
The Republican-controlled Texas House has passed new congressional maps that aim to pad the party’s majority in Washington by as much as five seats in the midterm elections as battles over redistricting spread across the country. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading.
Main Idea: Texas House Republicans passed new congressional maps that could give President Donald Trump and the GOP up to five more U.S. House seats, while Democrats in California move to counter with their own redistricting plan.
Key Points:
Mid-decade map fights can make House races less fair and more partisan, leaving voters with fewer real choices and deepening distrust in government.
Some communities may get more attention from lawmakers as parties fight harder for each congressional seat.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Urged Texas to enact new maps and is central to the article’s redistricting fight.
Central actor moving quickly to advance retaliatory redistricting legislation.
Passed the new GOP congressional maps that drive the article’s main conflict.
Its constitution-required redraw could favor Republicans and is a significant secondary front.
Prominent Texas Democrat quoted attacking the map as a Trump-driven power grab.
Republican co-sponsor of the Texas map and key defender of the redraw in the House vote.
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