Supreme Court strikes down Texas redistricting lawsuit, upholds new maps
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday struck down a challenge to Texas’ new congressional maps.
The court reversed Abbott v. LULAC, a case that sought to challenge years-long redistricting practices in state House and Senate races throughout Texas.
In 2021, a group of Latino voting rights organizations filed a lawsuit against Texas Gov. Greg Abbott challenging district apportionment in the Texas House and Senate. The groups sought to challenge voting maps dating back to the 2010 census.
“This is as stark a case of racial gerrymandering as one can imagine,” lawyers for the Latino groups wrote in a brief to the court.
However, maps came under new scrutiny in 2025 when the Texas legislature drew new U.S. Congressional maps in a rare mid-decade redistricting campaign aimed at yielding five new seats for the Republican party. After months of legal battling, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the new maps in December.
The Texas campaign kicked off a nationwide mid-decade redistricting battle for greater representation of either party in Congress across the country. The U.S. Supreme Court went on to affirm California’s congressional redistricting maps that favored Democrats.
Lawyers for Abbott said race was not considered when any of the maps were drawn. The lawyers said Adam Kincaid, exeuctive director of the Republican Redistricting Trust, did not consider race when redrawing the maps.
“Kincaid never considered racial data. He did not ‘have racial data visible’ on his computer while drawing the map,” lawyers wrote.
Justices on the court struck down the lawsuit along partisan lines. Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented from the majority decision.
Latest News Stories
Dems say EPA cancelling $7B community solar grants ‘illegal,’ but ignore law
Attorney argues IL should honor TX warrants for absconding Dems
WATCH: Legislators urge return to capitol to deal with increasing Illinois energy costs
Parental rights groups concerned over DEI in Denver teacher contract
Homeland Secretary: Pritzker, Johnson are protecting dangerous criminals
Reports: DOJ probing NY AG’s fraud case against Trump
Trump warns of ‘Great Depression’ if appeals court curbs tariff power
Illinois in focus: DHS announces new facility; NFIB urges veto of regulations; minority scholarship lawsuit moves forward
Abbott to call ‘special session after special session’ in response to AWOL Dems
WATCH: Illinois In Focus Daily | Friday Aug. 8th, 2025
Legislator urges leaders to focus on relief for Illinois’ high property taxes
Texas House, Illinois state senator sue 33 AWOL Democrats in Illinois court