
North Carolina’s Republican-led legislature approved a revised congressional district map designed to add at least one more GOP seat in the U.S. House, aligning with President Donald Trump’s push for mid-decade redistricting to help Republicans maintain their narrow majority in the chamber ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
The new boundaries build on the state’s existing map, drawn by Republicans in 2023 following the 2020 census, which delivered 10 of North Carolina’s 14 House seats to the GOP in the 2024 elections—even as the swing state remains evenly split between Republican and Democratic voters.
Democratic Gov. Josh Stein lacks veto power over redistricting under state law, leaving the plan poised for implementation unless challenged in court.
This move marks the third instance this year of a Republican-controlled state legislature responding to Trump’s call for aggressive redistricting strategies, following similar actions in Texas and Missouri.
In Texas, where the push began in earnest, Republicans unveiled a proposed map on July 30, 2025, aiming to flip up to five Democratic-held seats through mid-decade adjustments.
The effort stems from a pair of long-running legal battles, including a 2024 ruling by the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals that overturned prior district configurations in areas like Baytown and Galveston, creating an opening for the redraw.
Texas Republicans have cited population shifts and compliance with voting rights laws as justifications, though critics argue it’s a partisan power grab encouraged by Trump. By September 2025, state officials had begun walking back some initial rationales amid scrutiny from the U.S. Department of Justice, but the plan remains on track for adoption.
Other GOP-led states, including Ohio, Kansas, and Indiana, are weighing or advancing comparable mid-cycle changes, capitalizing on their legislative majorities to redraw lines outside the traditional decennial census timeline. Such tactics have historical roots.
Texas itself pursued a similar mid-decade redistricting in 2003 under then-Gov. Rick Perry, who helped solidify Republican dominance in the state’s delegation.
Democrats have decried these efforts as unfair gerrymandering, but Republicans counter that many blue states have long employed similar strategies to entrench their own advantages.
For instance, Illinois Democrats have drawn maps that pack Republican voters into a handful of districts, allowing the party to hold a supermajority in the state’s congressional delegation despite competitive statewide races.
In Maryland, convoluted district shapes have helped Democrats secure seven of eight House seats in a state where Republicans routinely win about 40% of the vote.
New York Democrats attempted an aggressive gerrymander in 2022, only to have it struck down by courts, but the episode highlighted ongoing partisan map-drawing in left-wing strongholds.
Overall, both parties have a history of manipulating districts for gain, with gerrymandering often canceling out nationally but distorting representation at the state level.
In response to the Republican surge, California Democrats have placed Proposition 50 on the November 2025 ballot, a measure that would authorize temporary congressional map changes through 2030 to counter moves in Texas and other red states.
The proposition, backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state Democratic Party, directs the independent Citizens Redistricting Commission to adopt legislatively influenced boundaries, potentially putting five Republican-held seats at risk in districts currently represented by figures like Reps. Kevin McCarthy and Mike Garcia.
With Republicans controlling more state legislatures than Democrats, the GOP appears positioned to net additional House seats through these maneuvers.
Democrats, who fell short in 2024, need to net just three seats to reclaim the House majority in 2026, making every district adjustment critical.
The Senate remains a tougher climb for Democrats, who must defend incumbents in red-leaning states while targeting GOP vulnerabilities.
U.S. Rep. Don Davis, a North Carolina Democrat, blasted the plan as “beyond the pale” in a statement, accusing Republicans of undermining fair elections as his 1st District faces elimination under the new map.
Trump, however, hailed the North Carolina map on social media, calling it a win for “putting America First.” State House Speaker Destin Hall echoed the sentiment by reposting Trump’s message, adding, “We’re putting America First in NC!”
As legal challenges mount and the redistricting arms race intensifies, the 2026 midterms could hinge on these behind-the-scenes battles over district lines, testing the resilience of America’s electoral system.
Hours after President Donald Trump told Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to “go to hell” in a fiery social media post Saturday, the Senate adjourned for summer break without reaching an agreement on confirming his pending nominees.
Sources familiar with the talks told CNN that Senate GOP Leader John Thune (R-S.D.), Schumer (D-N.Y.), and White House officials had been locked in tense negotiations aimed at breaking the impasse and allowing lawmakers to return to their home states.
According to the sources, Schumer had demanded the release of certain federal funds and sought assurances that Trump would not pursue another budget-cutting legislative package before agreeing to any deal, CNN noted.
But, on social media, Trump called Schumer’s demands “egregious and unprecedented,” a sign that talks had gotten nowhere.
Trump had pushed for the Senate to confirm his nominees, even if it meant forgoing the August recess, but his post made clear he had no intention of conceding to the Democrats’ demands.“Senator Cryin’ Chuck Schumer is demanding over One Billion Dollars in order to approve a small number of our highly qualified nominees, who should right now be helping to run our Country. This demand is egregious and unprecedented, and would be embarrassing to the Republican Party if it were accepted. It is political extortion, by any other name,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
“Tell Schumer, who is under tremendous political pressure from within his own party, the Radical Left Lunatics, to GO TO HELL! Do not accept the offer, go home and explain to your constituents what bad people the Democrats are, and what a great job the Republicans are doing, and have done, for our Country. Have a great RECESS and, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!,” Trump added.
On Saturday night, Thune took to the Senate floor to request unanimous consent for the chamber to vote on a select group of nominations before adjourning for a month-long recess.
Democrats had been slow-walking President Trump’s lower-level nominees, prompting Senate GOP Leader John Thune to keep the chamber in session over the weekend to push them through. Though in the minority, Democrats wield procedural tools that can force Republicans to clear time-consuming hurdles before votes can take place.
According to sources familiar with the talks, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer made several demands in exchange for expediting a batch of confirmations. These included unfreezing federal funds for programs like the National Institutes of Health and foreign aid, as well as securing a promise from Trump not to pursue another round of spending cuts—following a $9 billion rescissions package passed earlier this summer.
At a Saturday night press conference, Schumer said Democrats were “serious” about negotiating a “reasonable path” to bipartisan confirmation of nominees, but said the president refused to accept their terms, CNN said.
All said, however, Democrats are finding themselves in an increasingly perilous situation some 15 months before the midterm elections. The party is at historically low levels of approval, according to a series of polls this year, and fundraising has fallen far short of GOP efforts.
In fact, Trump’s campaign and allied political committees have already met his ambitious $1.4 billion fundraising goal — more than a year ahead of schedule — setting the stage for what insiders say will be record-breaking spending in the midterms.
Trump set the goal shortly after securing a second term, vowing to use his political operation to protect House and Senate Republicans and ensure one-party control of Congress throughout his presidency, The New York Post reported.
The $1.4 billion target was first revealed in May, when Trump’s team disclosed a $600 million haul — already a historic figure. On Friday, they announced the goal had been met in full through a combination of cash on hand and pledged donations, funneled through the Republican National Committee and his super PAC, Make America Great Again, Inc.


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