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Tracking states’ unprecedented redistricting efforts

<i>Photo Illustration by Alberto Mier/CNN via CNN Newsource</i><br/>Redistricting
<i>Photo Illustration by Alberto Mier/CNN via CNN Newsource</i><br/>Redistricting

By Amy O’Kruk, Ethan Cohen, Renée Rigdon, Fredreka Schouten, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump and Republicans have launched an unprecedented effort to redraw state congressional maps to help protect the party’s narrow majority in the House ahead of the midterm elections in November.

Democrats have responded with redistricting efforts of their own, setting off a series of fights across the country — including in the courts — which will shape the midterm landscape and help determine control of Congress.

Most recently, Democrats in the Virginia legislature set up a statewide vote for as soon as April that could allow them to draw a new map and potentially pick up as many as four Republican seats.

CNN is tracking new maps and will continue to update with new state developments.

The US Supreme Court stayed a lower court’s ruling that had blocked Texas from using a map that would create up to five new Republican-friendly seats. The ruling allows Texas to use the new map in the midterm elections.

Redistricting, or the process of redrawing congressional district boundaries, typically takes place just once a decade, as states respond to updated population counts after the decennial census.

But with a historically tight House of Representatives, redistricting has become a critical tactic to shaping the midterm races.

The redistricting process is different in every state. In some places, state legislators can redraw the map on their own, and all that’s needed is the political will. In other states, the redraw might require changing the constitution, a lengthier process which often involves a direct vote of the people.

Overall, Republicans have more opportunities to gain seats through new maps than Democrats do. Republicans have full control of government in more states and many Democratic states have ceded the map-drawing power to independent commissions, moves some of them are now trying to reverse.

Six out of the nine House members targeted by Republican-enacted maps across the country are Black or Latino.

2025 has already featured an unprecedented level of politically motivated mid-decade redistricting, but there could be even more in store. In many states, legal challenges aim to overturn existing maps. And at the Supreme Court, the justices may be poised to strike down key parts of the landmark Voting Rights Act, a decision which would open the floodgates to even more aggressive maps and imperil more seats held by people of color.

This story has been updated with additional information

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—CNN’s Molly English, Arit John and Dianne Gallagher contributed to this report. Photo Illustration by Alberto Mier/CNN/@SenatorBerger via X/California and Missouri state legislatures

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