Due to the actions of Texas Republicans, America has been plunged right into a tit-for-tat redistricting faceoff that’s oddly occurring within the midcycle interval as politicians angle for benefit forward of subsequent 12 months’s midterms. First, Texas Republicans on the urging of President Donald Trump himself have proceeded to redraw their state’s electoral map in a transparent maneuver to seize an extra 5 congressional seats come November 2026. In response, and in a bid to additionally seize 5 further seats for his or her aspect, California Democrats have finalized preparations to launch their very own effort in November by way of a poll initiative to counteract the transfer in Texas.
The broader political context of those strikes is kind of noteworthy: the Republican majority within the Home being razor skinny and the midterm elections being historically unfavorable affairs for the celebration in energy, the Republicans’ motion quantities to a preemptive transfer to retain management of Congress and thereby defend the Trump administration from an anticipated Democrat pushback towards Trump’s more and more controversial agenda which has actually convulsed American politics. Given this situation, the countermeasures undertaken by the Democrats was not solely foreseeable however reasonably inevitable. For them to do in any other case would have amounted to what some teams like Frequent Trigger have termed “unilateral political disarmament within the face of authoritarian efforts to undermine truthful illustration and people-powered democracy.” (This invokes the proverbial situation of “bringing a knife to a gun struggle.”)
Nationwide, each events are gearing as much as confront one another in what guarantees to be a race to the underside redistricting contest. These midcycle maneuvers, initiated by the Republicans, clearly appear to defy the conventional observe underneath which redistricting workouts are performed each ten years in accordance with the census cycle established in Article I Part 2 of the Structure.
In easy phrases, what the 2 events are doing right here is called “gerrymandering,” a infamous maneuver by which electoral maps are deliberately drawn to provide a bonus to 1 aspect, normally the aspect drawing the maps, over the opposite aspect. Extra particularly, what we’re seeing in Texas and California, the nation’s two most populous states, is a species of gerrymandering habits often known as “partisan gerrymandering” (primarily based on celebration); the opposite form is called “racial gerrymandering” (primarily based on race).
As between the 2, whereas racial gerrymandering is prohibited, as a violation of Part 2 of the landmark Voting Rights Act of 1965, partisan gerrymandering is deemed permissible, due to the US Supreme Courtroom’s resolution within the 2019 case of Rucho v. Frequent Trigger, which mentioned that such conditions belong to the category of non-justiciable “political questions,” the place federal courtroom intervention is unsuitable as a result of they lack the “goal” standards to evaluate these conditions. As we’ve seen in litigation post-Rucho, issues can get tough in circumstances the place it might not be straightforward to separate the “racial” and “partisan” parts of a given gerrymandered state of affairs.
A Mutual Skullduggery
Whereas Republicans management extra state legislatures than Democrats and thus wield higher skill to have interaction in gerrymandering habits, the proof clearly means that each events are responsible of the mischief of partisan gerrymandering. On the Republican aspect, apart from Texas, plans are reportedly underway to increase this Trump-inspired bout of gerrymandering to different Republican-controlled states like Indiana, Missouri, and Florida.
In Texas, as an example, the place Kamala Harris received 42% of the vote within the 2024 presidential election, Democrats maintain solely 34% of the congressional seats (13 of 38 seats). In Indiana, Democrats maintain two of seven seats, which is 22% regardless of Harris’ 40% share of the 2024 vote. In Missouri: Democrats maintain two of eight seats, which is 25% regardless of Harris’ 40% share of the 2024 vote. In Mississippi: Democrats maintain certainly one of 4 seats, which is 25% regardless of Harris’ 38% share of the 2024 vote.
On the Democrat aspect, the same sampling of illustration patterns tends to point out much more pronounced partisan gerrymandering: blue states like Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Mexico, as an example, have zero Republican members of their congressional delegations, despite the fact that Trump received 36%, 42% and 46% respectively in these states in 2024. In locations like New Jersey, the Republicans maintain solely 3 out of their 12 congressional seats (which is 25%) regardless of Trump’s 46% share of the votes in that state in 2024. In California, Republicans maintain solely 9 of the 52 congressional seats (which quantities to 17%) regardless of Trump’s practically 40% vote share in California within the 2024 presidential ballot.
In Illinois, the place most of the runaway Democrat legislators from Texas had fled to in the course of the redistricting controversy of their residence state, Republicans maintain solely 3 of the 17 congressional seats in that state’s delegation, which is roughly 18%, regardless of Trump’s 43% share of the vote within the 2024 presidential ballot. Who might quickly neglect the awkward scene on August 5 when comic Stephen Colbert of The Late Present confronted his visitor JB Pritzker, Illinois’ governor, with a map exhibiting the actually bizarro form of his state’s congressional District 17, a form the comic described as “loopy.”
Though legally permissible, the draw back of partisan gerrymandering is big, not least as a result of the victimized voters of the rival celebration are denied the real alternative to elect representatives of their alternative, in violation of the 14th Modification’s equal safety assure. To not point out the corrosive impact of this invidious maneuver on the residents’ religion within the general legitimacy of the electoral system.
The Case for Redistricting Commissions
To be clear, redistricting is an inherently political train that can’t be rid of all partisanship. But, start line in draining the poisonous partisanship out of the train is to take away it from the grips of state legislatures by way of nationwide shift to the usage of redistricting commissions, that are already in use in a single kind or one other in additional than 20 states throughout the nation. Among the many out there choices, the optimum construction for the redistricting commissions could be one that’s geared towards higher public participation within the course of and away from direct management by politicians.
As an example, elected officers and their direct associates must be excluded from the redistricting commissions, which our bodies must be mandated to carry public hearings and obtain public enter on their proposals, each on-line and in-person. Plus, no matter knowledge the redistricting commissions are counting on for his or her proposals should be made out there for public examination. To additional isolate the method from partisanship, the ultimate redistricting proposals produced by the commissions shouldn’t be additional subjected to remaining legislative approval, as occurs in locations like New York. On this situation, anybody dissatisfied with the proposals, say, on equal safety or different constitutional grounds and even on a declare that the fee violated its personal phrases of reference, may then search their treatment in courtroom.
Given the significance of the duty at hand, some federal intervention may nicely be wanted to harmonize the redistricting course of throughout the nation and thereby improve its credibility and legitimacy among the many individuals. As an example, Congress might use its authority underneath the Elections Clause (Article I Part 4) to mandate a nationwide shift to the usage of redistricting commissions in all places, along with prohibiting the bitterly polarizing observe of midcycle redistricting, a state of affairs that solely betrays the motivation of politicians to ‘recreation the system’ for partisan benefit.
Regardless of the imperfections of the redistricting fee strategy, these our bodies could be trusted greater than self-interested political actors to attract maps in accordance with the general public curiosity, in order that the voters are certainly those selecting their leaders and never the opposite method round.
Conclusion
What is occurring in Texas and California, and maybe quickly to come back in different places, is much less an train in consultant self-governance in a democratic republic than a corruption thereof, a state of affairs made worse by the extraordinarily polarized nature of present American politics. Thus, there is no such thing as a higher time than now for a nationwide shift to the usage of redistricting commissions and a prohibition on midcycle redistricting to streamline the train and improve its credibility with the voters.
Carl Unegbu, a lawyer and journalist, serves as a vice chair of the New York Chapter of the American Structure Society. He could be reached at ocarls@yahoo.com.
Democracy and Elections, Democracy and Voting, Redistricting

















