Category : Search result: Utah redistricting


Supreme Court Approves Texas Map, Aiding Trump's GOP

The US Supreme Court has ruled Texas can use a Republican-friendly congressional map, a major win for Donald Trump's efforts to secure the House. Read the latest on this pivotal political battle.

GOP Senator Opposes Redistricting After Trump's Slur

An Indiana state senator, father to a child with Down syndrome, vows to vote against partisan redistricting after Donald Trump used an ableist slur. His stand highlights the political consequences of language.

Judges allow Republican-drawn NC congressional map

A federal panel permits North Carolina's new GOP-drawn congressional map, targeting the state's sole swing district. Explore the implications for the 2026 elections and US House control.

Supreme Court Blocks Texas Redistricting Decision

US Supreme Court temporarily halts ruling that found Texas congressional map likely racially biased. Justice Alito's order preserves Republican-friendly districts pending full review.

Judge's fiery dissent in Texas redistricting case

A US federal judge issued a scathing 104-page dissent, attacking a colleague's ruling on Texas's congressional map and repeatedly mentioning George Soros. The case now heads to the Supreme Court.

Workers sue ex-Trump ally over trafficking raid

Employees at Utah landscape company file federal lawsuit against former attorney general Sean Reyes, alleging politically motivated human-trafficking raid caused severe financial harm. Read the full investigation.

California's New Political Maps Spark Power Struggle

California's latest congressional redistricting proposal threatens to reshape the state's political landscape, putting Democratic strongholds at risk and setting the stage for an intense 2026 battle for House control.

US Redistricting: How New Maps Reshape Politics

The controversial redrawing of congressional districts across the United States threatens to dramatically alter the political landscape, with both parties battling for advantage in what critics call 'gerrymandering at its most extreme'.

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