INSIDER
Federal judge rules Galveston County commissioner maps violate Voting Rights Act
Read full article: Federal judge rules Galveston County commissioner maps violate Voting Rights ActJudge Jeffrey V. Brown, a Trump appointee, found the county districts denied Black and Latino voters “the equal opportunity to participate in the political process.”
In federal trial, Galveston County challenged on efforts to undo Black and Latino voting power
Read full article: In federal trial, Galveston County challenged on efforts to undo Black and Latino voting powerThe coastal county faces a drawn-out trial over claims of intentional discrimination in its 2021 redistricting of commissioners court precincts. The only district in which Black and Latino voters could meaningfully influence elections was dismantled.
Where Texas redistricting lawsuits stand after U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Alabama case
Read full article: Where Texas redistricting lawsuits stand after U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Alabama caseThe high court left intact a key provision of the federal Voting Rights Act in a case many feared would go the other way. The decision’s importance in ongoing litigation over Texas’ political maps will largely be felt in what didn’t happen.
Texas House reaffirms the political maps it drew in 2021
Read full article: Texas House reaffirms the political maps it drew in 2021The 150 districts didn’t change, but the vote ensured the House met its constitutional requirement to approve new maps in the first regular session following formal publication of the 2020 census results.
To be safe, Texas Senate again approves political district maps
Read full article: To be safe, Texas Senate again approves political district mapsThe vote ensured the Senate met its constitutional requirement to redraw districts in the first regular session after publication of the 2020 census results.
Texas senators draw lots to determine how long their terms will be
Read full article: Texas senators draw lots to determine how long their terms will beAfter redistricting, the state constitution requires senators to draw lots to determine which half of the chamber will have four-year terms and which will have two-year terms. This keeps Senate district elections staggered every two years for the rest of the decade.
Why all eyes are now on the often ignored Texas Board of Education races
Read full article: Why all eyes are now on the often ignored Texas Board of Education racesAll 15 seats of the State Board of Education are up for grabs in November, and one race in District 7 highlights how critical race theory has become a key issue.
Federal trial over new Texas political maps is delayed by evidence disputes
Read full article: Federal trial over new Texas political maps is delayed by evidence disputesThe Republican-drawn maps largely serve to bolster the party’s dominance. The maps are being challenged based on various claims, including intentional discrimination, vote dilution and racial gerrymandering.
City Council adopts new district map under a new redistricting process
Read full article: City Council adopts new district map under a new redistricting processMore than 39,000 San Antonio residents are now in a new city council district after the 10 present members of the city council unanimously adopted a new council district map Thursday.
City Council poised to vote on new district map
Read full article: City Council poised to vote on new district mapIn order to re-balance the population of the city’s 10 council districts after a decade of lopsided growth, the city council has to approve a new map using the population numbers from the 2020 U.S. Census.
A GOP power grab shatters 30 years of political progress for Black voters in Galveston County
Read full article: A GOP power grab shatters 30 years of political progress for Black voters in Galveston CountyRepublicans dismantled the only Galveston County commissioners precinct in which voters of color held political clout. It’s a major blow for Black and Hispanic voters who had been building political momentum.
District 2 councilman wants his half of ‘Brack’ back in redistricting plan
Read full article: District 2 councilman wants his half of ‘Brack’ back in redistricting planBrackenridge Park is currently split between District 1 and District 2 along East Mulberry Avenue, but the proposed map would place it entirely within District 1 by removing the only two precincts in the district that are fully to the west of Broadway Avenue.
Analysis: Gerrymandering has left Texas voters with few options
Read full article: Analysis: Gerrymandering has left Texas voters with few optionsTexans who don’t vote in primaries and primary runoffs are missing a chance to choose who goes to Congress and the Texas Legislature. Thanks to the political maps drawn by lawmakers last year, only a handful of those contests will be competitive in November.
City Council to review draft of new council district map Wednesday
Read full article: City Council to review draft of new council district map WednesdayAn advisory committee made up of council appointees has created the first draft of a new council district map, based on the 2020 U.S. Census numbers. Under the proposal, nine out of 10 districts would have their boundaries shifted.
“Unwinnable race”: State Sen. Beverly Powell of Burleson ends reelection bid, citing redrawn political map
Read full article: “Unwinnable race”: State Sen. Beverly Powell of Burleson ends reelection bid, citing redrawn political mapPowell, a Democrat, had won Senate District 10 by winning over a coalition of diverse voters in Tarrant County. The GOP redrew the district to branch out to counties to the south and west that made it more rural and more white.
