Trans veteran Bree Fram challenges incumbent in Virginia redistricting fight

Bree Fram, a transgender former Space Force colonel forced out under President Trump, is running a long-shot Democratic primary campaign against Rep. James Walkinshaw in Virginia's 11th District. Her bid hinges on a state referendum Tuesday that could redraw congressional maps in Democrats' favor. If approved, the new map would create a district blending areas currently held by multiple incumbents.

Virginia voters head to polls Tuesday on redistricting amendment. The measure, passed by the state Senate and House and signed by Gov. Abigail Spanberger, proposes a congressional map favoring Democrats in 10 of 11 districts. Fram, a 23-year Air Force and Space Force veteran and rocket scientist, lives in Reston and sees a path to victory in the proposed 'new 11th' district, which includes voters from areas represented by Reps. Suhas Subramanyam, Don Beyer and Ben Cline. Her campaign manager, Sabrina Bruce, another transgender ex-Space Force member, said, 'That chaos is a ladder, and when you have an opportunity to exploit that, to take advantage of it, it’s clear that you can use that to win.' Fram's military ouster fuels her candidacy. Fram became the highest-ranking openly transgender service member as a colonel before Trump's executive order led to her administrative leave in June 2025 and retirement in January 2026. She described the process as marked by 'every pettiness, every cruelty.' Now, she advocates progressive policies like universal health care, no corporate PAC money and criticism of the DOGE federal workforce cuts. Walkinshaw holds fundraising edge amid tight polls. An internal Fram campaign poll shows Walkinshaw leading 43% to 9% head-to-head among likely Democratic primary voters in the new district, narrowing to 42%-21% with candidate information. Fram raised $250,000 in Q1 2026 with $135,000 cash on hand; Walkinshaw raised $630,000 with nearly $800,000 cash. Walkinshaw's manager Donald Brownlee highlighted grassroots support from over 6,000 small donations. Fram emphasizes unity, with Bruce noting, 'How are we going to get away from this malaise that Trump has put us in if we don’t try to be better ourselves?'

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Virginia voters line up at polls to decide on constitutional amendment for redistricting congressional districts amid controversy over partisan advantage.
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Virginia voters weigh redistricting amendment on election day

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Virginia voters headed to the polls on Tuesday to decide a single ballot question: whether to amend the state constitution to allow the General Assembly to draw new congressional districts aimed at 'restoring fairness' ahead of upcoming elections. The proposed maps would give Democrats an advantage in 10 of the state's 11 U.S. House seats, despite Kamala Harris winning less than 52% of the presidential vote there in 2024. Campaigns on both sides have drawn complaints of confusion from misleading ads, mailers and ballot wording.

A recent poll indicates narrow support for a mid-decade redistricting amendment in Virginia, with likely voters backing it 52-47%. The measure aims to redraw congressional maps from a 6-5 Democratic edge to 10-1 in their favor, potentially affecting House control during President Donald Trump's term. Early voting ends April 18, with the ballot decision on April 21.

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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.

Voters in a Chicago-area district are choosing a successor to retiring Rep. Jan Schakowsky in a crowded Democratic primary spanning three generations. Leading candidate Daniel Biss, a 48-year-old Gen Xer, faces younger challengers like 26-year-old Kat Abughazaleh and 28-year-old Bushra Amiwala. The race highlights tensions over party norms and progressive change ahead of Illinois primaries on Tuesday.

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Five months after Indiana's GOP-led Senate rejected a Trump-backed plan to redraw congressional maps for House advantage, President Trump has endorsed Republican primary challengers against the senators who opposed it—including Sen. Spencer Deery—intensifying intraparty conflict ahead of Tuesday's primary.

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