Shell-shocked Democrats scramble after Virginia redistricting whiplash
Key takeaways
- The decision immediately eliminates four House seats that were expected to flip to the Democrats side in the Old Dominion.
- Their options, however, are limited, given the shrinking window before the Nov. 3 elections and the dearth of blue states available for redistricting.
- Even some top Democrats are acknowledging that there s no way to sugarcoat the practical implications of Friday s ruling.
Why this matters: political developments that affect policy direction and public trust.
The decision immediately eliminates four House seats that were expected to flip to the Democrats side in the Old Dominion. And it constitutes an enormous setback to the party s efforts to counteract the Republicans redistricting push in red states around the country — an extraordinary gerrymandering war initiated by President Trump as he fights to keep GOP majorities in Congress for the final years of his second term.
Combined with the Supreme Court s decision last week to nullify a key part of the 1965 Voting Rights Act (VRA) — a decision that s set off a new hunt in a handful of GOP states to eliminate additional Democratic seats — the Virginia ruling makes it much more difficult for Democrats to win control of the House and serve as a check on Trump in his last two years.
Furious Democratic leaders are pushing back, accusing Virginia s high court of defying the will of the voters while vowing to explore all options to fight the verdict, in the words of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.).