Gov. Newsom confirms California threat to redraw congressional maps as battle with Texas, Trump heats up
California will forge ahead with a plan to redraw its congressional district maps in a bid to give Democrats five more US House seats, a drastic move intended to neutralize a similar President Trump-backed effort underway by Texas Republicans.
Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the anticipated measure in Los Angeles Thursday with a rally-like speech, where he ranted about supposed threats to democracy in America — despite support for his own redistricting plan falling across strictly partisan lines in the heavily blue state.
“We can’t stand back and watch this democracy disappear district by district all across the country,” Newsom said at the speech, confirming that state Democrats would soon officially declare a Nov. 4 special election to vote on the new maps.
Newsom’s plan mirrors a Trump-backed effort from Texas Gov. Greg Abbot to redraw its own congressional map and to try to win the state five more Republican US House seats — all of which is part of a wider play to help the GOP hold unto its slim 219-212 seat majority during the midterm elections.
Some Texas Democrats have left the state to avoid a vote on the matter, with the Trump administration even dispatching the FBI to bring the AWOL representatives back home.
