U.S. Supreme Court building with overlaid Texas congressional map illustrating gerrymandering in redistricting dispute.
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Supreme Court temporarily restores Texas congressional map as redistricting fight continues

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The U.S. Supreme Court has temporarily halted a lower court ruling that found Texas’s new congressional map likely racially gerrymandered, allowing the map to remain in place while the justices consider the case. The plan, advanced under former President Donald Trump and backed by Texas Republican leaders, is expected to add several GOP‑leaning seats. Democratic Congressman Lloyd Doggett, whose district has repeatedly been reshaped, has decided to run for reelection amid the uncertainty.

On Friday, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito issued an administrative stay pausing a ruling by a three‑judge federal panel in El Paso that had blocked Texas from using its new congressional map. As Alito is the justice responsible for emergency matters from the circuit that includes Texas, his order temporarily restores the disputed map while the full court weighs the state’s appeal, according to NPR and other outlets.

The panel’s 2–1 decision had concluded that Texas’s latest congressional redistricting plan, drawn in 2025, likely discriminates on the basis of race in violation of federal voting rights law. The judges found that civil rights groups representing Black and Hispanic voters had shown strong evidence that the map amounted to intentional vote dilution and racial gerrymandering, a finding Doggett highlighted in his interview with NPR’s Scott Simon.

According to reporting by NPR and local public radio affiliates, the new map was adopted outside the usual once‑a‑decade redistricting cycle and is expected to give Republicans several additional seats in the U.S. House ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Supporters of the plan have framed it as a legitimate partisan strategy, while opponents say it undermines minority representation and locks in a narrow Republican majority.

Doggett told NPR that the 2025 map followed a letter from Trump’s Justice Department warning Texas that it risked legal action if it did not redraw several districts that favored Black and Hispanic voters. He said Governor Greg Abbott added redistricting to the agenda for a special legislative session in response to that directive and that legislative leaders later boasted about the outcome. Federal judges in El Paso cited that Justice Department letter as key evidence that race, not just party, drove the mapmaking process.

The Supreme Court’s stay is expected to remain in place for at least several days while the justices consider written briefs from both sides. As KUT and other public radio stations report, the order keeps Texas on course, for now, to use the new lines in its 2026 congressional primaries, avoiding an immediate shift back to the 2021 map that was drawn after the 2020 census.

Doggett, a Democrat who represents Austin and has seen his district renumbered and reconfigured multiple times over the past two decades, has personally felt the impact of the state’s long‑running redistricting battles. NPR reports that he initially planned to run under the newly drawn lines, then announced his retirement after the map was enacted, and finally reversed course and decided to seek reelection after the lower court ruling against the plan.

“Well, what we have is an administrative stay, as you said, issued by Justice Alito,” Doggett told Simon in the interview, adding that he does not view the temporary order as a definitive signal of how the full court will rule. He said he remains hopeful that the Supreme Court will ultimately uphold the lower court’s conclusion that the map is a racial gerrymander and invalidate what he repeatedly called the “Trump map.”

Doggett dismissed Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton’s argument that the Republican‑drawn maps merely respond to years of Democratic gerrymandering. “That it’s total nonsense coming from a fanatic,” he said, noting that Republicans had already reshaped his district multiple times, even once stretching it from Austin to the Mexican border.

The congressman also used the interview to renew his call for nonpartisan redistricting commissions. He praised California’s citizen‑led model and said Democrats in the U.S. House, under then‑Speaker Nancy Pelosi, previously pushed nationwide redistricting reforms that he says Republicans blocked. Doggett argued that independent line‑drawing is needed in all 50 states so that “politicians [are] not selecting their voters” and so that Congress better reflects the country’s full range of political views.

The Texas fight is part of a broader legal and political struggle over congressional maps across the country. As the Associated Press and other national outlets have reported, states including Missouri, North Carolina and California have recently adopted new maps that favor one party or the other, prompting a wave of lawsuits. Separately, the Supreme Court is reviewing a Louisiana case involving Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act that could further shape how race may be considered in redistricting nationwide.

What people are saying

Conservative users and Texas officials celebrated the Supreme Court's temporary stay as a major victory restoring the GOP-favorable congressional map, predicting up to five Republican seat gains and criticizing Democrats for hypocrisy on gerrymandering. Democratic Rep. Lloyd Doggett decried the map as Trump's racist redistricting, struck down initially by a Trump judge. Liberal voices condemned the decision as enabling racial gerrymandering and questioned Justice Alito's impartiality. Neutral posts highlighted the administrative stay's temporary nature pending full review.

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Illustration of the U.S. Supreme Court building overlaid with a gerrymandered Texas congressional map, highlighting Republican-backed districts approved amid partisan redistricting dispute.
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The U.S. Supreme Court has sided with Texas Republicans in a dispute over the state’s new congressional map, allowing the plan to take effect and drawing fresh scrutiny over partisan gerrymandering ahead of the next round of federal elections.

On November 18, 2025, a three-judge federal panel in El Paso blocked Texas from using its newly redrawn U.S. House map in the 2026 midterms, finding the plan was likely a racial gerrymander and directing the state to revert to its 2021 districts while appeals proceed.

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The U.S. Supreme Court has denied a Republican challenge, allowing California to proceed with its Democrat-favored redistricting map for the 2026 midterm elections. The decision permits the state to use a map approved by voters last year as a counter to similar efforts in Texas. This ruling maintains the status quo amid ongoing national battles over partisan map-drawing.

Indiana’s Republican-led Senate has rejected a Trump-backed congressional map that would likely have given the GOP all nine of the state’s U.S. House seats, despite an aggressive months-long pressure campaign from the White House, even as redistricting battles elsewhere and a looming Supreme Court case shape the national landscape.

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California voters approved Proposition 50 on November 4 by roughly 64% to 36%, temporarily replacing commission-drawn congressional districts with a legislature-drawn map through 2030 — a move Democrats say counters GOP mid‑decade redistricting in states like Texas and could net them up to five House seats in 2026.

Virginia Democrats have filed an emergency motion with the state Court of Appeals to reverse a judge's ruling that halted a proposed constitutional amendment on redistricting. The amendment could reshape congressional districts to favor Democrats significantly. The legal battle centers on procedural challenges raised by Republicans during a recent special legislative session.

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After the Indiana Senate voted 31-19 to reject a Trump-backed congressional redistricting plan that would likely have erased the state’s two Democratic U.S. House seats, Republican lawmakers who opposed the measure faced threats of primary challenges from Trump and Gov. Mike Braun, while analysts noted that the defeat underscored limits on mid-decade map changes even in conservative states.

 

 

 

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