Texas vs. California redistricting

 Newsmax:

The Texas House has approved a Trump-backed redistricting plan projected to give Republicans as many as five additional U.S. House seats in the 2026 midterms, advancing a map that reshapes districts across the state's largest urban centers and South Texas. The measure passed on Wednesday by an 88-52 vote and now moves to the Texas Senate, The Associated Press reported.

The proposal, drafted by Republican leaders with input from President Donald Trump's advisers, redraws several key congressional districts in Houston, Dallas, Austin, and along the Rio Grande Valley, said the Texas Tribune.

Supporters say the map reflects population shifts since the 2020 census and will provide fairer representation for rural voters. Critics, including Democrat lawmakers and voting rights groups, argue the changes are designed to dilute minority influence and secure long-term Republican dominance in Texas' congressional delegation.

Democrats attempted to block the vote by staging a two-week walkout, leaving the state to prevent the House from reaching a quorum. Gov. Greg Abbott and Republican leaders responded by authorizing arrest warrants for absent members, vowing to compel their return. Eventually, Democrats returned, and the Republican majority advanced the bill. Legal challenges are already being prepared, with opponents citing violations of the Voting Rights Act and claims of racial gerrymandering.

The fight in Texas reflects a national trend as both parties seek to reshape congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterms. While redistricting traditionally follows the decennial census, Republican officials in several states have argued that mid-decade adjustments are warranted due to population growth, migration, and shifts in political power.

Florida, Georgia, and North Carolina are among the Republican-led states considering new proposals that could strengthen GOP advantages in competitive districts. Republican lawmakers contend these measures are necessary to ensure accurate representation and counter what they view as partisan gerrymanders already in place in Democrat-controlled state

Democrats, meanwhile, have criticized mid-decade redraws as unprecedented and destabilizing. They argue that frequent map changes undermine voters' confidence in the electoral process and could lead to prolonged litigation ahead of the next election cycle.

California is preparing a direct response. Gov. Gavin Newsom has proposed suspending the state's independent redistricting commission and allowing the Democrat-controlled California Legislature to redraw congressional maps if Texas' plan takes effect. The initiative, known as Proposition 50, is scheduled for a special election on Nov. 4, The Guardian reported.
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The huge difference between Texas and California is that Texas has significant gains in population, and California has significant losses in population.  BTW, California was already gerrymandered to prop up Democrats and discriminate against Republicans.  I am a rural Texas voter and my area is pretty conservative.

I oppose both parties representatives attempting to rig votes by going AWOL.

See also:


Newsom & Obama are lying and they are hypocrites. The most egregious gerrymanders in the country are virtually ALL Democrat: CA 83% IL 82% OR 84% WA 80% MD 88% MA 100% CT 100% TX is going from 63% to 76%—still LESS than all of the above.
Quote
Barack Obama
@BarackObama
Over the long term, we shouldn’t have political gerrymandering in America, just a fair fight between Republicans and Democrats based on who’s got better ideas. But since Texas is taking direction from a partisan White House and gerrymandering in the middle of a decade to try and x.com/demredistrict/…
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