Particle.news
Download on the App Store

Florida Sets April 20 Redistricting Session as Virginia Weighs April 21 Map Vote

The outcomes could shift control of the U.S. House in the 2026 midterms.

Overview

  • Florida lawmakers will open a special session on April 20 to redraw congressional districts at Gov. Ron DeSantis’ urging even though the Supreme Court has not ruled on a key Voting Rights Act case and the maps must rely on 2020 census counts under state rules.
  • DeSantis has pointed to rapid population growth and a likely Supreme Court ruling as reasons to proceed, and he said Justice Samuel Alito is writing the opinion, drawing concern from the National Democratic Redistricting Committee about the claim.
  • An Emerson College poll found 56% of likely Florida voters view a mid‑decade redraw as a bad idea, including strong opposition from independents, despite support from most Republican respondents.
  • In Virginia, early voting is underway for an April 21 referendum that would let the Democratic-controlled General Assembly temporarily adopt a new congressional map that Democrats say could cut as many as four Republican-leaning districts, with heavy pro-referendum spending and sharp rural pushback over diluted representation.
  • The mid‑cycle map fight grew out of President Donald Trump’s call last year for red states to redo maps, which spurred counter-moves in blue states and left Florida’s session and Virginia’s vote as the final major battlegrounds before the midterms.