Democrats set to take Texas redistricting fight to the courts
Source: The Hill
08/23/25 6:00 AM ET
The Texas redistricting battle is entering a new front as the fight turns to the courts, where Democrats and civil rights groups are expected to challenge the newly passed maps.
Texas House Democrats who had fled the state to stall the maps said that they were returning to the House floor and to the courthouse this week and several groups signaled they are ready to sue as soon as Gov. Greg Abbott (R) signs the legislation.
But experts forecast Democrats will face an uphill climb to stop or even stall the maps, which could net five GOP House seats, from taking effect ahead of next years high-stakes midterms.
Literally minutes after Abbott signs this bill and the redistricting plan goes into effect, therell be litigation, most likely by Democrats, by the ACLU, by LULAC, by the NAACP, said Jon Taylor, the University of Texas at San Antonios department chair of political science. A host of organizations will make the argument that what was already viewed as a racial gerrymander that took place in 2021 has become even more so in 2025. So, oh yeah, theyre going to court literally, almost at the same time that Abbott does his thing.
Read more: https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/5466798-democrats-challenge-texas-maps/

cstanleytech
(27,885 posts)Igel
(37,071 posts)I got no authority over you so my "order" would be a meaningless and arrogant speech act.
Now, Trump has a bit of influence--political--and politicians at one level often wield that kind of influence. "Unconstitutional"? Probably not.
FBaggins
(28,387 posts)Newsom has insisted that other Democratic governors redistrict (as has Beto and any number of national Dems)... does that make the move unconstitutional if some of them follow through?
lostincalifornia
(4,218 posts)it until after the California redistricting ballot initiative. If it fails, I predict the SC will say what Texas is doing is perfectly fine. However, if it passes, they send it back demanding that both California and Texas demonstrate why redistricting is necessary.
ananda
(32,873 posts)I was already thinking about it.