AT A GLANCE
• Democratic Primary – Texas House District 120
• Incumbent: Rep. Barbara Gervin-Hawkins (since 2016)
• Challenger: Jordan Brown
• Central Issue: Continuity versus change
• Backdrop: Project Marvel debate and education accountability questions
Continuity or Recalibration? District 120 Primary Unfolds Amid Countywide Scrutiny
For more than 30 years, this paper has covered underserved sides of San Antonio. We’ve seen promises come and go. We’ve seen ribbon cuttings, press conferences, and campaign seasons filled with hope.
What we’ve also seen is how slow real change can be. Rep. Barbara Gervin-Hawkins has represented District 120 since 2016. Eight years. That’s enough time for voters to ask a fair question.
Has your life tangibly changed?
Look around your block. Your street. Your schools. Your small businesses. Has anything in the last eight years in this district changed for you, the voter? Supporters will say experience matters, and that’s true– but experience only carries weight if outcomes follow.

Drive through parts of the East and Southeast sides and you still see families struggling, small businesses fighting to stay afloat, infrastructure that hasn’t caught up, and economic gaps that remain stubborn. After nearly a decade, voters are asking whether extending that tenure changes the trajectory or simply preserves it.
A Question of Time
This race is not about whether someone is capable. It’s about how long their vision stretches.
Jordan Brown is in his 30s. He teaches special education in Northside ISD. After the murder of George Floyd, he has said he felt called to work in a space where his identity as a Black man could make a meaningful difference. He chose the classroom.
That decision shapes how he talks about the district. His campaign centers on public education funding, healthcare access, housing stability, and economic opportunity. He frames it as long-term investment, not short-term politics.
When you’re talking about 10- and 20-year plans, time matters. The kids in elementary school today will graduate under policies being shaped right now.
Education and Accountability
Education is central to Gervin-Hawkins’ public profile as well. She co-founded the George Gervin Youth Center, which operates George Gervin Academy, a public charter district in San Antonio.
Texas Education Agency
2025 Accountability Rating Overall Summary
GEORGE GERVIN ACADEMY (015802001) – GEORGE GERVIN ACADEMY – BEXAR COUNTY
According to the Texas Education Agency’s most recent accountability ratings, George Gervin Academy received an overall D rating for the 2024–2025 school year under the state’s A–F system. That rating reflects performance below state standards in several academic and progress measures.
Charter districts operate with their own leadership structures, but the rating is public record. For voters, it raises broader questions about education outcomes and oversight, especially given Gervin-Hawkins’ advocacy for charter policy.
Project Marvel and Alignment
Then there’s Project Marvel.
Gervin-Hawkins publicly supported the initiative and appeared alongside Bexar County Judge Peter Sakai encouraging support for it within the district. It was promoted as an economic catalyst, particularly for historically underserved communities.
After the measure moved forward, Sakai later signaled that parts of the project, as structured, would not be beneficial in their current form. That shift sparked public debate across the county.
Since that reversal, Gervin-Hawkins has not publicly clarified her position.
State and county offices are separate. But politically, alignment matters. When major projects change direction, voters expect consistency or at least explanation.
The Ground Game: Signage, Door Knocking, and Outreach
There is also a noticeable difference in campaign presence. Brown’s yard signs and door knocking are visible in several neighborhoods. Whereas Gervin-Hawkins has run a quieter operation, leaning on incumbency and name recognition.
Generational Test
For some voters, continuity equals stability. For others, it feels like stagnation. A vote for the incumbent is a vote for more of the same. A vote for Brown may represent an investment in a different timeline for the district’s future.
That’s the choice, and District 120 has to decide what kind of chapter it wants next.
Because the children in these classrooms, the small businesses trying to survive on these corridors, and the families investing their lives here are not watching this election from a distance.
Disclaimer: This column is political analysis and does not constitute an endorsement. The San Antonio Observer encourages readers to research all candidates and make informed decisions.











