
California legislature poised to vote on redistricting plan in response to Texas gerrymandering
The nation's two most populous – and ideologically opposed – states were racing on parallel tracks toward consequential redistricting votes, potentially within hours of each other. As Democrats in Sacramento worked to advance a legislative package that would put their 'election rigging response act' before voters in a special election this fall, Republicans in Austin were nearing a final vote on their own gerrymandering pursuit.
Approval by the Texas senate, which is expected as early as Thursday, would conclude a dramatic showdown with the state's outnumbered Democratic lawmakers whose two-week boycott captured national attention and set in motion a coast-to-coast redistricting battle.
The California plan, led by the state's Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, is designed to flip as many as five Republican-held seats in California – the exact number of additional GOP seats Trump has said he is 'entitled to' in Texas.
'This is a new Democratic party, this is a new day, this is new energy out there all across this country,' Newsom said on a call with reporters on Wednesday. 'And we're going to fight fire with fire.'
The redistricting tit-for-tat is an extraordinary deviation from the norm. Traditionally, states redraw congressional maps once a decade based on census data, with both the Texas and California maps originally intended to last through 2030.
The California state legislature, where Democrats have a supermajority, is expected to easily approve new congressional maps despite sharp Republican objections. Newsom's signature would send the measure to the ballot in a special election this November.
The California changes would only take effect in response to a gerrymander by a Republican state – a condition that would be met when the Texas legislatures sends the maps to the state's governor, Greg Abbott, for his promised signature.
California was acting after a dramatic showdown in Austin, where Democratic lawmakers fled the state earlier this month to delay the GOP redistricting plan. When they returned, some were assigned police minders and forced to sign permission slips before leaving the capitol. Several spent the night in the chamber in protest ahead of Wednesday's session, where Republicans pushed through a map designed explicitly to boost their party's chances in 2026.
The legislative action on Thursday followed a weeks-long showdown in Texas, after Democratic lawmakers fled the state in an effort to delay the GOP redistricting plan. They returned only after California moved forward with its counterproposal.
California Democrats are moving ahead after days of contentious debate over the cost – and consequences – of a referendum to temporarily toss out the maps drawn by the state's voter-approved independent redistricting commission. Republicans estimated that a special election could cost more than $230m – money they said would be better spent on other issues like healthcare.
On Wednesday night, the state supreme court declined an emergency request by Republican lawmakers seeking to block the Democratic plan from moving forward.
The redistricting push has also caused angst among some Democrats and independents who have fought for years to combat gerrymandering.
Sign up to This Week in Trumpland
A deep dive into the policies, controversies and oddities surrounding the Trump administration
after newsletter promotion
Testifying in favor of the changes during a hearing earlier this week, Sara Sadhwani, a political science professor who served as a Democratic member of the state's independent redistricting commission in 2020, said the map-drawing tit-for-tat presented California voters with a 'moral conflict'. But she argued that Democrats had to push back on the president's power grab.
'It brings me no joy to see the maps that we passed fairly by the commission to be tossed aside,' she said. 'I do believe this is a necessary step in a much bigger battle to shore up free and fair elections in our nation.'
The plan also drew the backing of former president Barack Obama and other champions of fair redistricting, such as his former attorney general, Eric Holder.
But Newsom's redistricting plan – a high-stakes gambit for the term-limited governor who has made no secret of his 2028 presidential ambitions – is not assured to succeed. It faces mounting opposition from high-profile Republicans, including the state's former governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who has vowed to 'terminate gerrymandering'.
Early polling has been mixed. But a new survey conducted by Newsom's longtime pollster David Binder found strong support for the measure in the heavily Democratic state, with 57% of voters backing it while 35% opposed it.
