Texas state lawmakers gathered at the University of Houston on Saturday to hear public testimony on Texas’ mid-decade round of congressional redistricting. Much of the attention focused on the congressional district where the hearing took place, Texas’ 18th, which has been vacant most of the past year.
President Donald Trump has said he wants Texas to redistrict so the GOP can pick up five congressional seats next year. Republican state lawmakers have yet to unveil any proposed map. That they have yet to do so was a major point of contention at Saturday’s hearings, where many witnesses questioned why the committee was taking testimony when no one could say what boundaries were being proposed. State Rep. Cody Vasut (R-Angleton), the committee chair, repeatedly said the committee was acting at the behest of Gov. Greg Abbott, who had put congressional redistricting on the special session call.
The hearings opened with a group of Democratic members of Congress speaking up to oppose redistricting, including U.S. Reps. Sylvia Garcia (TX-29), Lizzie Fletcher (TX-7), Jasmine Crockett (TX-30), and Al Green (TX-9) – as well as former Democratic U.S. Rep. Nick Lampson.
Garcia and Green represent two of the four congressional districts that were targeted for redrawing in a letter to Abbot from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division. The letter alleged that four Texas congressional districts, three of which are represented by people of color and all of which contained majority non-white voting populations, amounted to “unconstitutional racial gerrymanders.”












