Republicans eye more than 12-seat gain in redistricting push


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Summary

A 12-seat gain

Republicans are now hoping to redraw congressional maps around the country in an attempt to gain at least 12 seats in the 2026 midterms.

Ohio and Florida

After Texas, the biggest gains would come in Ohio and Florida, where the GOP wants three new seats per state.

Enough is enough

U.S. Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., introduced a bill to ban mid-decade redistricting and nullify new maps drawn before the 2030 census.


Full story

Republicans are now hoping to gain at least a dozen seats in the 2026 midterm elections by redrawing congressional maps around the country. Texas has received the most attention because it’s furthest along in the process, and could net the GOP five new seats. But Florida, Ohio, Missouri and Indiana are also important states to watch. 

Florida 

Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez announced he’s forming a special redistricting committee.

Reports indicate Republicans will try to draw three new GOP seats in the Sunshine State. The Democrats they’re targeting include United States Representatives Debbie Wasserman Schultz in District 25, Jared Moskowitz in District 23 and Darren Soto in District 9.

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Ohio

Ohio’s legislature is legally obligated to redraw their maps this year, and they must be done by Nov. 30. 

Ohio Republicans approved the current map in 2021 without Democratic support, so it was only allowed to be in place for four years. State law requires the legislature to go back to the drawing board and come up with a map that can get three-fifths support from both chambers and one-half of the Democratic minority. 

If they can’t agree, a commission gets involved. If the commission can’t make a deal, it goes back to the legislature where, ultimately, Republicans could approve a new map without Democrats again. 

Ohio Republicans will try to target U.S. Representatives Marcy Kaptur in District 9, Emilia Sykes in District 13, and possibly Greg Landsman in District 1. 

Missouri and Indiana

Missouri and Indiana could both get one new Republican district. 

Why Republicans say they’re redistricting

If Republicans succeed in each of these states, they would have 12 or 13 new districts. 

Republicans said the new maps reflect political changes that were seen across the country in 2024. 

“An overwhelming number of Hispanics and Blacks, as well as others, chose to vote for Trump,” Gov. Greg Abbott, R-Texas, said on the Joe Pags podcast. “Four of the five districts that we’re going to create are predominantly Hispanic districts that they’re going to happen to be voting for Republicans as opposed to the Democrats.” 

Democrats say it’s anti-democratic and an illegal power grab. 

“If we can get rid of any kind of partisan gerrymandering across the entire United States all at once, I absolutely favor that,” Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker told reporters. 

Pritzker also addressed criticism that maps in Illinois are significantly gerrymandered in favor of Democrats. 

“I think we have to all remind ourselves that just because a map ends up with one party having more seats than the other does not mean that it was gerrymandered, or that there was anything wrong with what happened,” Pritzker said.  

Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., is introducing a bill that would ban mid-decade redistricting nationwide and nullify new maps drawn before the 2030 Census. Kiley’s seat could be a target if California Democrats try to redraw their maps.

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Why this story matters

Efforts by Republican-led states to redraw congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterm elections raise ongoing debates about fair representation and gerrymandering.

Redistricting strategies

Multiple states are considering new congressional maps, which may provide Republicans the opportunity to gain additional seats and alter upcoming election outcomes.

Partisan conflict

Republican and Democratic leaders express contrasting views on the legitimacy and intent of redistricting.

Election integrity

Debates over redistricting raise broader questions about how congressional boundaries are determined and whether reforms, such as banning mid-decade redistricting, are needed to promote fair representation.

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

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