Texas is quietly using redistricting lawsuits to launch a broader war against federal voting rights law
Read full article: Texas is quietly using redistricting lawsuits to launch a broader war against federal voting rights lawAs Texas defends against accusations that its new political maps are discriminatory, it’s laying the groundwork to ask the U.S. Supreme Court to throw out longstanding Voting Rights Act protections.
Nearly 18% of registered Texas voters cast 2022 primary ballots
Read full article: Nearly 18% of registered Texas voters cast 2022 primary ballotsTexas has a history of a dismal turnout rate in primary elections. This year’s turnout was higher than the last six midterm primaries. Still, less than 1 in 5 registered voters participated.
Federal judges won’t halt Texas primary in state Senate district being challenged for alleged discrimination
Read full article: Federal judges won’t halt Texas primary in state Senate district being challenged for alleged discriminationThe redrawn state Senate District 10 splits Black and Hispanic voters in Tarrant County. A full trial on whether GOP lawmakers intentionally discriminated against voters of color is expected later this year.
Texas violated voting rights law during redistricting, retiring state GOP senator says in sworn court statement
Read full article: Texas violated voting rights law during redistricting, retiring state GOP senator says in sworn court statementA three-judge federal panel is hearing arguments in a lawsuit claiming that Texas Republicans violated the Voting Rights Act when they redrew state Senate District 10 in Tarrant County to lessen Black and Hispanic voting power.
Analysis: Running a Texas election while voters are distracted — by politics
Read full article: Analysis: Running a Texas election while voters are distracted — by politicsWith less than five weeks left in the primary election season, there is no shortage of political issues to debate. But most of the political conversation isn’t about the election.
Frontrunners for Texas’ new congressional seats look to send message with decisive primary wins
Read full article: Frontrunners for Texas’ new congressional seats look to send message with decisive primary winsU.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Austin, is the favorite to return to Congress via Texas’ 37th District, while Republican Wesley Hunt is the leading contender in the 38th District.
Analysis: A Texas election in the shade of government’s third branch
Read full article: Analysis: A Texas election in the shade of government’s third branchChallenges to new Texas laws on voting, political districts and abortion are all pending in court, as is the state’s challenge to federal vaccine mandates. But until the courts rule, those laws remain in place — and they provide political fodder for the incumbents who support them.
Opportunity was snatched away from Dallas County Latino communities when Texas Republicans redrew congressional maps
Read full article: Opportunity was snatched away from Dallas County Latino communities when Texas Republicans redrew congressional mapsDallas-area Latinos hoped their growing numbers would finally translate into political clout this year through the creation of a new congressional district anchored by their communities. Instead, their neighborhoods were splintered between numerous white-majority districts.
Analysis: Texas’ population has changed much faster than its political maps
Read full article: Analysis: Texas’ population has changed much faster than its political mapsTexas’ population has grown 40% this century, and 91% of the new Texans are people of color. Federal judges now have to decide whether those monumental changes are reflected in the state’s political maps.
U.S. Department of Justice sues Texas over new political maps
Read full article: U.S. Department of Justice sues Texas over new political mapsTexas lawmakers illegally discriminated against voters of color by drawing new political districts that give white voters more political power despite rapid growth of Hispanic and Black populations, the department claims in its lawsuit.
Analysis: The Texas-Mexico frontier still tops the news — and state politics
Read full article: Analysis: The Texas-Mexico frontier still tops the news — and state politicsFor Texas voters, fear of an insecure border consistently overshadows other issues — electric grid failures, handgun regulation, abortion access — even when those things top the news.
Congressional gerrymandering by Texas Republicans cut out the heart of Houston’s Asian community
Read full article: Congressional gerrymandering by Texas Republicans cut out the heart of Houston’s Asian communityAsian and Pacific Islander populations surged in Texas over the past decade, but their political power is weakened under new congressional maps. A northwest Houston neighborhood offers a case study in how that was done.
State Rep. Alex Dominguez will run to replace retiring state Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr. in high-stakes Democratic primary
Read full article: State Rep. Alex Dominguez will run to replace retiring state Sen. Eddie Lucio Jr. in high-stakes Democratic primaryLucio is retiring from the Rio Grande Valley seat, and Dominguez wants to continue his legacy of focusing on education in the region. But he suggested he would take a different approach to at least a couple issues, including abortion.
