Overview
- The Supreme Court let Texas' new congressional map proceed despite a lower-court finding of likely racial gerrymandering, potentially adding up to five GOP seats in 2026.
- Indiana’s House passed a map that could create a 9-0 Republican delegation, and the state Senate is set to consider it this week.
- Turning Point Action, working with Trump-aligned super PACs, vowed to fund primary challenges against Indiana Republicans resisting the redraw.
- The Texas decision has energized mid-decade remaps nationwide, with GOP moves in Florida, Missouri and North Carolina as California advances a countermap aimed at flipping five GOP-held seats.
- Some Republicans caution the strategy could backfire, citing polling that shows Trump’s standing with Latino voters has eroded in 2025.