Talarico, a Texas Democratic primary candidate for U.S. Senate, speaks during an event at the University of Houston Monday, March 2, 2026, in Houston. Credit: AP/Ashley Landis

Questioned later by a reporter, Cornyn said he supports the attack, which the Trump administration conducted without first getting congressional approval. But when asked if Trump has done a good job explaining the objectives for the war, Cornyn pivoted somewhat.

“We'll have a debate in Congress what the goals and objectives are,” he said, while adding, "I am completly satisfied in the president’s explanation.”

Cornyn referenced Trump's video announcement of the attacks: “I think the president made a cogent and good explanation. I think there will be more debate.”

Aboard Air Force One with Trump last week headed to Texas, Cornyn said, he and other members of the state’s congressional delegation were asked by Trump their thoughts about a strike, to which Cornyn said the rest of the contingent said they supported it.

Mixed response from Cornyn event

Elton Hartwich, who wore a Vietnam veteran cap, said he supports the war, and thinks others should too.

“I think it should be backed by more poeple,” he said. "I think we as Americans gotta look back at what Iranians did to our people."

But David Ozuna, of New Braunfels, Texas, who attended Cornyn's event, said he doesn’t support the strikes and thinks Trump has inadequately explained his reasons or what would constitute an acceptable resolution. Ozuna's position is rooted in his own family members who died and were wounded while serving in the military.

“I think that we as citizens, before we send our sons and daughters, mothers and fathers to support this thing, deserve to have a good explanation as to what we’re doing, what the objective is and where we’re going," Ozuna said.

Talarico references death of servicemembers

Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico, who is running against Rep. Jasmine Crockett for their party's nomination, touched lightly on the conflict during a rally at the University of Houston, lamenting only the deaths of three U.S. service members killed.

But Charles Padmore from Houston was unsparing, calling the strikes on Iran “absolutely horrible.”

“It shouldn't have happened. It's illegal. We're the aggressor. They didn't do anything to us, really, so we shouldn't have been so aggressive in attacking them, and a lot of people have died," Padmore said.

He said that Trump had not adequately explained his objectives to the nation, and fears the war could linger for years. “This could go for years to come if they don’t have a clear exit strategy," he said.

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