North Carolina’s Republican-led legislature has passed a new congressional map expected to secure at least one additional GOP seat in the U.S. House. The change aligns with former President Donald Trump’s push for mid-decade redistricting aimed at strengthening the party’s narrow majority before the 2026 midterm elections. Democratic Gov. Josh Stein cannot veto the plan, leaving court challenges as the only potential barrier to implementation.
The revised map builds on the GOP-drawn 2023 boundaries that gave Republicans 10 of North Carolina’s 14 congressional seats, despite the state’s nearly even partisan split. This marks another example of Republican-controlled legislatures reshaping political maps mid-decade, following similar actions in Texas and Missouri.
In Texas, Republicans introduced a new map in mid-2025 to flip several Democratic-held seats after court rulings reopened redistricting opportunities. Officials cited population changes and compliance with voting laws, though critics labeled it a partisan strategy. The plan has drawn scrutiny from the U.S. Department of Justice but remains on course for approval.
Other Republican-majority states — including Ohio, Kansas, and Indiana — are also pursuing mid-cycle redraws, echoing tactics first used in Texas in 2003 under Gov. Rick Perry to cement GOP dominance. Democrats have condemned these moves as gerrymandering, but Republicans argue that Democrats in blue states have long engaged in similar practices.
Examples include Illinois and Maryland, where Democrats have drawn maps favoring their candidates, and New York, where a court blocked an attempted partisan gerrymander in 2022. Meanwhile, California Democrats are responding with Proposition 50, a 2025 ballot measure allowing temporary redistricting to counter Republican gains.
With more state legislatures under GOP control, Republicans are positioned to gain additional House seats. These nationwide redistricting battles could prove decisive for the 2026 midterms, shaping party control and testing the fairness of U.S. elections.