Summary
- The Texas Senate approved a new Republican-leaning map Saturday.
- The map aims to give the GOP five additional House seats.
- Governor Greg Abbott expected to sign the bill into law.
- Democrats criticize map as racially discriminatory, vow legal challenge.
Ahead of the difficult midterm elections anticipated in 2026, the new Texas map shifts the balance of power by securing five more congressional seats that lean Republican.
Democrats opposed the proposal, calling it a partisan attempt to impose Republican control, and it passed the Senate by a vote of 18 to 11. In the Texas House, where Democratic lawmakers had earlier staged a two-week boycott before returning to the chamber, the action came after a similar party-line passage.
The idea was first approved by the Senate at a prior special legislative session, but when that session concluded, new permission was needed. This week, Abbott called a second session, enabling the House-passed version to proceed.
In a post on X, Abbott welcomed the passage and said,
"The One Big Beautiful Map has passed the Senate. Despite Democrats' petty stunts, we delivered on our promise. This map reflects Texans' actual voting preferences, and I look forward to signing it into law."
As reported by The Hill, Democrats have pledged to challenge the legislation in court. Representative Suzan DelBene, Chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, termed the plan an "unprovoked, unwarranted Texas gerrymander."
"We are seeing Democrats around the country respond and fight back to make sure DC Republicans cannot steal the House majority," Suzan DelBene said. "I applaud the Texas Democratic lawmakers who have been at the forefront of this fight and inspired people across the country to stand up and fight back against Republicans' shameful attempt to cling onto power,"
she added.
The Texas developments coincide with nationwide redistricting initiatives of a similar nature. A ballot initiative that would let voters choose new district borders for the rest of the decade was approved by the California Assembly this week. Soon after it was passed, Governor Gavin Newsom signed the bill into law. According to The Hill, the updated map might give Democrats up to five more House seats.
Florida and Missouri, two Republican-led states, are also thinking about drawing new congressional borders, indicating that the redistricting dispute would probably heat up before the November elections.
What legal grounds are Texas Democrats citing for their promised court challenge?
Democrats argue the map amounts to unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering designed to dilute minority and Democratic voters' influence. They claim the redistricting plan intentionally depresses minority voting power, violating equal protection principles.
They contend the map breaches Section 2 of the federal VRA by undermining the voting power of Black, Latino, and other minority communities. Previous federal courts have struck down similar Texas maps under this provision.
The challenge will claim the maps unlawfully discriminate against racial and ethnic minorities, making it harder for their preferred candidates to win elections. Democrats may also raise issues regarding the redistricting process violating state and federal legal standards in transparency and fairness.