In a memo, Binder noted that support for the redistricting measure varies depending on how it is presented to voters. When framed as eliminating the state's independent redistricting commission designed to prevent partisan gerrymandering, support drops. However, when voters hear that the initiative would allow temporary map changes only in response to partisan actions in other states, like Texas, while retaining the commission, the measure enjoys a double-digit margin of support.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
6 minutes ago
- The Independent
Vice President JD Vance reveals who his MAGA besties are
JD Vance has revealed his closest buddies in the Trump administration. During an interview with Fox News Wednesday, Vance was asked about his closest allies, but initially seemed hesitant to respond, insisting he had "a lot" of good friends at work. He explained his hesitance by saying that 'the weird thing is, you say it's one person and then fundamentally that's an insult to other people." Eventually though he revealed his best friends at work are Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth. 'We are very close, we were close in the Senate, he's been a great friend of mine, I think he's doing a great job,' Vance said of Rubio. And the feeling appears mutual. When Fox News host and presidential daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, asked Rubio last month whether he'd consider running for the White House again, he dodged and heaped praise onto Vance. 'I think JD Vance would be a great nominee," Rubio said. "I think he's doing a great job as vice president. He's a close friend.' Vance has previously said that he spends time with Rubio outside of the White House, and described him as 'more impressive in private than he is in public' at the American Compass gala in June, according to Real Clear Politics. President Trump also appears to have noticed the close friendship, suggesting that Vance and Rubio could run on the same ticket for the White House next time around. 'I think Marco is also somebody that maybe would get together with JD in some form,' Trump said. On Wednesday, Vance also spoke about his friendship with Hegseth, explaining they had just dined together at a burger joint in Washington. The trio have also found themselves in hot water together during 'Signalgate' earlier this year. The scandal erupted in March when Trump's short-lived national security adviser Mike Waltz accidentally added Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg to a group chat in which top secret information about an upcoming bombing raid on Houthi rebels in Yemen was discussed. The group chat included Hegseth, Vance, Rubio, along with other top defense officials. Since then, the Secretary of Defense has fired three of his top aides in relation to a Pentagon leak investigation over the disclosure of classified materials. But on Wednesday, Vance insisted that Hegseth is doing a good job. 'I think he's doing a great job as Secretary of Defense,' Vance told Fox News. The vice president went on to suggest that Hegseth's controversies were a concerted effort by the "DC swamp" to undermine him. 'The DC Swamp tried to destroy Pete Hegseth unlike anybody in the administration,' Vance added. 'Whenever I see the worst people in the world trying to tear a guy down that makes me think he's on our side.'


Daily Mail
6 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trump slams Biden for not letting Ukraine 'fight back'
Donald Trump has suggested it would be 'very hard, if not impossible' for Ukraine to prevail without attacking Russia. The US President posted his thoughts on the continuing conflict on his Truth Social account on Thursday, adding he did not agree with his predecessor, Joe Biden, to refuse Kyiv the right to 'fight back' against Putin's forces. 'It is like that with Ukraine and Russia. 'Crooked and grossly incompetent Joe Biden would not let Ukraine FIGHT BACK, only DEFEND. How did that work out?' He proceeded to share a picture of himself poking Vladimir Putin in the chest, in a playful echo of former president Richard Nixon doing the same to Nikita Khrushchev, former prime minister of the Soviet Union, during a tense debate in 1959. More recently, President Volodymyr Zelensky's forces launched Operation Spiderweb in June. The audacious assault saw more than 100 first-person view (FPV) kamikaze drones smuggled into Russia in wooden containers disguised as modular homes. They were loaded onto civilian trucks and driven behind enemy lines by Russian lorry drivers seemingly unaware of what they were carrying. The vehicles were parked within range of five airfields stretching from northern Russia down to Siberia, at which point the hidden roofs of the wooden cabins were opened remotely and the FPV drones took to the skies. Over the next few minutes, 41 nuclear bombers were systematically targeted and decimated in a crushing military blow to Russian President Vladimir Putin. However despite these military successes, Trump has questioned whether Ukraine has the ability to strike deeper into Russia. He reportedly asked Zelensky whether his forces could strike Moscow during a candid telephone call with the Ukrainian leader in July, according to The Telegraph . Trump's comments on the continuing conflict came as Russia staged its biggest hypersonic missile barrage on Ukraine since Putin met Trump last Friday . Poland was forced to scramble warplanes today to protect its airspace as the heavy assault began. The Operational Command of the Polish Armed Forces said on X: 'In connection with the activity of long-range aviation of the Russian Federation, conducting strikes on Ukrainian territory ... aircraft of the Polish Air Force and allied aviation are operating in Polish airspace.' Russian attacks on western Ukraine killed one person and wounded multiple others , officials in the country reported as diplomatic efforts to end the three-year war grind on. Moscow and Kyiv have kept up their aerial attacks on each other as world leaders including US President Donald Trump continue to push for a ceasefire. Russian fire also wounded 12 people in the city of Mukachevo, near the border with Hungary and Slovakia, the city council said.


Reuters
7 minutes ago
- Reuters
US continues visa vetting even after admission, official says
Aug 21 (Reuters) - The U.S. State Department's continuous vetting applies to "all of the more than 55 million foreigners who currently hold valid U.S. visas," a department official said on Thursday, including those who have already been admitted to enter the country. "The State Department revokes visas any time there are indications of a potential ineligibility, which includes things like any indicators of overstays, criminal activity, threats to public safety, engaging in any form of terrorist activity, or providing support to a terrorist organization," the official said.