US Supreme Court: Texas’ newest congressional map stands, nullifying racial gerrymandering claims

The court issued a decision Monday morning allowing Texas to use the controversial congressional maps that were drawn last summer. The order reverses a lower court ruling that could have led to the maps being thrown out.

By Blaise Gainey, The Texas NewsroomApril 27, 2026 11:47 am,

From The Texas Newsroom:

When Gov. Greg Abbott approved the state’s new congressional map last August, the idea was that it would help Republicans pick up five additional seats in Congress. In November, a district court threw out the map over allegations of racial gerrymandering.

The case made its way to the U.S. Supreme Court, and on Monday the justices issued their decision, reversing the district court’s ruling and allowing the maps to be used until at least 2030. (Congressional maps are typically redrawn with new census data, and the next batch will drop in 2030.)

“The Supreme Court did not protect the Constitution today,” Rep. Gene Wu, the state House Minority Leader, said in a statement Monday. “It protected Greg Abbott’s racist map and gave Donald Trump exactly what he demanded from Texas Republicans.”

Abbott responded to Wu’s statement on X: “Cry harder.”

The backstory

Last year the state legislature opted to redistrict outside of a census year, an unusual idea that came from President Donald Trump over fears that Republicans would lose the U.S. House in 2026

Thousands of people protested on the Texas State Capitol lawn, even joining legislative hearings to let the state know they did not want the maps redrawn. State Republicans moved forward with the redraw, and Democrats responded by breaking quorum in an attempt to delay the map’s passage.

In the meantime, several states, including California, began their own redistricting process to try and give Democrats or Republicans an advantage in the upcoming midterm elections.

A spokesperson for Gov. Abbott told The Texas Newsroom, “Abbott is pleased that the Supreme Court reversed a poorly reasoned decision that halted Texas’ new congressional maps. The right legal answer was obvious. These maps better represent our constituents and allow more Texans to vote for the candidate of their choice. This is a victory for Texas voters, for common sense, and for the U.S. Constitution.”

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