NEED TO KNOW
- Virginia voters decide Tuesday whether Democrats can redraw the map
- Trump held a tele-rally Monday urging voters to reject the amendment
- The proposed map would give Democrats 10 of 11 congressional seats
RICHMOND, VA (TDR) — Virginia voters are deciding Tuesday whether to scrap their bipartisan redistricting commission — a fight President Donald Trump began last summer by pushing Republican states to redraw their own maps and is now trying to stop in a state Democrats control.
The big picture: Mid-decade redistricting was virtually unheard of before Trump pushed Texas Republicans to do it in 2025. Every map redraw since traces back to that single decision.
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- Texas, Missouri, and North Carolina redrew maps for GOP gains
- California countered with five Democratic pickups under Gov. Gavin Newsom
- Virginia Democrats would gain up to four House seats if the amendment passes
Why it matters: The U.S. House majority is separated by three seats. Virginia's referendum could decide which party controls federal spending and committee power through 2028.
- A Democratic House would check Trump's second-term agenda
- Virginia voters approved the current bipartisan commission by 65% in 2020
Driving the news: Trump joined House Speaker Mike Johnson on a Monday tele-rally urging "just vote no," and called into the John Fredericks radio show the same night.
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- Trump called the Democratic map "unfair" and Gov. Abigail Spanberger "liberal extremist"
- He posted "VOTE NO TO SAVE YOUR COUNTRY" on Truth Social
- Republicans filed last-minute voter ID challenges in Fairfax County
- Polling shows the race a toss-up despite Democrats' spending advantage
What they're saying: Both campaigns are framing the vote as defensive — each against the other side's power grab.
- Donald Trump, on the John Fredericks show — "It's terrible. It is true, John, nobody's ever seen anything like it. It's so unfair."
- Dan Gottlieb, Vote Yes communications director — "Trump and his MAGA allies are trying to rig the 2026 midterms here in Virginia just like they have in other states."
- Jason Miyares, former Virginia AG, Republican — called the measure "a measure to silence and disenfranchise the voices of millions of Virginians"
Yes, but: The Democratic map is itself a gerrymander. A 10-1 split in a state Kamala Harris won by 6 points does not reflect Virginia's political geography — it reflects the majority's willingness to use the same tools it condemned.
- Spanberger said in 2019 that "gerrymandering is detrimental to our democracy"
- 48% of Virginians polled called the 10-1 map unfair representation
- The ballot question asks if the amendment would "restore fairness" — language critics call leading
Between the lines: Neither side is defending a principle — both are defending a position. Democrats who fought for the 2020 commission are now dismantling it because Republicans built a national advantage first. A Page County billboard quotes Trump's own "take over the voting" line back at him.
- The 2020 commission was a reform Democrats championed
- "Vote Yes" explicitly frames the map as anti-Trump insurance
- Courts cleared the referendum but reserved final rulings for after the vote
What's next:
- Polls close at 7 p.m. ET Tuesday
- Virginia Supreme Court will hear post-election legal challenges
- If passed, the new map takes effect for November's midterms
When both sides argue the other started it, does "they did it first" justify anything — or does it just end the argument everyone used to pretend to have?
Sources
This report was compiled using information from NBC News, CBS News, NPR, and The Washington Examiner.
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