North Carolina Republicans complete redistricting of U.S. House districts that could threaten Rep. Don Davis’ re-election and help GOP gain one more seat.
North Carolina Republican legislative leaders completed their remapping of the state’s U.S. House districts on Wednesday, intent on picking up one more seat to help President Donald Trump’s efforts to retain GOP control of Congress in next year’s midterm elections.
The new boundaries approved by the state House could thwart the re-election of Democratic U.S. Rep. Don Davis, who represents more than 20 northeastern counties. The state Senate already approved the plan in a party-line vote on Tuesday.
Republicans hold majorities in both General Assembly chambers, and Democratic Gov. Josh Stein is unable under state law to use his veto stamp on redistricting maps. So the GOP’s proposal can now be implemented unless likely litigation by Democrats or voting rights advocates stops it. Candidate filing for 2026 is scheduled to begin Dec. 1.
Republican lawmakers made the intent of their proposed changes crystal clear — it’s an attempt to satisfy Trump’s call for GOP-led states to secure more seats for the party nationwide, so that Congress can continue advancing his agenda. Democrats have responded with rival moves in blue states. A president’s party historically loses seats in midterm elections, and Democrats currently need just three more seats to flip House control.
« The new congressional map improves Republican political strength in eastern North Carolina and will bring in an additional Republican seat to North Carolina’s congressional delegation », GOP Rep.
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USA — Political Trump-backed North Carolina House map approved by lawmakers as Republicans aim to...