Don't waste hours Googling candidates.
Branch has information on all of your candidates, in one place.

Stuart Whitlow
DEMOCRAT
Stuart Whitlow is running for Texas US Representative, District 31, Democratic Primary.
Personal background
Stuart Whitlow has a bachelor's degree from Southwestern University, a master’s degree in divinity from Vanderbilt University, and joint law and public affairs degrees from the University of Texas. He has two children.
Professional background
Stuart is an attorney in his private law practice, where he has been for 35 years. He previously founded a company that provided propane commercial mowers across Texas, worked as a Texas teacher and coach, and interned for U.S. Representative J. J. Pickle while studying at the LBJ School of Public Affairs.
Political background
Stuart Whitlow previously ran for U.S. House, Texas District 31 in 2024 and did not win.
Economy
Believes the federal government should "strengthen small businesses, invest in workforce training, and reward work — not just wealth."
Wants "tax relief" for middle-class families and aims to "protect" Social Security and Medicare.
Suggest an edit
Public Safety
As of January 22, 2026, Stuart Whitlow’s website did not contain information on this issue.
Suggest an edit
Healthcare
Supports protecting women's reproductive rights and believes that pregnant women should have access to medical care without extreme circumstances.
Supports "lowering prescription drug prices, expanding rural and veterans’ care access, and protecting Medicare for seniors."
Suggest an edit
Education
As of January 22, 2026, Stuart Whitlow’s website did not contain information on this issue.
Suggest an edit
Energy & the Environment
Believes in "expanding" clean-energy manufacturing and investing in technology that keeps "our grid reliable, lowers costs, and creates good-paying jobs."
Suggest an edit
Voting & Elections
As of January 22, 2026, Stuart Whitlow’s website did not contain information on this issue.
Suggest an edit
Foreign Policy and Immigration
Supports addressing "immigration issues" at the Mexican border by increasing border security personnel and providing more judges to reduce asylum case backlogs.
Suggest an edit

