Final results confirm Virginia voters' narrow 51-49% approval of the redistricting amendment on April 21, solidifying a Democratic-favoring congressional map expected to deliver 10 of 11 seats through 2030. Building on early projections, the outcome suspends the bipartisan commission amid national midcycle battles, with Republicans vowing court challenges.
Projections cited by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries confirmed the ballot measure's passage after an initial AP call at 50.3% with 82% counted late on election night. The vote allows Democratic lawmakers to replace the current 6-5 map with one favoring Democrats 10-1. Gov. Abigail Spanberger, who endorsed the proposal, framed it as a counter to Republican efforts elsewhere in an NPR interview. Jeffries told NPR the result thwarts President Trump's midterm seat grabs: 'That effort has now been thwarted.' Republicans plan legal challenges to the new boundaries, escalating Virginia's role in national redistricting fights. This caps the 'Virginia 2026 Redistricting Amendment' saga, following pre-vote polls, endorsements, and election-day coverage.