By Bo Tefu, California Black Media
Gov. Gavin Newsom says California won’t “sit idle” as Republican-led states like Texas manipulate congressional maps to entrench power — even if that means rethinking California’s own redistricting rules.
“We’re not going to play by a different set of rules anymore,” Newsom said last week, after Texas Republicans approved new congressional maps in a special session pushed by President Trump. He called the move a “five-alarm fire for democracy” and signaled that California may need to respond in kind to help Democrats reclaim control of the U.S. House.
The governor’s office confirmed that four legal and political options are under review, including a 2026 ballot measure that would dismantle the state’s independent redistricting commission and return the power to draw political maps to the Legislature. California voters created the commission in 2008 to insulate the process from partisan influence.
The idea, still in exploratory stages, has sparked sharp backlash from California Republicans, who accuse Newsom and state Democrats of trying to upend a fair system for political gain.
“We win elections by a war of ideas, not by manipulating the lines,” said Assembly Republican Leader Heath Flora (R-Ripon). “This could cost everyone a lot of money and destroy voter trust.”
Other GOP leaders warn the proposal could unravel nearly two decades of bipartisan reform and tarnish Democrats’ credibility on voting rights. They argue that responding to Texas by undermining California’s own democratic safeguards sends the wrong message.
Newsom, however, insists California can’t be passive while other states exploit partisan redistricting to tilt national power. He noted that the state’s independent system was created under different political conditions and may no longer serve California’s strategic interests.
“This could cost everyone a lot of money and destroy voter trust,” he said.
Still, critics from both parties remain skeptical that California voters — who overwhelmingly approved the redistricting commission — would back a return to lawmaker-controlled mapmaking. Newsom has not ruled out putting the issue before voters in 2026.
As of publishing time, the Texas Legislature had not officially approved the redrawn electoral maps, and Gov. Greg Abott had not signed them into law.
The redistricting debate comes at a critical moment, as both parties aim to lock down control of the U.S. House. Any changes to California’s maps could reshape the national political landscape for years to come.