Chicago – February 04, 2026
The US Supreme Court on February 4, 2026, allowed California to proceed with a new congressional voting map designed to favor Democrats, rejecting an emergency appeal from state Republicans and the Trump administration. This voter-approved map, enacted via Proposition 50 last November, aims to flip up to five Republican-held House seats, countering similar Republican gains in Texas.
In a brief, unsigned order with no dissents noted, the conservative-majority court cleared the path for the map’s use in the November 2026 midterms, potentially bolstering Democratic chances to reclaim the House and challenge President Trump’s agenda. Republicans argued the redistricting constituted an unconstitutional racial gerrymander, particularly in districts targeting Latino voters, violating the 14th Amendment and Voting Rights Act.
A federal three-judge panel had previously upheld the map in a 2-1 ruling on January 14, deeming partisan motives dominant over racial ones. California’s Democratic leaders framed it as retaliation against Texas’s pro-GOP redistricting, which the Supreme Court approved in December. This decision underscores ongoing national battles over mid-decade gerrymandering, following a 2019 ruling limiting federal oversight of partisan maps.
