The decision is a major blow for Republicans, including President Donald Trump, who had pushed Texas GOP leaders to draw new lines to help protect the partys narrow U.S. House majority.
Breaking: Federal court blocks Texas from using new congressional gerrymander in 2026 midterms.
— Texas Tribune (@texastribune.org) 2025-11-18T18:30:03.820Z
https://www.texastribune.org/2025/11/18/texas-redistricting-ruling-lawsuit-el-paso-court-2026-midterms/
Texas cannot use its new congressional map for the 2026 election and will instead need to stick with the lines passed in 2021, a three-judge panel ruled Tuesday.
The decision is a major blow for Republicans, in Texas and nationally, who pushed through this unusual mid-decade redistricting at the behest of President Donald Trump. They were hoping the new map would yield control of 30 of the states 38 congressional districts up from the 25 they currently hold and help protect the narrow GOP majority in the U.S. House.
The public perception of this case is that its about politics, U.S. Judge Jeffrey Brown, a Trump appointee, wrote in the ruling striking down the new lines. To be sure, politics played a role in drawing the 2025 Map. But it was much more than just politics. Substantial evidence shows that Texas racially gerrymandered the 2025 Map.
Brown ordered that the 2026 congressional election shall proceed under the map that the Texas Legislature enacted in 2021. The case will likely be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, but time is short: Candidates only have until Dec. 8 to file for the upcoming election.......
It was not immediately clear if the state still has a legal path to restoring the new map in time for 2026. Unlike most federal lawsuits, which are heard by a single district judge and then appealed to a circuit court, voting rights lawsuits are initially heard by two district judges and one circuit judge, and their ruling can only be appealed directly to the U.S. Supreme Court.