Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

California Governor Gavin Newsom signs legislation calling for a special election on a redrawn congressional map on Thursday in Sacramento.Godofredo A. Vásquez/The Associated Press

California voters will decide in November whether to approve a redrawn congressional map designed to help Democrats win five more U.S. House seats next year, after Texas Republicans advanced their own redrawn map to pad their House majority by the same number of seats at President Donald Trump’s urging.

California lawmakers voted mostly along party lines Thursday to approve legislation calling for the special election. Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom, who has led the campaign in favour of the map, then quickly signed it – the latest step in a tit-for-tat gerrymandering battle.

“This is not something six weeks ago that I ever imagined that I’d be doing,” Mr. Newsom said at a press conference, pledging a campaign for the measure that would reach out to Democrats, Republicans and independent voters. “This is a reaction to an assault on our democracy in Texas.”

Republicans, who have filed a lawsuit and called for a federal investigation into the plan, promised to fight the measure at the ballot box as well.

Open this photo in gallery:

California Democrats and Texas Republicans are both pursuing a partisan gerrymander with the goal of adding up to five more U.S. House seats each in the 2026 midterms.Eric Gay/The Associated Press

California Assemblyman James Gallagher, the Republican minority leader, said Mr. Trump was “wrong” to push for new Republican seats elsewhere, contending the President was just responding to Democratic gerrymandering in other states. But he warned that Mr. Newsom’s approach, which the governor has dubbed “fight fire with fire,” was dangerous.

“You move forward fighting fire with fire and what happens?” Mr. Gallagher asked. “You burn it all down.”

Texas’ redrawn maps still need a final vote in the Republican-controlled state Senate, which advanced the plan out of a committee Thursday but did not bring the measure to the floor. The Senate was scheduled to meet again Friday.

After that, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s signature will be all that is needed to make the map official. It’s part of Mr. Trump’s effort to stave off an expected loss of the GOP’s majority in the U.S. House in the 2026 midterm elections.

Texas House approves new congressional maps, advancing Trump’s goal of adding more winnable GOP seats

On a national level, the partisan makeup of existing districts puts Democrats within three seats of a majority. The incumbent president’s party usually loses congressional seats in the midterms.

The President has pushed other Republican-controlled states including Indiana and Missouri to also revise their maps to add more winnable GOP seats. Ohio Republicans were also already scheduled to revise their maps to make them more partisan.

Redistricting typically occurs once a decade, immediately after a census. While some states have their own limitations, there is no national impediment to a state trying to redraw districts in the middle of the decade.

The U.S. Supreme Court has also said the Constitution does not outlaw partisan gerrymandering, only using race to redraw district lines. Texas Republicans embraced that when their House of Representatives passed its revision Wednesday.

“The underlying goal of this plan is straight forward: improve Republican political performance,” state Representative Todd Hunter, the Republican who wrote the bill revising Texas’ maps, said.

On Thursday, California Democrats noted Mr. Hunter’s comments and said they had to take extreme steps to counter the Republican move. “What do we do, just sit back and do nothing? Or do we fight back?” Democratic state Senator Lena Gonzalez said. “This is how we fight back and protect our democracy.”

To counter Texas, California moves ahead with plan to redraw congressional map

Republicans and some Democrats championed the 2008 ballot measure that established California’s nonpartisan redistricting commission, along with the 2010 one that extended its role to drawing congressional maps.

Democrats have sought a national commission that would draw lines for all states but have been unable to pass legislation creating that system.

Mr. Trump’s midterm redistricting ploy has shifted Democrats.

That was clear in California, where Newsom was one of the members of his party who backed the initial redistricting commission ballot measures, and where Assemblyman Joshua Lowenthal, whose father, Representative Alan Lowenthal, was another Democratic champion of a nonpartisan commission, presided over the state Assembly’s passage of the redistricting package.

Mr. Newsom on Thursday contended his state was still setting a model.

“We’ll be the first state in U.S. history, in the most democratic way, to submit to the people of our state the ability to determine their own maps,” Mr. Newsom said before signing the legislation.

Former president Barack Obama, who’s also backed a nationwide nonpartisan approach, has also backed Mr. Newsom’s bid to redraw the California map, saying it was a necessary step to stave off the GOP’s Texas move.

“I think that approach is a smart, measured approach,” Mr. Obama said Tuesday during a fundraiser for the Democratic Party’s main redistricting arm, noting that California voters will still have the final say on the map.

Texas troopers follow Democrats everywhere, even the grocery store, amid redistricting battle

The California map would last only through 2030, after which the state’s commission would draw up a new map for the normal, once-a-decade redistricting to adjust district lines after the decennial U.S. Census. Democrats are also mulling reopening Maryland’s and New York’s maps for mid-decade redraws.

However, more Democratic-run states have commission systems like California’s or other redistricting limits than Republican ones do, leaving the GOP with a freer hand to swiftly redraw maps. New York, for example, can’t draw new maps until 2028, and even then, only with voter approval.

In Texas, outnumbered Democrats turned to unusual steps to try to delay passage, leaving the state to delay a vote by 15 days. Upon their return, they were assigned round-the-clock police monitoring.

California Republicans didn’t take such dramatic steps but complained bitterly about Democrats muscling the package through the Statehouse and harming what GOP State Senator Tony Strickland called the state’s “gold-standard” nonpartisan approach.

“What you’re striving for is predetermined elections,” Mr. Strickland said. “You’re taking the voice away from Californians.”

Follow related authors and topics

Interact with The Globe