Supreme Court allows Texas to use a congressional map favorable to Republicans in 2026
- On Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court allowed Texas to use a newly drawn congressional map for the 2026 midterm election, issuing an unsigned emergency order pausing a lower three-judge district court's 2-1 ruling.
- Acting at President Donald Trump's urging, Texas lawmakers in a special session redrew 38 districts after a Justice Department letter earlier this year challenged coalition districts.
- Judge Jeffrey Brown wrote that a three-judge district court panel found substantial evidence of racial gerrymandering and ordered Texas to use the 2021 congressional map pending trial.
- Because candidate filing deadline Dec. 8 is imminent, the new map engineered to give Republican congressional candidates in Texas up to five additional U.S. House seats faces a court hearing Dec. 15.
- Building on the Roberts court's 2019 ruling, the conservative justices' shadow docket rulings favoring state maps in roughly 90 percent of cases could prompt nationwide redistricting efforts, especially after Louisiana's congressional map case.
223 Articles
223 Articles
"We have won! Texas is officially — and legally — redr," the state governor rejoiced.
In the interim elections Trump's Republicans have to fear the loss of their majority in the House of Representatives. A new cut in the constituencies in Texas is to be remedied. The Supreme Court gives the green light.
A new cut in the constituencies in the state of Texas is said to give US President Trump's party a tailwind for the congressional elections. The Supreme Court gives the Republicans the green light for this.
A new cut in the constituencies in the state of Texas is said to give US President Trump's party a tailwind for the congressional elections. The Supreme Court gives the Republicans the green light for this.
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