The Texas State Legislature’s special session opens at noon Monday. While disaster recovery and preparedness are at the top of many Texans’ minds, a rare mid-decade round of congressional redistricting will take up much of lawmakers’ attention over the next month.
Texans were still absorbing the shock of the deadly Hill Country flood when Gov. Greg Abbott proclaimed the agenda for the special session. Congressional redistricting sat near the bottom of a list of 18 priorities.
“This is like you’re using one of the absolute worst tragedies that has hit Texas families in a long time, since like Uvalde, and use that to give yourself a political advantage. What kind of craven, disgusting political maneuver is that?” said state Rep. Gene Wu (D-Houston), who heads the Texas House Democratic Caucus.

Texas state Rep. Gene Wu. Screenshot / Texas House of Representatives
‘Unconstitutional racial gerrymanders’
Abbott’s move followed intense pressure from President Donald Trump, culminating in a letter to Abbott from the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). The letter identified four congressional districts – representing communities in which Black and/or Latino residents make up a majority.
U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York), speaking at a press conference flanked by other Democratic congressional leaders and members of the Texas Democratic congressional delegation, blasted Trump for contributing to the Hill Country disaster by firing hundreds of critical employees from the National Weather Service.
“But instead of addressing the serious crisis that has affected tens of thousands of lives in unthinkable ways, Donald Trump, House Republicans here in Washington, and Governor Abbott are conspiring to rig the Texas congressional map as part of an effort to disenfranchise millions of people in Texas,” Jeffries said.












