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North Carolina Republicans Plan to Redraw Congressional Map to Add a Seat

October 14, 2025
in News
North Carolina Republicans Plan to Redraw Congressional Map to Add a Seat
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Republican lawmakers in North Carolina announced plans on Monday to redraw the state’s already gerrymandered congressional maps to further favor their party. It’s the latest effort to help the Trump administration retain control of the U.S. House in the midterm elections next year.

Phil Berger, the State Senate leader, and Destin Hall, the speaker of the State House of Representatives, said in a joint statement that they would hold votes next week on the rare mid-decade redistricting effort. Republicans control the legislature, and Gov. Josh Stein, a Democrat, cannot veto redistricting plans, per the State Constitution.

Republicans already control 10 of the state’s 14 congressional seats. Mr. Hall said in the statement that Republican lawmakers would seek to secure one more seat, though he did not specify where. The most likely target is the First Congressional District, which has the state’s only competitive House seat, which is currently held by Representative Don Davis, a Democrat.

The proposed redrawing in North Carolina comes as the Trump administration has pushed Republican-led states to redraw House district maps to strengthen his party’s majority in the chamber before the midterm elections. That effort took off over the summer in Texas, at the urging of Gov. Greg Abbott. Lawmakers there approved a map that could give Republicans up to five more seats in the U.S. House.

In response to Texas’ actions, Gov. Gavin Newsom of California, a Democrat, pressed his state’s Legislature to approve a new map that could flip as many as five Republican-held House seats to Democrats. That map will require the approval of California voters in November.

Since then, other states, including Missouri and Indiana, have either taken part in gerrymandering or threatened to do so before 2026.

A fight over congressional maps is nothing new in North Carolina, a politically divided swing state where the governor’s mansion has long been occupied by Democrats, even as Republicans have controlled the General Assembly since 2011. But the Republicans’ near-total control of the legislature has made them the dominant political force in the state.

That power allowed them to pass a heavily gerrymandered map in 2023 that created 10 solidly Republican districts, three solidly Democratic districts and one competitive district. The previous map had seven seats for each party.

On Monday, Mr. Berger, the State Senate leader, defended the new redistricting effort as a way to “protect President Trump’s agenda, which means safeguarding Republican control of Congress.”

“Picking up where Texas left off, we will hold votes in our October session to redraw North Carolina’s congressional map to ensure Gavin Newsom doesn’t decide the congressional majority,” he added in the statement.

The timing of Mr. Berger’s willingness to engage in redistricting has raised eyebrows in the state. He is in a contentious and possibly close primary race against a popular sheriff, Sam Page. Mr. Berger has denied claims that the redistricting plans are part of a deal to secure Mr. Trump’s endorsement.

Governor Stein denounced the redistricting move, saying in a statement on Monday that “the General Assembly works for North Carolina, not Donald Trump.”

“The Republican leadership in the General Assembly has failed to pass a budget, failed to pay our teachers and law enforcement what they deserve, and failed to fully fund Medicaid,” he said. “Now they are failing you, the voters. These shameless politicians are abusing their power to take away yours.”

State Representative Phil Rubin, a Democrat, said in a separate statement that “Republicans are terrified of a system where voters matter.”

Eduardo Medina is a Times reporter covering the South. An Alabama native, he is now based in Durham, N.C.

The post North Carolina Republicans Plan to Redraw Congressional Map to Add a Seat appeared first on New York Times.

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