The Virginia Supreme Court has invalidated a redistricting map supported by Democrats, marking a significant triumph for Republicans as the midterm elections loom.
In a recent move, Virginia voters expressed their disapproval of former President Donald Trump’s influence on Congressional maps. They endorsed a redistricting proposal poised to potentially eliminate almost all Republican seats in the state, save for one.
By a narrow margin, voters passed a constitutional amendment aimed at reshaping Virginia’s congressional districts to strongly benefit Democrats, potentially shifting the state’s political landscape to a 10-to-1 Democratic advantage from its previous swing state status.
This initiative, supported by prominent Democrats, including former President Barack Obama, was a counteraction to Trump’s previous call for Texas Republicans to gerrymander districts in a bid to maintain GOP control of the House of Representatives.
However, on Friday, the Virginia Supreme Court declared the newly proposed map “null and void,” citing procedural errors by the Democratic-controlled legislature in placing the amendment on the ballot.
Former President Trump hailed the court’s decision as a “huge win” against what he described as the Democrats’ “horrible gerrymander,” sharing his thoughts on the social media platform Truth Social.
Midterm elections are generally unfavorable to the President’s party – and Republicans already have a razor-thin majority in the House.
If the Democrats take back control, there’s the likelihood of investigations and impeachment.
Trump’s Texas demand set off an unusual mid-decade redistricting frenzy.
Fresh maps in Missouri, North Carolina, and Ohio are expected to help Republicans.
On Tuesday, Virginians headed to the polls to decide if they would allow the Democrats to redistrict their US House districts in order to offset Republican redistricting efforts in Texas and several other states
A person votes in a Virginia redistricting referendum on Tuesday that could help Democrats win the House of Representatives in November
California Governor Gavin Newsom, a likely 2028 White House contender, spearheaded Proposition 50, which was on the ballot in California in November and overwhelmingly passed.
Democrats believe they can pick up five seats from the redrawn California districts and one more seat due to a court-ordered redistricting in Utah.
In Virginia, Democrats currently occupy six of the commonwealth’s 11 US House seats.
The new map could give Democrats 10 out of 11.
It does that by branching several more Congressional districts out of Washington, DC’s liberal-leaning suburbs, diluting the state’s rural, Republican vote.
Virginia Republicans have been up in arms about the effort.
And they’ve expressed disgust at the commonwealth’s Democratic Governor Abigail Spanberger for campaigning as a moderate during her 2025 race but coming out in support of the proposed constitutional amendment.
Spanberger previously supported the 2020 effort to have Virginia’s districts drawn by a bipartisan commission and has generally expressed opposition against gerrymandering.
A poster on the Virginia redistricting effort in which voters have to vote ‘yes’ for a proposed constitutional amendment that would take redistricting duties away from a bipartisan commission

‘I Voted’ stickers are captured at a polling place Tuesday in Alexandria, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, DC. The new Democratic-leaning districts cut into the liberal DC suburbs to dilute the rural, Republican Virginia vote
While Democratic figures like Obama and Spanberger have been engaged, Trump – who can travel to Virginia by motorcade from the White House in about 10 minutes – didn’t rally around the issue.
Instead, he and House Speaker Mike Johnson participated in a ‘tele-rally’ on Monday, the night before the vote, out of view from the press.
The President also didn’t wholeheartedly back Spanberger’s opponent in the lead-up to the November off-year Virginia gubernatorial election, never endorsing GOP Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears.
On Monday, former Trump White House press secretary Sean Spicer, who lives in Northern Virginia, bemoaned the missed opportunity as he commented on the President’s decision to hold a last-minute ‘tele-rally.’
‘A few million of early money to get the grassroots engaged would have saved 4 seats – which very well could be the difference between keeping and losing the House majority,’ Spicer said.















