Poll finds Marylanders cool to Moore’s redistricting push as special session sidelines maps

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A new survey shows that fewer than one-third of Maryland residents consider redrawing congressional districts a high priority, even as Gov. Wes Moore and national Democrats press for new maps that could eliminate the state’s lone GOP-held seat. Lawmakers are set to convene in a special session focused on House leadership and other matters, with Democratic leaders saying redistricting will not be on the agenda.

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore has for months urged state lawmakers to redraw the state’s congressional map in a way that could give Democrats control of all eight U.S. House seats, according to reporting by Politico. Democrats currently hold seven of Maryland’s eight congressional districts, with Republicans controlling a single seat.

A recent survey by the University of Maryland, Baltimore County’s Institute of Politics and Public Policy indicates limited public enthusiasm for making redistricting a top concern. According to that poll, conducted Dec. 2–6 among 801 adults in the state, 27 percent of respondents said redrawing congressional districts was a high priority.

By contrast, large majorities of respondents identified other issues as more pressing, including the cost of health care, the quality of K-12 education and reducing crime. Mileah Kromer, director of the UMBC institute, said in a statement that redistricting does not rank as a major concern for most Maryland residents, noting that other domestic and economic issues continue to dominate voters’ attention.

The survey also asked about the fairness of the current congressional map. Twenty-eight percent of respondents said the existing lines are fairly drawn, while 41 percent considered them unfair and roughly three in ten had no opinion. Views differed sharply by party. Among Democrats, more than a third described the lines as fair, while Republicans were far more likely to label the map unfair and to attribute that unfairness to Democratic advantage.

Attention to the redistricting debate was relatively high among partisans, with majorities of both Democrats and Republicans saying they were following the issue at least somewhat closely. But views on whether to proceed with a mid-decade map change diverged. In the poll, Democrats were split, with some supporting an immediate redraw, others opposing it, and a significant share saying they disliked the idea but saw it as necessary to protect their party’s representation in Congress. Republicans, by contrast, were broadly opposed to reopening the maps, and only a small minority said they viewed such a move as necessary.

The poll comes as a special legislative session begins Tuesday. But Senate President Bill Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat, and House Speaker Pro Tem Dana Stein have said redistricting will not be taken up during the session, according to Politico. Instead, lawmakers plan to focus on electing a new House speaker following the resignation of Adrienne Jones and on other state business.

Moore and prominent national Democrats, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, have pressed Ferguson to allow votes on new maps that could help Democrats secure all eight seats in Maryland’s congressional delegation. Ferguson has raised concerns that an aggressive redraw could backfire if courts strike down the new lines, potentially jeopardizing the party’s existing seats, Politico reports.

Redistricting efforts in other states are feeding the debate in Annapolis. In Indiana, Republicans recently rejected an effort to overhaul that state’s congressional map, a move that has drawn attention from Maryland Democrats watching how GOP-controlled legislatures handle similar pressures. Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland has publicly urged his state’s lawmakers to keep pushing the issue, even as Ferguson and other legislative leaders keep it off the current special session agenda.

For now, Moore’s Redistricting Advisory Commission continues to hold public hearings and is expected to deliver recommendations to the governor and General Assembly in the coming weeks. That could set up another clash over congressional lines when the legislature returns for its regular session in January, even as polling suggests that many Marylanders remain more focused on day-to-day concerns like health care, schools and public safety than on how the state’s eight House districts are drawn.

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Maryland Gov. Wes Moore announces redistricting commission at press conference amid divided reactions from Democrats and Republicans.
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Maryland governor’s redistricting commission faces resistance from some Democrats

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Governor Wes Moore has created a commission to consider possible mid-decade redistricting in Maryland, one of the nation’s most Democratic-leaning states, drawing support from some Democrats and sharp opposition from Republicans and several Democratic leaders who warn of legal and political risks.

Maryland's Democratic leaders have approved a proposal to redraw congressional districts, potentially eliminating the state's only Republican-held U.S. House seat ahead of the 2026 midterms. The plan, recommended by a governor-appointed commission, would reshape the 1st District to favor Democrats. While supporters cite population changes and actions in other states, critics from both parties warn of partisan overreach and legal risks.

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Virginia Democrats’ push to redraw the state’s congressional districts has stalled amid disagreements between the House of Delegates and state Senate over competing map concepts, even as party leaders move to appeal a judge’s ruling that blocked the underlying redistricting effort.

The Republican-controlled Indiana Senate voted 31-19 against a congressional redistricting proposal backed by President Donald Trump, dealing a setback to his broader push for mid-decade map changes aimed at expanding GOP control of the U.S. House.

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After Indiana Senate leaders said they would not reconvene in December to redraw congressional maps, President Donald Trump escalated attacks on state Republicans and warned he would back primary challengers to those who oppose mid-decade redistricting. Politico reports the White House is preparing to support Tipton County Commissioner Tracey Powell against Sen. Jim Buck, and hours after Trump criticized Sen. Greg Goode online, authorities said Goode was the target of a swatting incident.

Republicans' hopes for a Supreme Court decision to weaken the Voting Rights Act and enable favorable redistricting before the 2026 midterms are fading as election timelines tighten. The case, Louisiana v. Callais, could allow the GOP to redraw maps in the South to gain more congressional seats, but experts predict a ruling too late for implementation. State officials warn that changing maps now would create logistical chaos for elections.

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On November 4, California voters will decide Proposition 50, a temporary congressional redistricting plan advanced by Gov. Gavin Newsom and legislative Democrats in response to GOP-led mapping in Texas encouraged by President Donald Trump. Supporters say the change could net Democrats up to five U.S. House seats; opponents argue it undermines California’s independent redistricting system and local representation.

 

 

 

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