Republican lawmakers in North Carolina have approved revised congressional district boundaries aimed at strengthening the party’s position in the U.S. House of Representatives ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. The move follows calls from Donald Trump for Republican-controlled states to consider redistricting strategies that could help preserve the GOP’s narrow majority in Congress. Under North Carolina law, Governor Josh Stein does not possess veto authority over congressional maps, meaning the plan could take effect unless challenged successfully in court.
The updated map builds upon district lines drawn after the 2020 census and reflects broader efforts by Republican-led legislatures to revisit congressional boundaries outside the traditional once-per-decade redistricting cycle. North Carolina, a politically competitive state with closely divided voters, sent 10 Republicans and four Democrats to the U.S. House following the 2024 elections. Supporters of the new map argue that shifting population patterns and legal developments justify adjustments, while critics contend that the changes are designed primarily to provide partisan advantages.
Similar efforts have emerged in several other states. In Texas, Republican lawmakers introduced proposals intended to reshape districts and potentially increase GOP representation. Legal rulings and demographic changes have played a role in the debate, with state officials citing compliance with voting laws and population shifts as reasons for reconsidering district boundaries. Other Republican-controlled states, including Ohio, Kansas, and Indiana, have also discussed or pursued mid-cycle adjustments, reviving a strategy that has historical precedent, including Texas’ high-profile redistricting efforts in 2003 under former Governor Rick Perry.
Democrats have criticized these initiatives as examples of partisan gerrymandering, arguing that they undermine fair representation and weaken electoral competition. Republicans, however, counter that Democratic-controlled states have long drawn maps favorable to their own interests. They point to states such as Illinois and Maryland, where district configurations have frequently been challenged by opponents as benefiting Democratic candidates. As both parties continue to battle over congressional boundaries, the debate underscores how redistricting remains one of the most powerful—and controversial—tools influencing the balance of political power in the United States.