- Trump launched national redistricting campaign this summer.
- Both Republican and Democratic states adopted effort.
- Campaign now targets Indiana statehouse for changes.
The long-awaited and contentious issue of whether the state will join the six other states that have approved new congressional election maps ahead of the 2026 midterm elections will be discussed by state legislators on December 11.
A proposed plan that would establish two new, strongly Republican districts will be put to a vote by Indiana Senate members. As both parties share in amulti-state redistricting battle for control of the U.S. House of Representatives during Trump's final two times in office, it would strengthen Republicans' advantages.
The state's largest megacity, Indianapolis, would be divided into four sections under the revised lines, which would change the two Popular- held sections.
It's anticipated that the voting will be tight and may take several hours. Trump's redistricting plan in the Hoosier State could be derailed by more than just Democrats, despite their obvious strong opposition to the new map. The commander-in-chief's public anger has been sparked by the GOP state politicians' inconsistent support for the president on the matter, which has caused turmoil inside the state party.
The rare mid-decade redistricting is opposed by a number of Republican state senators, including Senate leader Rodric Bray. The president has responded by threatening to stop supporting Bray and encourage primary candidates to succeed him.
"Anybody that votes against Redistricting, and the SUCCESS of the Republican Party in D.C., will be, I am sure, met with a MAGA Primary in the Spring,"
Trump said in a Dec. 10 social media post.
Despite all the encouragement from national leaders, it is still unclear if the plan will pass Indiana's Senate chamber.
For months, the White House has been stepping up its pressure campaign. In an effort to bolster Republican support, the president has twice dispatched Vice President JD Vance to the Indiana statehouse. According to reports, Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson has called Indiana state senators multiple times in an effort to lobby them.
To persuade politicians to vote yes, friends have established a number of charity organizations and political action committees. Additionally, the organizations have promised to locate primary opponents for politicians who cast a no vote.
Since the legislative session began on November 18, some state lawmakers have also been threatened with violence.
In the summer, Trump sparked the national redistricting controversy by persuading Republicans in Texas that they urgently needed to create a new congressional map, despite the lack of new census data. Voters in California then decisively supported a plan to modify their boundaries, claiming that the addition of five blue-leaning districts would offset Texas' gains. Recent redistricting initiatives have also been started by Republicans and Democrats in other states.
The approval of one of these gerrymandered maps by a statehouse might be crucial to one party's control during Trump's final two years in office, given the present Republican majority in the House.
The geographic pool of voters who can cast ballots for representatives to fill vacancies in the U.S. House has been redrawn in six states thus far. In what the National Conference of State Legislatures refers to as the largest wave of such activity since the 1800s, at least eight more states are thinking about altering their maps.
What legal challenges could block mid decade redistricting in Indiana?
Indiana Egalitarians are preparing legal challenges to blockmid-decade redistricting, arguing it violates the state constitution's inferred formerly- per- decade limit and statutory language tying redraws topost-census sessions.
Opponents cite a 1995 premonitory opinion by former AG Pamela Carter, interpreting Composition 2 as proscribing mid-term redraws, and a 1895 Supreme Court case suggesting charts endure a full decade; these could form the base for injunctions if new charts pass.
Challenges may bring Voting Rights Act protections against discriminative goods, one- person- one- vote difference, or ethnic gerrymandering, though prejudiced claims face wallspost-Rucho v. Common Beget; Indiana Code 3-3-2-1 explicitly links sections to decennial counts, potentially allowing quick legislative overrides but inviting court scrutiny.

