Sacramento, CA — California Governor Gavin Newsom issued a sharp warning to President Donald Trump over Republican-led redistricting efforts in Texas, but the move quickly drew fierce pushback and left Newsom facing political backlash of his own.
In a letter sent Monday, Newsom threatened to push for a redrawing of congressional maps in California if Texas Republicans move forward with their plan to eliminate several Democrat-held districts ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
“If you will not stand down, I will be forced to lead an effort to redraw the maps in California to offset the rigging of maps in red states,” Newsom warned. He accused Trump and Texas Republicans of “playing with fire” and risking “the destabilization of our democracy.”
The Texas Fight
At the center of the clash are new mid-decade redistricting maps championed by Texas Republicans. If approved, analysts say the changes could cut out as many as five Democratic-held congressional seats.
Republicans argue the move simply mirrors tactics long used by Democrats in states like California and Illinois. They claim the maps would balance decades of political maneuvering that left GOP voters underrepresented in heavily Democratic states.
The redistricting effort in Texas has already sparked chaos. Dozens of Democratic lawmakers abandoned their seats, fleeing the state to block a quorum in the legislature. Republicans slammed the walkout as a betrayal, noting that Texans recovering from recent storms are being denied critical relief while lawmakers remain absent.
Texas Governor Greg Abbott vowed consequences for the defectors, pledging they would be arrested upon returning to the state and forced back to the Capitol to restore a quorum.
California’s Countermove
Newsom’s threat to redraw California’s maps highlights just how far Democrats are willing to go in retaliation. However, unlike Texas, California’s congressional districts are drawn by an independent redistricting commission. To override those maps, Democrats would likely need voter approval — a steep challenge even in the deep-blue state.
Newsom’s position drew criticism not only from Republicans but also from some Democrats who argued that threatening to politicize California’s commission undercuts the very principles of fairness and transparency that Democrats have promoted.
“If California tries to gerrymander five more districts, listen, Texas has the ability to eliminate ten Democrats in our state,” Abbott said in response. “We can play that game more than they can because they have fewer Republican districts in their states.”
Legal Battles Heat Up
Meanwhile, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit with the state Supreme Court, seeking to have 13 Democratic House seats declared vacant due to the prolonged absences of lawmakers.
“The rogue Democrat legislators who fled the state have abandoned their duties, leaving their seats vacant,” Paxton argued in a press release. “These cowards deliberately sabotaged the constitutional process and violated the oath they swore to uphold.”
He added that Texas “cannot be held hostage by runaway legislators,” calling their actions an unlawful rebellion against the state’s constitution.
High Stakes for 2026
With Democrats only three seats shy of reclaiming a House majority, both parties are treating redistricting battles as a matter of survival. Only a few dozen congressional districts nationwide remain truly competitive, raising the stakes of every line drawn on a map.
For Trump, the Texas maps could secure Republican dominance in the House for years to come. For Newsom, California’s response could either energize his party’s base or expose him to charges of hypocrisy if he moves to override the state’s independent system.
Either way, the showdown underscores how redistricting — once a bureaucratic process — has become a central battlefield in America’s political wars.