Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe calls for special session on redistricting 


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Summary

Missouri special session

Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe announced a special session to enact legislation updating congressional maps for the state of Missouri.

Other states' redistricting

Kehoe’s move follows the state of Texas redistricting to give Republicans five more seats in Congress. California is attempting to counter this with a map referendum in November.

Missouri Democrats push back

While Kehoe said the special session is about clarity for voters, Missouri House Minority Leader Ashley Aune called it a “threat to the integrity of our state government.”


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The latest state to take up redistricting will be Missouri, Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe said on Friday. In a statement, he called to convene a special session of the General Assembly “to enact legislation establishing updated congressional districts for the State of Missouri.”

“This is about clarity for voters and ownership of our future,” Kehoe said.

Other states have also pursued mid-decade redistricting, which is relatively unheard of. 

However, President Donald Trump recently pushed Texas to change its congressional maps to give the GOP five new seats. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, on Friday signed the map into law, despite Democratic lawmakers’ objections that it is racist and would harm their constituents. State representatives had even left Texas earlier in August to prevent a vote on the maps. Abbott, meanwhile, said in a video on X that the new map will ensure “fairer representation” in the state. 

California is taking Texas on with its own redistricting plan, which voters will decide on this November. Legislators designed this map to give Democrats five more seats in Congress.

Now, Politico reported, Trump and Vice President JD Vance are also pressuring Indiana to take up its own redistricting plan that favors Republicans.

After Kehoe announced the special session, Trump thanked the governor on Truth Social, saying it would “give the incredible people of Missouri the tremendous opportunity to elect an additional MAGA Republican in the 2026 Midterm Elections — A HUGE VICTORY for our America First Agenda, not just in the “Show-Me State,” but across our Nation.”

U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo., one of the members of Congress who could be affected by Missouri’s potential new maps, put out a statement saying that “Trump’s unprecedented directive to redraw our maps in the middle of the decade”  is “an unconstitutional attack” against democracy. 

“This attempt to gerrymander Missouri will not simply change district lines, it will silence voices. It will deny representation,” Cleaver said. “It will tell the people of Missouri that their lawmakers no longer wish to earn their vote, that elections are predetermined by the power brokers in Washington, and that politicians — not the people — will decide the outcome.”

Missouri House Minority Leader Ashley Aune, a Democrat, called Kehoe a “Trump puppet” and said him announcing a special session “marks the worst threat to the integrity of our state government since pro-slavery lawmakers voted for Missouri to join the Confederacy in 1861.”

“Missourians will not tolerate acts of electoral sabatoge from their leaders nor silently allow Republicans to seize more power,” Aune said. 

The session is set to begin on Sept. 3.

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Why this story matters

Missouri is convening a special legislative session to consider mid-decade redistricting, reflecting ongoing national political battles over congressional maps and raising concerns about electoral fairness, representation and constitutional norms.

Mid-decade redistricting

The move to redraw congressional districts outside of the usual ten-year cycle is unusual and can affect political power and representation in Missouri and beyond.

Partisan influence

Efforts by national and state political leaders, including public statements from President Donald Trump and other officials, highlight the role of partisan interests in shaping electoral maps.

Representation and democracy

According to critics like U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver and Missouri House Minority Leader Ashley Aune, redrawing district lines mid-decade could undermine voter representation and is framed as impacting democratic integrity.

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Behind the numbers

Missouri currently has eight congressional districts, with six held by Republicans and two by Democrats. The proposed redistricting may shift the balance to a 7-1 Republican majority, changing representation for hundreds of thousands of voters.

Community reaction

According to multiple sources, the announcement has sparked protests and strong public opposition in Kansas City, with unions, civil rights groups and voter advocacy organizations voicing concern over potential loss of representation for local communities.

Context corner

Redistricting in the United States is typically conducted once every decade after the national census, but recent years have seen a rise in mid-decade partisan-driven efforts, intensifying political competition and legal challenges across several states.

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Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • Missouri Republicans will start a special session to redraw congressional lines on Sept. 3, aiming to maintain their United States House majority, as announced by Gov. Mike Kehoe.
  • The new map aims to change voting districts in the Kansas City area to favor Republicans over Democratic U.S. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver.
  • Kehoe has stated that Missouri's values should be represented in government, while Cleaver described the redistricting as an attack on democracy.

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Key points from the Center

  • Gov. Mike Kehoe called for a special legislative session beginning Sept. 3 in Jefferson City to revise Missouri’s congressional district boundaries.
  • The session follows President Donald Trump's recent call for Republican-led states to redraw maps to help maintain the GOP's narrow U.S. House majority.
  • Kehoe urged the General Assembly to address changes in congressional district boundaries and improve the initiative petition process to guarantee that Missouri's districts and Constitution reflect the state's core values.

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Key points from the Right

  • Gov. Mike Kehoe announced a special session for Missouri lawmakers to redraw U.S. House districts, aiming to assist Republican gains in the 2026 elections.
  • Democrats, including State Sen. Doug Beck and Missouri Democratic Party Chairman Russ Carnahan, condemned the move as an abuse of power and an attack on democracy.
  • The proposed map targets Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver's Kansas City district to potentially shift power to Republicans.

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