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BREAKING: Virginia Dems just responded to SCOTUS letting Texas Republicans use their new gerrymandered map, by unveiling a new Virginia map that takes away FOUR Republicans seats.
BREAKING: Virginia Dems just responded to SCOTUS letting Texas Republicans use their new gerrymandered map, by unveiling a new Virginia map that takes away FOUR Republicans seats.
## Virginia Democrats Strike Back After SCOTUS Green Lights Texas Gerrymander
When SCOTUS on December 4, 2025 cleared the way for Texas Republicans to use a newly drawn congressional map — one that many civil-rights advocates had labeled a heavily partisan and racially motivated gerrymander — political ripples spread far beyond the Lone Star State. ([The Guardian][1])
In response, lawmakers in Virginia moved swiftly. Within hours of the SCOTUS ruling, top members of the state’s Democratic leadership vowed a “counterstrike”: a plan to redraw Virginia’s own congressional map with the explicit goal of flipping seats formerly held by Republicans. ([AOL][2])
Under the proposed redistricting, Democrats aim to transform Virginia’s U.S. House delegation from the existing 6-D to 5-R split into a much more lopsided 9-D to 2-R — or in a more aggressive vision, 10-D to 1-R. That would effectively erase up to four currently Republican-held seats.
“Full steam ahead,” declared Scott Surovell, the Democratic majority leader in the Virginia Senate, when asked what the Texas decision meant for Virginia’s map-making ambitions.
Meanwhile, Don Scott, Speaker of the Virginia House, acknowledged in a fundraising email that Democrats had not relished the idea of mid-decade redistricting — but cast their move as a necessary retaliation. “We didn’t want to have to consider drawing a 10D-1R map,” he wrote. “But where I grew up, if a bully came and punched you in the mouth, you better punch back.”
Whether the effort succeeds depends on several steps: the state must formally pass amendments to override its existing independent redistricting process, then clear both legislative chambers again after the new session begins, and ultimately — in many versions — submit map redrawing to a public referendum.
But Democrats in Richmond are making clear they see the TC decision as a call to arms. And for many, the message is clear: if Republicans believe they can lock in an advantage via aggressive mapping, Democrats are willing to respond in kind — redrawing lines, rebalancing power, and reshaping Virginia’s congressional delegation.
