California moving forward with partisan redistricting effort to counter Texas’ move

Gov. Gavin Newsom is calling for a special election on November 4 to introduce new U.S. House maps. The goal is to win more Democratic seats.

LOS ANGELES — California Gov. Gavin Newsom stood with other prominent Democratic leaders Thursday to announce that the state will move forward with a partisan plan to redraw congressional maps in an effort to help his party win five more U.S. House seats in 2026.

The move is a direct response to a Republican-led effort in Texas, pushed by President Donald Trump as his party seeks to maintain its slim House majority after the midterm elections. Texas lawmakers are considering a new map that would help them send five more Republicans to Washington, but Democrats have so far halted a vote by leaving the state to prevent their GOP colleagues from meeting Trump’s demands.

Newsom, who is seen as a potential 2028 presidential candidate, urged Trump in a letter earlier this week to abandon his scheme, telling the president he is “playing with fire” and “risking the destabilization of our democracy.”

On Thursday, Newsom called for a Nov. 4 special election on new U.S. House maps designed to win more Democratic seats. He released a campaign ad on social media as Democrats kicked off a press conference where Newsom stood with a coalition of union leaders and U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff and Alex Padilla.

California leaders are aiming to release their proposed maps Friday, with plans to quickly approve them next week when the Legislature returns from the summer recess. Lawmakers are also expected declare a special election for Nov. 4 to seek voter approval on the new maps. Democrats hold supermajorities in both chambers.

The California map would only take effect if Texas and other states move forward with their own redistricting efforts, and they would remain through the 2030 elections. After that, Democrats say they would return mapmaking power to an independent redistricting commission approved by voters more than a decade ago.

There are 435 seats in the U.S. House and Republicans currently hold an 219-212 majority, with four vacancies. New maps are typically drawn once a decade after the census is conducted. Many states give legislators the power to draw maps but some, like California, rely on an independent commission that is supposed to be nonpartisan.

The Thursday announcement marks the first time any state beyond Texas is officially wading into the mid-decade redistricting fight, kicking off a national standoff that could continue spilling into other states.

The move is seen as a long shot for California Democrats, who face more complex legal and logistical hurdles than Republicans do in Texas. It’s not clear how voters would respond to the mid-decade effort after they voted to give the power of drawing congressional maps to an independent commission in 2010. In Texas, that power lies with the Republican-controlled Legislature.

Some already said they would sue to block the effort, and influential voices including former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger may campaign against it.

“Gavin Newsom’s latest stunt has nothing to do with Californians and everything to do with consolidating radical Democrat power, silencing California voters, and propping up his pathetic 2028 presidential pipe dream,” National Republican Congressional Committee spokesperson Christian Martinez said in a statement. “Newsom’s made it clear: he’ll shred California’s Constitution and trample over democracy – running a cynical, self-serving playbook where Californians are an afterthought and power is the only priority.”

California Democrats already hold 43 of the state’s 52 House seats, and the state has some of the most competitive House seats.

Elsewhere, leaders from red Florida to blue New York are threatening to write their own new maps, bucking the standard once-a-decade redistricting process that happens after the Census. But none have moved as far as Texas and, soon, California, in advancing new maps.

Missouri lawmakers are waiting for Gov. Mike Kehoe to call a special session to draw more favorable Republican maps, and a document obtained by The Associated Press shows the state Senate has received a $46,000 invoice to activate six redistricting software licenses and provide training for up to 10 staff members.

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