Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Texas house passes Republican-drawn gerrymandered congressional map after weeks of protest – as it happened

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Texas house passes partisan Republican congressional map after weeks of protest

The Texas state house – which has a significant Republican majority – has approved a plan to redraw the state’s congressional districts, passing a new map on Wednesday that fulfills Donald Trump’s desire to tilt the US House map in his favor before the 2026 midterm elections.

The vote was 88 in favor and 52 against.

The map could give Republicans five new House seats in 2026 and took more than two weeks to pass, after Democratic state lawmakers staged a walkout over what they describe as “a power grab”. Several legislators fled to states run by Democrats, and the protest ultimately set the stage for a redistricting battle now playing out across the country.

California’s Democratic governor, Gavin Newsom, has advanced an effort to offset the gerrymandering in Texas by redrawing his state’s map to flip five Republican seats, pitting the nation’s most populous Democratic state its most populous Republican one.

The new Texas map will have to be reconciled with the state senate’s version, which advanced on Sunday. Republicans hold nearly twice as many seats in the Texas state senate as Democrats.

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Key events

Closing summary

This ends our live coverage of the second Trump administration for Wednesday, but we will be back at it on Thursday. Here are the latest developments:

  • The Texas house approved a plan to redraw the state’s congressional districts, passing a new map on Wednesday by a vote of 88-52 that fulfills Donald Trump’s desire to tilt the US House map in his favor before the 2026 midterm elections. The measure is expected to be approved by the Republican-dominated state senate and signed into law by the state’s Republican governor, Greg Abbott.

  • The vice-president, JD Vance, the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, and the White House deputy chief of staff, Stephen Miller, staged a photo op with National Guard troops at Union Station in the nation’s capital. They were roundly booed and jeered on their way in and out of the station.

  • A federal judge denied the justice department’s bid to unseal records from the grand jury that indicted Jeffrey Epstein in 2019. US district judge Richard Berman said the small number of documents seen by the court pale in comparison with the 100,000 records the government already has on Epstein and that disclosing them could harm victims.

  • Lisa Cook, the Federal Reserve governor Trump has called on to immediately resign over an accusation that she falsely declared a property she obtained a mortgage on was her primary residence, responded on Wednesday that she has “no intention of being bullied to step down”.

  • Trump has bought at least $100m of bonds since he returned to office in January, according to a CNBC analysis of new filings from the president with the US Office of Government Ethics.

  • A young American citizen who was violently arrested by federal immigration officers in Los Angeles county in June, after he objected to the arrest of an older man in a Walmart parking lot, was charged with conspiracy to impede a federal officer.

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