Two Republican-led states are making major moves to reshape their political maps, setting the stage for another round of partisan battles over redistricting ahead of the 2026 midterms.
In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott signed a sweeping redistricting plan into law Friday, one that critics say consolidates GOP power while diluting the influence of Democratic-leaning urban and minority communities. The new map adds a congressional seat in a fast-growing suburban corridor but carves up parts of Houston, Dallas and Austin in ways Democrats argue weaken their representation. Abbott defended the plan as a “fair reflection of Texas’ population growth” and a necessary step to ensure “strong conservative leadership in Washington.”
Meanwhile, Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe called a special session for lawmakers to redraw his state’s congressional lines after a federal court struck down the previous map as unconstitutional. The ruling found that the state’s last redistricting plan improperly favored Republicans and failed to comply with population balance requirements. Parson’s move could reopen political fault lines in Jefferson City, where Republican majorities have clashed with Democrats — and sometimes with each other — over how aggressively to pursue gerrymanders.
In California, Governor Gavin Newsom and Democratic lawmakers have launched a bold counteroffensive: a new proposal, set for a November 4 special election, would override the current independent redistricting process to introduce Democratic-favoring maps potentially flipping up to five Republican-held seats. This mid-decade redistricting move, framed as a necessary response to GOP gerrymandering elsewhere, bypasses the voter-approved redistricting commission.
These developments underscore how redistricting battles remain central to American politics nearly four years after the 2020 Census triggered nationwide map-drawing. With control of Congress at stake in 2026, both parties are closely watching Texas, Missouri and California as potential bellwethers for how far courts will allow partisan line-drawing to go.
Legal challenges are already expected in Texas, where civil rights groups argue the map violates the Voting Rights Act. In Missouri, Democrats warn the special session could produce yet another map skewed toward Republicans, setting up another round of litigation before voters even head to the polls.
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