AUSTIN (Nexstar) — A proposed congressional map filed in the Texas House of Representatives appears to fulfill the wishes of President Donald Trump — giving Republicans an edge to pick up an additional five seats in the midterms.
State Rep. Todd Hunter, R – Corpus Christi, filed the proposed map on Wednesday morning in House Bill 4. It is not the official map and could change through the redistricting process in the Capitol. The map has been referred to the House select committee on congressional redistricting with a hearing scheduled on Friday at 10 a.m.
The proposal moves some Democratic incumbents out of their current districts and places them in another district either in competition with a Republican member or in competition with someone in their own party. However, the U.S. Constitution said that a candidate for Congress must live in that state, but not necessarily in the district they are running for.
The proposed map appears to target congressional members in Austin, Dallas, south Texas and Houston. For example, parts of district 35, held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Greg Casar, has been merged with district 37. That seat is currently held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett.
“Merging the 35th and the 37th districts is illegal voter suppression of Black and Latino Central Texans,” Casar said on social media Wednesday morning. “By merging our Central Texas districts, Trump wants to commit yet another crime— this time, against Texas voters and against The Voting Rights Act.”
According to 2024 results, President Trump would have won 30 districts under the proposed map. President Trump told reporters earlier this month the goal of redistricting is to pick up five new seats for Republicans in Texas.
Possible subpoena vote on Wednesday
In the higher chamber of the Texas Capitol, the Senate’s select committee on congressional redistricting is expected to hold a formal hearing in order to vote on whether or not to subpoena a Department of Justice official to testify.
The official, Harmeet Dhillon, wrote a letter to a couple of Texas leaders saying there were concerns of racial gerrymandering in four of the state’s congressional districts. Gov. Greg Abbott used that letter as reasoning to place redistricting on the special session agenda.
The nine-member committee would have to approve a subpoena by two-thirds vote.
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