California voters approved Proposition 50 on Nov. 4 with about 64% support, temporarily replacing the state’s independent-drawn U.S. House lines with maps passed by the Legislature. On Nov. 5, Republicans sued in federal court, arguing the plan unlawfully uses race and violates the Constitution.
California voters on Tuesday approved Proposition 50, a constitutional amendment that authorizes legislatively drawn congressional maps to be used through 2030, after which the independent Citizens Redistricting Commission regains authority. Backers say the new map could help Democrats flip as many as five U.S. House seats in 2026. (voterguide.sos.ca.gov)
The next morning, the California Republican Party, Assemblymember David Tangipa and 18 voters filed a federal lawsuit seeking to block the maps. The complaint, brought by the Dhillon Law Group in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, alleges the Legislature and its consultant used race as a predominant factor to favor Latino voters, violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. (apnews.com)
“At a news conference Wednesday, Dhillon Law Group partner Mike Columbo said the plan ‘is designed to favor one race of California voters over others,’ adding, ‘This violates the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the law, and the right under the 15th Amendment.’” (abcnews.go.com)
What the maps do for Latino representation is disputed. The lawsuit asserts the plan expands the number of districts where Latino voters can be decisive—from 14 to 16—while citing public statements that the maps were drawn to empower Latino voters. But nonpartisan analyses found the number of majority‑Latino districts largely unchanged at 16, with one additional Latino‑influence district (30%+ CVAP). (dailywire.com)
Mark Meuser, an attorney with the Dhillon firm and the GOP’s 2022 Senate nominee, said plaintiffs will ask a three‑judge panel for emergency relief and argued the state cannot satisfy the Supreme Court’s Gingles test. “We believe the Supreme Court Gingles test cannot be satisfied by the state,” he said. (nbclosangeles.com)
Tangipa condemned the process as diminishing some groups to benefit others. He has described himself as the first Polynesian American elected to the California Legislature. (gvwire.com)
On Election Day, President Donald Trump called Prop. 50 a “GIANT SCAM,” adding that California’s mail‑in ballots were under “very serious legal and criminal review.” He provided no evidence. (politico.com)
Prop. 50’s supporters framed the measure as a counter to Texas’ mid‑decade redistricting, which Republicans said would add up to five GOP‑leaning seats there. California’s map was pitched as a response that could net Democrats a similar number of seats. (apnews.com)
Separately, Rep. Kevin Kiley, a California Republican whose district is affected by the new lines, introduced legislation to ban mid‑decade gerrymandering nationwide. (aspenpublicradio.org)