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Texas House passes Trump-backed redistricting bill

Texas House passes Trump-backed redistricting bill

RTÉ News​16 hours ago
The Texas legislature's lower chamber has passed a contentious new electoral map that aims to help Donald Trump's Republican Party retain its razor-thin US House majority in the 2026 midterm elections.
The vote had been delayed by two weeks after Democratic legislators fled the southern state to halt the redistricting drive, which carves out five new Republican-friendly districts.
More than 50 Democrats walked out, stalling legislative business and generating national headlines as they sought to draw attention to the rare mid-decade redistricting push.
The Democratic politicians returned this week, but not before their protest had set off a national map-drawing war, with President Trump pressuring his party's state-level officials to do everything they can to protect the majority in the US House of Representatives.
The stakes are sky-high for Mr Trump, who will be bogged down in investigations into almost every aspect of his second term if Democrats manage to flip the handful of districts nationwide needed to win back the House in next year's midterm elections.
Mr Trump hailed the "Big WIN for the Great State of Texas" last night.
"Everything Passed, on our way to FIVE more Congressional seats and saving your Rights, your Freedoms, and your Country, itself," he wrote on his Truth Social platform. "Texas never lets us down."
The president also suggested Florida, Indiana and other states were looking into pursuing similar redistricting to benefit Republicans while once again calling to "STOP MAIL-IN VOTING."
Mr Trump - who has long railed against postal ballots, even though they have benefited his party and he has voted by mail - said in a separate post: "END MAIL-IN VOTING, AND GO TO PAPER BALLOTS. 100 additional seats will go to Republicans!!!"
As politicians in Texas debated the electoral map, Democratic representative Chris Turner called it a "clear violation of the Voting Rights Act and the constitution," according to Austin-based news site The Texas Tribune.
Republican leaders of the Texas House sped up the normal legislative process, bringing the new map to a final vote yesterday evening. It passed along party lines 88-52.
After the state House's green light, it moves to the state Senate, where it has passed in a previous session, before heading to Republican Governor Greg Abbott's desk.
Playing hardball
Individual states redraw their own congressional districts, usually only once every 10 years, after the US Census.
But "redistricting can be done at any point in time," argued the Texas map's sponsor, Republican Todd Hunter, according to the Tribune. "The underlying goal of this plan is straightforward: improve Republican political performance."
There is little Democrats in Texas can do to thwart the map change, but it has prompted retaliation in California, and serious discussions in other Democratic-led states alarmed that the Texas manoeuvre could be replicated nationwide.
Republicans are mulling drawing at least 10 new seats and are targeting Ohio, Missouri, New Hampshire, Indiana, South Carolina and Florida.
Mr Trump on Monday posted the proposed map of Texas on Truth Social, calling it "one of the most popular initiatives I have ever supported."
State lawmakers in Democratic stronghold California - the most populated and richest US state - introduced three bills on Monday to create a voter referendum this year for a new congressional map that would effectively counteract Texas.
If approved, the referendum would appear on California's 4 November ballot.
"Nothing about this is normal, and so we're not going to act as if anything is normal any longer," Governor Gavin Newsom told reporters.
"Yes, we'll fight fire with fire. Yes, we will push back. It's not about whether we play hardball anymore, it's about how we play hardball."
New York Democrats may follow suit, with Governor Kathy Hochul calling the Texas redistricting plan nothing short of a "legal insurrection".
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