In a bid to strengthen the Republican Party’s grip on Congress in the 2026 midterm elections, former U.S. President Donald Trump has unambiguously backed the redistricting efforts in Texas. Trump is advocating for the Texas Governor, Greg Abbott, and his Republican allies in the state’s legislature to modify the electoral map in a way that could potentially swing as many as five House of Representatives seats away from the Democrats in the next year.
In a recent phone interview on CNBC, Trump emphasized the potential gains his party could make, stating, “We have an opportunity in Texas to pick up five seats… We are entitled to five more seats.”
In a bid to hinder the redistricting efforts, Democrat state representatives have exited Texas, effectively preventing the Republicans from voting in the legislature to ratify the new boundaries.
The redistricting of Texas is a significant matter as it could greatly influence which party controls the House of Representatives. Currently, the Republicans hold a narrow majority in the House. However, historically, the president’s party tends to lose seats in midterm elections.
If the Democrats manage to gain control of the House in 2026, Trump’s legislative and spending agenda could face significant hurdles, including the potential threat of impeachment. As such, redrawing Texas’s electoral map to shift a few seats from blue to red could help maintain Republican control of the House.
Unlike Canada, where non-partisan commissions in each province redraw federal riding boundaries every decade, U.S. Congressional district maps are controlled by the highly partisan state legislatures. This has resulted in a long history of gerrymandering, where the ruling party in a state manipulates boundaries to maximize their seat count.
In the 2024 elections, Republicans triumphed in 25 House races in Texas, while Democrats secured the remaining 13. The proposed redistricting could potentially shift up to five of those Democrat-held seats to the Republicans, according to recent voting pattern analyses.
The proposed changes involve merging solidly blue portions of neighboring Democrat-held districts in the urban areas of Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Austin. This would force pairs of Democrat incumbents to either compete against each other in primaries or run in a district where the Republicans have an advantage.
Meanwhile, in South Texas, alterations to the boundaries of two Democrat-held districts along the Mexican border could turn both into Republican seats.
Despite the U.S. Constitution empowering states to control election boundaries, it is the U.S. legal system that has permitted states to exercise this control in a decidedly political manner. In 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the issue of partisan gerrymandering was a “political question beyond the reach of the federal courts.”
As a result, Democrat legislators have left the state in an attempt to prevent the passing of the new boundaries law. By doing so, they have left the Republican-dominated Texas House without the minimum number of lawmakers required for business to proceed.
In response, the Speaker of the House in Texas has signed warrants authorizing the sergeant-at-arms to compel the absentee Democrat representatives to attend the legislative session. Governor Abbott has also ordered state troopers to arrest them. These warrants, however, only apply within state lines.