Virginia Democrats share proposed US House map despite court ruling against redistricting push


RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Virginia Democrats unveiled a proposed U.S. House map Thursday that aims to give their party four more seats in the latest effort to fight President Donald Trump’s redistricting push, even as an ongoing legal challenge makes use of that map for the midterm elections far from certain.

The map would dilute Republicans’ hold in Virginia’s conservative areas while giving Democrats a better footing in the districts they would like to flip. And it would give Democrats nationwide a boost in the redistricting battle for the House ahead of the November elections.

But in January, a Virginia judge ruled that Democrats’ proposed constitutional amendment for redrawing the state’s U.S. House lines was illegal. It was a blow to Democrats’ plan to let voters decide on the amendment in a referendum in April. Democrats are appealing in the case, which appears headed directly to the state Supreme Court.

The state is currently represented in the U.S. House by six Democrats and five Republicans who ran in districts imposed by a court after a bipartisan legislative commission failed to agree on a map after the 2020 census.

Earlier Thursday, the state’s top Democratic legislators said they would unveil a map drawn to help Democrats win 10 of the 11 seats. Data from recent past elections attached to the proposal posted online Thursday support that possibility. A congressional primary is currently set for June.

Virginia Republicans have rebuffed Democrats’ efforts to redraw the House map, pointing to a recent yearslong push for fair maps in the state. In 2020, voters supported a change to the state’s constitution aimed at ending legislative gerrymandering by creating the redistricting commission.

Virginia Democrats, who decisively flipped 13 seats in the state House and the governor’s office last November, have long said that efforts to redistrict the state would level the playing field after Trump pushed to redraw House districts in Republican-controlled states such as Texas.

“These are not ordinary times and Virginia will not sit on the sidelines while it happens,” state Senate President Pro Tempore L. Louise Lucas told reporters earlier Thursday alongside House Speaker Don Scott. “We made a promise to level the playing field, and today we’re keeping our promise.”

In other states, the redistricting battle has resulted so far in nine more seats that Republicans believe they can win in Texas, Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio, and six that Democrats think they can win in California and Utah. Democrats have hoped to make up that three-seat margin in Virginia.

Mike Young with Virginians for Fair Maps, a Republican-backed group opposed to the redrawing, called Thursday’s proposal “an illegal, hyper-partisan gerrymander drawn in backrooms hidden from the public” and one “that completely disregards common sense.”

Redistricting initiatives are still being litigated in several states, and there is no guarantee that the parties will win the seats they have redrawn.

While Virginia’s redistricting push hits hurdles, Maryland lawmakers have advanced a new map that could enable Democrats to defeat the state’s only House Republican, after Democratic Gov. Wes Moore urged them in person to do so, though obstacles remain for enacting such a map there.

___

Robertson reported from Raleigh, North Carolina. Diaz is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.

Olivia Diaz And Gary D. Robertson, The Associated Press



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Republicans reject complaint about Gabbard as Democrats question time it took to see it

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Republican leaders of the House and Senate intelligence committees have rejected a top-secret complaint from an anonymous government insider alleging that Director of National Intelligence Tulsi…

    CP NewsAlert: Public servants ordered to work in office 4 days a week as of July

    OTTAWA — The federal government is ordering public servants to return to the office at least four days a week. A Treasury Board message to deputy department heads says executives…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    2026 NFL Honors: Patriots’ Mike Vrabel named Coach of the Year

    2026 NFL Honors: Patriots’ Mike Vrabel named Coach of the Year

    PSA: Monster Hunter Stories 3 Switch 2 Trial Demo Now Available, Save Data Carries Over

    PSA: Monster Hunter Stories 3 Switch 2 Trial Demo Now Available, Save Data Carries Over

    Germany’s CDU weighs social media age curbs for under-16s

    Germany’s CDU weighs social media age curbs for under-16s

    Price of average UK home passes £300,000 for first time, Halifax says | Housing market

    Price of average UK home passes £300,000 for first time, Halifax says | Housing market

    Here Are the Letters to Never, Ever Guess in Wordle (and the Ones to Guess Every Day)

    Here Are the Letters to Never, Ever Guess in Wordle (and the Ones to Guess Every Day)

    New Zealand deputy PM heckled day after saying colonisation good for Maori | Indigenous Rights News

    New Zealand deputy PM heckled day after saying colonisation good for Maori | Indigenous Rights News