GOP unveils new Texas congressional map in bid to retain control of House


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Summary

Map could aid GOP

Republican lawmakers in Texas unveiled a new map of congressional districts that could help their party pick up five seats in next year’s midterm elections.

House majority at stake

President Donald Trump has suggested that Republican-led states redraw congressional maps to help keep the GOP in charge of the House.

President’s party vulnerable

The party of incumbent presidents often loses congressional seats – and, sometimes, control of the House – during midterms.


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Texas Republicans on Wednesday unveiled a redrawn map of the state’s congressional districts designed to help their party keep control of the House of Representatives after next year’s midterm elections. The redistricting proposal complied with a request from President Donald Trump.

The new map, which still needs the approval of the Republican-controlled Texas Legislature, carves up five districts now represented by Democrats, greatly diminishing the incumbents’ chances of winning re-election.

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The map places two current Democratic congressmen — Greg Casar, a rising progressive, and Lloyd Doggett, an old-line liberal — into the same new district in the Houston area, effectively pushing one out of office.

Casar called the move “illegal voter suppression of Black and Latino Central Texans.

By merging the districts, Casar wrote on X, “Trump wants to commit yet another crime — this time, against Texas voters and against The Voting Rights Act.”

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican who called state lawmakers into a special session to redraw the congressional map, has defended the effort.

“We will maximize the ability of Texans to be able to vote for the candidate of their choice,” Abbott said last week. 

‘A simple redrawing’

Trump recently suggested that Republican-led states redraw congressional maps this year, even though the process normally takes place just once a decade after new census data is released.

“Texas will be the biggest one,” Trump said. “Just a simple redrawing, we pick up five seats.”

In recent decades, the party of the incumbent president tends to lose big in midterm elections. In 2022, halfway through President Joe Biden’s single term, Republicans picked up 10 House seats, giving them a slim majority in the chamber. Four years earlier, at the midpoint of Trump’s first term, Republicans lost a staggering 42 seats, ceding what had been a seemingly insurmountable majority in the House.

Republicans now hold a 219-212 majority over Democrats. Four seats are vacant — three that were held by Democrats who died in office and one that was occupied by a Republican who resigned last week.

In Texas, Republicans fill 25 of the state’s 38 congressional seats. If the new districts stand, they could easily take 30 seats in the 2026 elections, primarily in the Austin, Dallas and Houston areas. The five newly drawn districts would include areas that Trump carried by 10 percentage points or more in 2024, according to Punchbowl News.

‘Two can play this game’

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The House of Representatives is divided among 219 Republicans and 212 Democrats. Four seats are vacant.

Democrats have vowed to fight the Texas redistricting — in the Lone Star State and beyond.

A political action committee aligned with House Democrats is reportedly buying hundreds of thousands of dollars in airtime for ads attacking the new map in several Texas congressional districts. The ad campaign is part of the Democrats’ planned $20 million campaign for Texas congressional seats in 2026.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries traveled to Austin to confer with Texas Democrats on a plan to defeat the redistricting proposal. Democrats reportedly are considering boycotting the legislative chambers for the final vote on the map to keep it from passing. They tried a similar tactic to block a vote on Republican-backed election bills in 2021.

“This is a moment that requires a forceful on-the-ground response,” Jeffries told Politico, adding that Republicans are “afraid of the voters in 2026 in the midterm elections, and they’re trying to cheat to win.”

From Austin, Jeffries will head to California, where Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom has threatened to push through a redistricting plan of his own to freeze out his state’s Republican members of Congress.

“Two can play this game,” Newsom wrote on X on July 15.

His party already holds 43 of California’s 52 congressional seats, and Newsom has said a new map could help elect an additional five Democrats.

‘Ample justification’

The redistricting efforts could spread to even more states. 

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, said redrawing congressional districts makes sense in his fast-growing state.

“We’re malapportioned right now as a country, I think because of the migration and but the state of Florida, I think for sure,” DeSantis said at a news conference last week. “So I think there’s ample justification to do it.”

Democratic governors in New Jersey and New York have also raised the possibility of redistricting, although the constitutions of both states allow the process only once a decade.

Texas lawmakers could vote on the new map as early as next week. The new districts would likely be challenged in court.

Some Republicans aren’t sure redistricting is the safest approach to keeping the GOP House majority.

“There is some risk of making safe Republican seats more competitive, and I think that the incumbents are certainly worried about that,” GOP strategist Brendan Steinhauser told Fox News. “If you talk to Republican members of Congress, they’re going to be worried about their own seats. They don’t want to be in a seat that’s more competitive.”

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Why this story matters

Changes to Texas congressional districts could shift the balance of power in the U.S. House of Representatives, raising concerns about representation, legal challenges and the future of redistricting nationwide.

Redistricting and political power

The redrawn Texas congressional map is intended to help Republicans retain control of the U.S. House, potentially altering election outcomes and party representation at both the state and national levels.

Legal and ethical challenges

Democratic officials and advocates argue that the new map may suppress minority votes and violate the Voting Rights Act, which could prompt legal challenges and debates about fair electoral practices.

National implications

Following Texas, other states signal plans to redraw their own congressional maps, heightening partisan strategies and signaling a broader trend that could reshape political representation across the country.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame Texas Republicans’ mid-decade redistricting as blatantly partisan “illegal voter suppression,” using charged phrases like “Gerrymander The Hell Out Of” and “Eliminate” to depict the move as a cynical effort to marginalize minorities and Democratic voters, emphasizing the urgency and moral imperative behind Democrats’ planned quorum break as righteous resistance.
  • Not enough unique coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right portray the same plan as a “legitimate and essential step” to preserve GOP control, highlighting supposed gains in minority representation and criticizing Democratic opposition as “political gamesmanship,” with terms like “save our country” conveying a crisis tone.

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • Texas Republicans revealed a congressional map on July 30, aiming to create five new Republican-leaning districts while maintaining 38 total seats in the Texas delegation.
  • The Republican initiative for redistricting is in response to a request from President Donald Trump, who seeks to help the party gain seats ahead of the 2026 elections.
  • Texas Democrats decried the map changes and are exploring options to counter the redistricting, including a potential walkout to prevent quorum.
  • California Gov. Gavin Newsom stated that if Texas proceeds with the redistricting, his state will pursue strategies to counteract Republican efforts in Texas.

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Key points from the Center

  • On July 30, Texas Republicans unveiled a new mid-decade redistricting map creating five additional GOP-leaning districts for the 2026 midterm elections.
  • Earlier this month, the Justice Department alleged `unconstitutional racial gerrymanders` in four districts, prompting a special legislative session called by Gov. Greg Abbott at President Trump’s urging.
  • According to election analyst Dave Wasserman, the plan creates 30 districts that Trump would have carried by 10 points, reshaping Texas's delegation into nearly 80% Republican control.
  • With walkouts looming, Texas Democrats face $500-per-day fines under state House rules, after California Gov. Gavin Newsom warned of retaliation.
  • Washington Rep. Suzan DelBene indicated that if Texas succeeds, other Democratic-led states like Ohio and Missouri might follow suit before the 2026 midterms.

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Key points from the Right

  • President Trump has asked the Texas Legislature to create new congressional districts to gain five Republican seats for the upcoming midterm elections, making it harder for Democrats to regain control of Congress.
  • The Texas GOP is seeking to redraw its congressional districts, which could increase Republican seats.
  • Democratic leaders in states like California and New York are considering their own redistricting to counteract Texas's Republican efforts.
  • Texas House Democrats are planning a potential quorum break to block the redistricting legislation.

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