New congressional maps passed by Texas lawmakers are intended to offer Republicans a competitive advantage in the US House of Representatives elections next year.
Republicans in the Texas House of Representatives passed the new voting lines by a vote of 88-52 following a two-week standoff during which Democrats left the state to delay the vote and mobilize supporters against the redistricting plans. The maps will now be sent to the Texas Senate, where a speedy approval is anticipated.
The party’s US House majority in Washington, DC, would be strengthened by the creation of five additional Republican-leaning seats. States run by Democrats are attempting to counterbalance the Texas maps by redrawing their own.
In order to preserve a Republican majority in the US House, President Donald Trump supported redrawing the maps. In the 2026 midterm elections, Democrats want to regain the tiny majority that Republicans now have in the upper house of Congress.
Following a dramatic showdown in which Democrats fled over state lines to deprive Republicans the quorum required in the state legislative body to take a vote, the Texas vote was held on Wednesday. Republicans Greg Abbott, the governor of Texas, ordered the arrest of their absent Democrats, and several of them claimed that while they were away, police had been watching their residences.
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