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What Trump Has to Do With Texas Democrats Fleeing the State

A political showdown is unfolding in Texas over a contentious redistricting plan backed by President Donald Trump that could reshape several congressional districts to favor Republicans.

More than 50 Democratic members of the Texas House fled the state on Sunday in protest, relocating to blue states in an effort to deny the chamber the quorum needed to pass the proposed map. The plan, championed by Governor Greg Abbott and designed with input from the Trump Administration, aims to shift five Texas congressional seats to Republicans—a move that could strengthen the party’s narrow majority in the U.S. House ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

Republicans have defended the plan as a legal mid-cycle adjustment reflecting population growth and political trends. But Democrats and civil rights groups have described it as an aggressive gerrymander designed to entrench one-party rule and dilute minority voting power.

The confrontation has effectively frozen the Texas legislature. On Monday, Abbott said he would begin trying to remove Democratic lawmakers from office if they did not return to the state.

Here is what to know about the fight.

Why Republicans are redrawing the Texas map now

Redistricting typically occurs once per decade in each state following the census. But Texas Republicans broke that tradition last week by proposing a new map mid-decade after Trump pushed them to redraw the state’s congressional districts so that the GOP would be more likely to win more seats in the midterm elections next year. 

Currently, Republicans hold 25 of Texas’s 38 congressional seats. The new map would reshape several Democratic-held districts in major metropolitan areas like Dallas, Houston, Austin, and San Antonio, as well as in the Rio Grande Valley, a historically Democratic stronghold that has recently shown signs of shifting Republican. By adding conservative-leaning voters to these districts, Republicans aim to flip up to five seats.

“There could be some other states we’re going to get another three, or four or five in addition. Texas would be the biggest one.” Trump said in July when asked about the Texas redistricting plan. “Just a simple redrawing we pick up five seats.”

Governor Abbott has defended the redistricting as a necessary step to ensure Texans have fair representation, citing a recent ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit that challenged the protection of so-called “coalition districts” under the Voting Rights Act. The court found that these districts—where minority groups are drawn into the same district to form a majority—may not be entitled to the same safeguards as traditional majority-minority districts. Abbott and Republican lawmakers argue that this ruling necessitates a redraw of several districts to better reflect current legal standards and population changes.

Why did Texas Democrats flee the state?

By fleeing to other states, Democrats in the Texas House have effectively stalled the legislative process—at least for now—by denying Republicans the quorum needed to pass the redistricting plan. More than 50 Democrats traveled to Illinois, New York, and other Democratic strongholds, placing themselves outside Texas jurisdiction and legislative enforcement powers.

They contend that the redistricting plan violates federal voting rights protections by diluting the power of minority voters, particularly Black and Latino communities that have historically been underrepresented. They also argue that the mid-decade redrawing itself is unprecedented and undermines long-established norms designed to prevent partisan manipulation.

Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows presided over a mostly empty chamber Monday afternoon and suggested that Democrats who left could face fines or other legal consequences. Abbott has cited a nonbinding 2021 legal opinion by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton suggesting that absent lawmakers could be declared to have forfeited their seats.

“Come and take it,” the Democratic caucus said in a joint statement, invoking the revolutionary-era Texas slogan. Texas state Representative Vikki Goodwin wrote on X that she’s “willing to take the risk of being arrested, removed from office, or fined $500 a day” and framed the walkout as a larger pushback against the Trump agenda. “By trying to gain five additional Republican seats in Congress, Trump is hoping to continue implementing harmful policies after the 2026 elections. I will do everything in my power to stop the rigging of our congressional districts in Texas.”

Democratic governors in blue states—including New York’s Kathy Hochul, California’s Gavin Newsom, and Illinois’ J.B. Pritzker—have offered safe haven and political backing to the lawmakers who fled Texas. Hochul appeared with a group of them Monday in Albany and called the GOP’s redistricting effort a “modern-day stagecoach heist.”

“If Republicans are willing to rewrite the rules to give themselves an advantage, then they’re leaving us with no choice,” Hochul said. “We must do the same. You have to fight fire with fire.”

In theory, Democratic-led states could attempt their own mid-decade redraws to claw back seats—but in practice, many are constrained by independent, non-partisan redistricting commissions or state laws banning gerrymandering. New York, for example, would require a constitutional amendment to override its commission’s map. California is similarly bound, though soon after Texas Republicans unveiled their new maps, Newsom posted on social media that “California won’t sit back and watch this happen.”

Illinois, where Democrats already control 14 of 17 House seats, is one of the few blue states where lawmakers have more latitude to adjust lines—but even there, options are limited. Still, Governor Pritzker signaled a willingness to explore aggressive countermeasures. “Everything has to be on the table,” he said.

National Democrats have rallied behind the Texas lawmakers. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries traveled to Austin last week to pledge support, and Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin accused the GOP of trying to rig the system “because they know that they’re on track to lose the House majority next year.”

What happens if Texas passes a new map

Any new map will face an all-but-certain lawsuit. But it could still end up being the map Texas uses in next year’s midterm elections. That could have ripple effects nationwide, influencing the balance of power in Congress and setting the tone for increasingly aggressive redistricting battles in other states.

Currently, Republicans hold a slim 219-212 majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. The new redistricting plan in Texas aims to flip up to five Democratic-held districts, potentially making it harder for Democrats to reclaim control of the House. The Trump Administration has also put pressure on Missouri Republicans to pursue a new map that could give the GOP more seats in Congress. Ohio will redraw its congressional maps later this year, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has suggested that his state is also considering drawing new House maps.

While the walkout over the Texas maps may delay a vote, history suggests it may not prevent it. Texas Democrats staged a similar quorum break in 2021 over a controversial voting bill. They stayed away for 38 days—but when they returned, Republicans passed the bill anyway.  Similarly, Texas Republicans pursued an aggressive 2003 redistricting push by U.S. Rep. Tom Delay, a Texas Republican who was House Majority Leader at the time. Democrats fled the state twice. The effort stalled—but didn’t stop—the Republican map, which ultimately helped the GOP win control of the U.S. House in 2004. This time, Democrats may be hoping for a wave of litigation to stall the maps before the 2026 midterms.

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