2025 Indiana redistricting attempt

Unsuccessful proposal to change Indiana's congressional districts From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Between October and December 2025, Indiana lawmakers considered redrawing the state's congressional districts to eliminate Democratic representation in the U.S. House of Representatives. The push followed calls from President Donald Trump, and after other states, including Texas, California, Virginia, and Missouri, sought to gerrymander their congressional districts. The proposal was rejected in the State Senate on December 11.

Indiana's current congressional districts map since 2023
Interactive map version

In 2026, at least 5 out of the 7 Republicans who voted against redistricting lost renomination.[1]

Background

In 2025, after Texas adopted a new congressional map, California, in response, adopted their own.[2]

On October 10, 2025, Vice President JD Vance met in Indianapolis with Republican state legislators to discuss the "pros and cons" of redistricting.[3]

Proposed legislation

A bill passed by the State House sought to amend Indiana's congressional districts to foster in more Republican support. The legislation, which was passed by the House on December 5, 2025,[4] cracked Indiana's 1st and 7th districts. The 7th, which includes Indianapolis, was split between four different districts in the proposed map.[5]

More information Political affiliation, Voted for ...
December 5, 2025, vote in the State House[6]
Political affiliation Voted for Voted against No vote
Republican Party 57 12 1
Democratic Party 29 1
Total 57 41 2
Close

The proposal ran into opposition in the Republican-supermajority Senate, with over a dozen Republican Senators voicing opposition to the move ahead of the vote. In an attempt to pressure holdouts to vote in favor of redrawing the map, Trump vowed to back primary challengers to all Republicans who vote against it.[7] Independent of these actions, a number of Senators were targets of threats of violence against them ahead of the vote, including bomb threats and swatting calls.[8] The bill failed on December 11, 2025, after opposition votes came from 21 Republicans and all 10 Democrats.[9]

2025 Indiana Senate redistricting vote
  Republican Yes
  Republican No
  Democrat No
More information Political affiliation, Voted for ...
December 11, 2025, vote in the State Senate
Political affiliation Voted for Voted against
Republican Party 19 21
Democratic Party 10
Total 19 31
Close

Impact

With the bill's failure, Indiana's congressional map will remain the same for the 2026 elections, allowing both incumbent Democratic congressmen much easier paths to re-election. Republican governor Mike Braun has vowed to assist Trump in primarying the Republican Senators who voted against redistricting in the 2026 and 2028 primaries.[10]

In 2026, at least 5 out of the 7 Republicans who voted against redistricting lost renomination.[1]

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI