Democrats are staring down a potential redistricting nightmare heading into the 2026 midterms, with Republicans playing aggressive offense on congressional maps while Democrats scramble to hold the line in court, Punchbowl News reported Monday.
The most urgent crisis is in Virginia, where Democrats won a redistricting referendum designed to hand them four new House seats, only to watch the Virginia Supreme Court pump the brakes on certifying the results. The delay has left election officials unable to prepare for the August primaries in the newly drawn districts, and Democrats are growing increasingly nervous.
“There’s a lot of nervous people out there,” a House Democratic aide told Punchbowl.
The Virginia Supreme Court previously warned the challenge raised “weighty assertions of invalidity” — legal language that is giving Republicans reason for optimism and Democrats reason to panic. If the court invalidates the referendum on procedural grounds, Punchbowl warned it would be “an absolute catastrophe” for the party.
Meanwhile in Florida, GOP Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a redrawn congressional map that would hand Republicans four additional House seats, though Democrats sued within the hour. The lawsuit called the new map “one of the most extreme gerrymanders in American history” and argued it blatantly violated the Florida constitution. If Republicans prevail, they would hold 24 of Florida’s 28 congressional seats.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who has publicly guaranteed Democrats will win the majority this year, dispatched Rep. Joe Morelle, ranking member of the House Administration Committee, to Albany to lobby New York leaders on future redistricting options, though that effort won’t help Democrats in November.
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