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Leaders are considering a mid-cycle congressional redistricting — a rare move just two years after their last map was struck down.
WASHINGTON — Maryland Democrats are weighing whether to redraw the state’s congressional map — even though the last redistricting fight wrapped up just two years ago.
The idea: push back against Republican-led states like Texas that are redrawing districts to add more GOP seats.
It’s a familiar move after Democratic-led states like California responded in kind.
Governor Wes Moore hinted at the move on CBS’s Face the Nation earlier this month. Asked if Democrats in Annapolis are considering new lines, Moore said:
“When I say all options are on the table, all options are on the table… yeah, we’re actively looking at it.”
This week, State Senator Clarence Lam filed the first bill request that could open the door to a new Maryland map ahead of the 2026 midterms. Lam says Maryland needs to be ready if other states tilt the playing field.
“We’re hoping this doesn’t have to happen, but we’re also putting them on notice: if you do this, we’re going to neutralize your efforts too,” he said.
Texas Republicans just approved — and Governor Greg Abbott signed — a mid-decade congressional map that could add as many as five GOP-leaning seats. Lawsuits were filed almost immediately.
In California, Democrats are going the opposite direction: Governor Gavin Newsom has set a November ballot measure that would lock in a revised map projected to add five Democratic-leaning seats.
Maryland Democrats argue that if states on both sides are redrawing maps mid-cycle, the Old Line State shouldn’t sit still.
What’s at stake in Maryland
Back in 2000, Maryland’s U.S. House delegation was split evenly — four Republicans and four Democrats. Today, only Rep. Andy Harris (R-1) remains.
Harris told WUSA9 that another redraw would be blatant partisanship:
“The most partisan thing you could do is gerrymander a state that has had two Republican governors out of the last four into a state that can’t send a Republican to Congress. If the Democrats want to roll the dice, let them roll the dice.”
House Minority Leader Jason Buckel echoed that warning, arguing new lines could disenfranchise voters and backfire:
“It produces the type of feelings that lead to the system breaking down, because [voters] are led to believe that they don’t matter.”
For now, Lam’s proposal is only at the bill request stage. Actual maps haven’t been released. Any new lines would need approval from the General Assembly and Governor Moore — and would almost certainly be challenged in court.
Maryland’s last map, approved in 2021, was struck down by a state judge in 2022 as an “extreme partisan gerrymander.” Lawmakers were forced to pass a less aggressive version.
That history makes any new effort risky — but Democrats say with other states pressing their advantage, Maryland can’t afford to be caught flat-footed.
The earliest the legislature could take up the bill is January 2026, unless Moore calls a special session.
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