Sacramento, California – California officials are happy with a ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court that keeps the state’s newly drawn congressional districts in place. This ends a legal challenge initiated by California Republicans and supported by the U.S. Department of Justice during the Trump administration.
There was no disagreement with the court’s decision, and there was no written explanation. The justices turned down the Republicans’ bid to stop the redistricting plan in a short, one-sentence order.
The outcome lets California’s new political map stay as originally intended. Democratic leaders argue this plan matches what voters want and is part of a larger national discussion about how congressional borders should be set.
Governor Gavin Newsom said the decision was part of a bigger political fight over redistricting in other states. He brought up things that former President Donald Trump had said before, when he said that Republicans should get more congressional seats in Texas. Newsom says the push started a bigger fight over district lines, which California won in court and hopes to win again at the polls.
“Donald Trump said he had the right to five more seats in Congress in Texas.” He initiated this fight over redistricting. “He’s lost, and he’ll lose again in November,” Gov. Newsom added.
Attorney General Rob Bonta described the decision as a good thing for both the state and the country’s democracy. He stated that Texas Republicans started their journey to the Supreme Court when Trump told them to draw new maps.
In response, officials in California pushed Proposition 50 forward and put it in front of voters, who overwhelmingly supported it. Bonta said that his agency has successfully defended the initiative in court several times and is ready to do so again if additional challenges come up.
The Supreme Court’s decision comes after a December ruling that allowed a Texas redistricting plan that favored Republicans to go ahead. California Democrats say that the most recent decision brings about a sense of balance, especially as redistricting battles continue to rage on across the country and both major parties are trying to get more congressional representation.
The justices did not explain their reasoning, but the immediate result is clear: California’s congressional map will stay the same. The result strengthens the belief of state leaders who backed the proposal that people, not courts or pressure from other states, should decide how representation is structured.
The bigger national argument about redistricting is not likely to go away. California officials said that for now, the Supreme Court’s ruling puts an end to this chapter and supports the state’s way of drawing its congressional districts.