Newsom Pushes California Mid-Decade Redistricting Plan

Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday called on California lawmakers to approve a November ballot measure that would allow them to redraw the state’s congressional map to fight back against Republicans’ mid-decade redistricting plans in Texas and elsewhere.

Newsom’s proposal, called the “Election Rigging Response Act,” would pave the way for California Democrats to circumvent the independent commission that controls the map-drawing process in the state and pass new congressional lines that would be more favorable to their party.

Republicans in Texas, with President Donald Trump’s backing, are pursuing a new congressional map that would allow them to gain up to five more House seats.

“It’s not complicated. We’re doing this in reaction to a president of the United States that called a sitting governor of the state of Texas and said, ‘Find me five seats,'” Newsom said. “We’re doing it in reaction to that act. We’re doing it mindful of our higher angels and better angels. We’re doing it mindful that we want to model better behavior, as we’ve been doing for 15 years in the state of California with our independent redistricting commission. But we cannot unilaterally disarm.”

California Democrats need approval from others in to sidestep the state’s independent redistricting commission, and the clock is ticking for lawmakers to approve a ballot initiative for this year’s Nov. 4 election. If the measure passes, it would allow new maps to be enacted in time for the 2026 midterm elections.

Several other Democratic leaders in California appeared alongside Newsom at an event Thursday in Los Angeles, framing their mid-decade redistricting effort as a broader rebuke of Trump and the actions of his administration.

Sara Sadhwani, a member of California’s redistricting commission who spoke at Thursday’s event, warned that Border Patrol agents were outside the venue where the rally was taking place and making arrests.

Sadhwani said Trump was “turning our cities into police states.”

“We are watching executive overreach that is no doubt making our Founding Fathers turn over in their graves,” she said.

Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin pushed back against Democrats’ criticism of the Border Patrol agents’ presence.

“Our law enforcement operations are about enforcing the law—not about Gavin Newsom,” McLaughlin wrote on X. “@CBP patrols all areas of Los Angeles every day with over 40 teams on the ground to make LA safe.”

California’s move is the next salvo in what has become a nationwide tit-for-tat between Republican- and Democratic-led states in response to a plan to redraw the congressional lines in Texas to pad the GOP’s majority in the U.S. House.

Last month, after Trump’s public urging, Abbott called the GOP-controlled Texas Legislature in for a special session that including a rare mid-decade redrawing of the congressional map outside the typical, once-a-decade cycle.

Newsom told reporters after the rally that the California Legislature would formally launch the effort Monday through a series of bills.

“We anticipate the Legislature will move quickly and by the end of next week they will complete that work,” he said.

He added that the proposed new maps would appear over the next few days and that he expected they would “neuter and neutralize” efforts in Texas. Democrats currently represent 43 of California’s 52 House districts.

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