Trump's redistricting fight mushrooms with Vance in Indiana and Florida
joining the fray
[August 08, 2025]
By BILL BARROW, ISABELLA VOLMERT and TOM MURPHY
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana (AP) — As President Donald Trump ramps up pressure
on Republican-run states to redraw congressional boundaries, he has
dispatched Vice President JD Vance to Indiana and called for a new
federal census — moves reflecting his intent to maximize the GOP's
partisan advantages in coming elections.
Separately, a top Republican leader in Florida announced plans Thursday
to begin redistricting efforts in the president's adopted home state.
And U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said FBI Director Kash Patel had
granted his request for the agency to get involved in corralling Texas
Democratic lawmakers who left the state to deny the Republican majority
a quorum necessary to vote on a U.S. House redistricting plan at the
forefront of Trump's initiative.
The FBI has not detailed what role it might attempt to play. Indiana
Gov. Mike Braun was mum after a private Thursday morning session with
Vance. And Florida's plans are in their opening phase.
The developments reflect rising intensity in a fight that began in
GOP-dominated Texas, spread to Democratic-run California and now seems
to be mushrooming. The dynamics could embroil the 2026 midterm campaign
in legislative and court battles testing Trump's power over the
Republican Party, Democrats' ability to mount opposition and the
durability of the U.S. system of federalism that balances power between
Washington and individual states.
Texas has been the epicenter of Trump's push to gerrymander
congressional maps to shore up Republicans' narrow House majority in
2026. At a time when competitive House districts number just several
dozen, Democrats are three seats short of a House majority under the
current maps. Trump wants five more seats out of Texas to potentially
avoid a repeat of the 2018 midterms, when Democrats reclaimed the House
and proceeded to thwart his agenda and impeach him twice.

Braun has seemingly affirmed Democrats’ warnings that Texas is a test
case for the GOP to scale nationally. “It looks like it’s going to
happen across many Republican states,” he told reporters ahead of
Vance's visit, though he's made no promises about his own state.
Vance holds private meetings in Indianapolis
Vance met privately with Braun and others at the Indiana Capitol on
Thursday.
Afterward, Braun sidestepped redistricting — contrasting Texas Gov. Greg
Abbott's enthusiastic embrace of Trump's demands. “We discussed a number
of issues, and I was pleased to highlight some of the great things
happening in Indiana,” Braun said via his official social media account.
Around 100 people protested at the Capitol.
“I’m 75, and I never, never thought I had to worry about our democracy
being taken apart from the inside,” said Linda Linn of Indianapolis, as
she held a sign warning Braun not to disenfranchise her.
Braun would have to call a special session to start the redistricting
process, but lawmakers have sole power to draw new maps.
Republican U.S. representatives outnumber Democrats in Indiana 7-2,
limiting possibilities of squeezing out another seat.
While Braun is a staunch Trump ally in a state the president won by 19
percentage points in 2024, Indiana lawmakers have avoided the national
spotlight in recent years — especially after a 2022 special session that
yielded a strict abortion ban. Former Vice President Mike Pence, a past
Indiana governor, also holds sway over many state lawmakers and has a
more measured approach to partisan politics than Trump.
Indiana's Republican legislative leaders praised existing boundaries
after adopting them four years ago. “I believe these maps reflect
feedback from the public and will serve Hoosiers well for the next
decade,” Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray said at the time.
Rep. André Carson, one of two Indiana Democrats in the U.S. House, said
he has not seen any alternate maps, calling them theoretical for now.
“If Republicans get too cute, they may hurt themselves,” he warned.
Still, Republicans hold a supermajority in the General Assembly, meaning
Democrats could not thwart a special session by refusing to attend, as
Texas Democrats are doing.
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Sen Shelli Yoder, D-Bloomington, speaks at a rally protesting
redistricting at the Statehouse in Indianapolis, Thursday, Aug. 7,
2025. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy). party affiliation

“Statehouse Dems will do everything within our power to work with
Hoosiers to make sure the checks and balances remain and we remain to be
the firewall not just for Indiana but for the entire country,” said
state Senate minority leader Shelli Yoder, though she acknowledged there
is little the party could do to stop redistricting if Republicans choose
to please Trump.
The Census Bureau and Florida are now in the mix
Trump already is flouting U.S. political traditions with such a
widespread, aggressive push for mid-decade redistricting. He added
another variable with a social media post on Thursday calling for “new
and highly accurate CENSUS” that does not count U.S. residents who are
not citizens, permanent residents or otherwise legal immigrants.
He did not offer any timeline or details for such a massive undertaking,
and his post raises constitutional questions about the once-a-decade
process that apportions the U.S. House of Representatives among the
states and sets distribution formulas for nearly $3 trillion in federal
spending programs. The Constitution's 14th Amendment declares that House
seats “shall be” established based on “the whole number of persons in
each state,” and during Trump's first term, the Supreme Court
effectively blocked him from adding a citizenship question to the 2020
census.
Still, Trump has, in his second presidency, pushed the boundaries of
executive action, even amid ongoing legal disputes or court orders, and
the Census Bureau is under the direction of his Commerce Department, led
by Secretary Howard Lutnick.
In Florida, the third most populous state, state House Speaker Daniel
Perez said his chamber will take up redistricting this fall through a
special committee. State Senate leaders have not yet followed Perez's
lead. Gov. Ron DeSantis, an erstwhile Trump rival-turned-ally,
previously told the public to “stay tuned.”
Texas lawmakers still spread across other states
Pressure has intensified on Texas Democratic lawmakers — dozens of whom
remain in other states and outside the jurisdiction of civil warrants
issued by the Republican majority for their return. Besides Sen. Cornyn
trying to engage the FBI, state Attorney General Ken Paxton on Thursday
filed a new request asking an Illinois state court to rule that the
Texas warrants are enforceable in Illinois under the full faith and
credit clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Under Texas legislative rules, face $500 daily fines that exceed their
compensation and cannot be paid, legally, by their campaign accounts.
Political contributions are being used to cover some costs of their
travel, lodging and meals while they are outside the state.

Texas Democrats hope to run out the clock on a special session that
would end Aug. 19. But Abbott could call another session, increasing
prospects for an extended stalemate.
While their minority status allows them only to delay, the Texas holdout
has inspired Democrats and progressives around the country.
California's Gavin Newsom wants Democratic gerrymandering in his state
if Texas proceeds, though voters would have to bypass an independent
redistricting commission. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and New York Gov.
Kathy Hochul, both of whom have appeared alongside Texas Democrats who
relocated to their states, have also declared their intent to push new
maps if they are necessary to neutralize Republican maneuvers.
___
Barrow reported from Atlanta. Volmert reported from Lansing, Michigan.
Associated Press journalist Kate Payne contributed from Tallahassee,
Florida.
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