State Rep. Ryan Guillen switches to GOP in latest blow to South Texas Democrats
Read full article: State Rep. Ryan Guillen switches to GOP in latest blow to South Texas DemocratsThe Rio Grande City lawmaker was the least liberal Democrat in the Texas House this year, according to a political scientist’s rankings of lawmakers.
Bexar County commissioner fears new precinct boundaries could bring new opponent
Read full article: Bexar County commissioner fears new precinct boundaries could bring new opponentA seemingly routine county redistricting process turned contentious as Precinct 4 Commissioner Tommy Calvert accused Precinct 1 Commissioner Rebeca Clay-Flores of possibly putting a political opponent into his district. Calvert is up for re-election in the March 2022 primary.
Analysis: Early signs point to another Republican-dominated election cycle in Texas
Read full article: Analysis: Early signs point to another Republican-dominated election cycle in TexasRepublican incumbents enter their reelection campaigns well ahead of their Republican challengers and with most voters unacquainted with the Democratic challengers in the field, according to the latest University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll.
Tonight at 7 p.m.: Join KSAT anchors for live town hall on redistricting with local experts
Read full article: Tonight at 7 p.m.: Join KSAT anchors for live town hall on redistricting with local expertsOn Tuesday, November 9th at 7 p.m., Steve Spriester and Stephania Jimenez will host a livestream to take a closer look at the process of redistricting and how it affects Bexar County
Texas’ new House map challenged in state court, expanding redistricting fight
Read full article: Texas’ new House map challenged in state court, expanding redistricting fightThe Mexican American Legislative Caucus is arguing that the new state House map violates the Texas Constitution. The lawsuit follows two legal challenges to the state’s new maps previously filed in federal court.
Analysis: Texas legislators aren’t ready to take self-interest out of redistricting
Read full article: Analysis: Texas legislators aren’t ready to take self-interest out of redistrictingIn Texas, the Legislature draws political maps — with results that predictably favor the party in power. Do independent commissions do any better?
Democratic state Reps. Claudia Ordaz Perez and Art Fierro will vie for the same El Paso House seat due to redistricting
Read full article: Democratic state Reps. Claudia Ordaz Perez and Art Fierro will vie for the same El Paso House seat due to redistrictingOrdaz Perez announced she will challenge Fierro after new political maps forced her to run against another incumbent if she wanted to seek a new term. Democrats have criticized the GOP-drawn House map for diluting the El Paso area's representation.
Analysis: With grades like these for political maps, Texas won’t be making the honor roll
Read full article: Analysis: With grades like these for political maps, Texas won’t be making the honor rollThe new political maps drawn by Texas Republicans have run into some criticism from academics studying gerrymandering. That puts the Texans in the same boat with Illinois Democrats.
Analysis: Maps bolster Republicans in the Texas Senate, especially the top one
Read full article: Analysis: Maps bolster Republicans in the Texas Senate, especially the top oneThe new political maps drawn by the Texas Senate don't just favor Republicans; that much was expected from a Republican majority. The maps help Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick pick which Republicans he wants in the Senate.
Analysis: Are lawmakers trying to make Texans more confident in elections, or less?
Read full article: Analysis: Are lawmakers trying to make Texans more confident in elections, or less?After conservative complaints about the national results in the 2020 election, Texas Republicans have tried to anticipate everything that might play against them in 2022, right down to who’ll be at the helm.
Texas’ new political maps create safer districts for incumbents — and put an end to some challengers’ runs
Read full article: Texas’ new political maps create safer districts for incumbents — and put an end to some challengers’ runsThe redistricting process in the GOP-dominated Legislature made many political districts less competitive, which some experts believe might hurt civic engagement.
Texas has new political maps. See which districts your home is in.
Read full article: Texas has new political maps. See which districts your home is in.This year’s elections will take place using newly redrawn political maps for the state’s congressional, House, Senate and Board of Education districts. Search your address to see how the new districts will affect your community.
In fast-growing Central Texas, redistricting sparks political reshuffling in upcoming statehouse and congressional races
Read full article: In fast-growing Central Texas, redistricting sparks political reshuffling in upcoming statehouse and congressional racesThe fast-growing region likely will see a considerable number of new state and federal lawmakers after the 2022 election. And in many cases, they will be representing districts whose boundaries have significantly shifted.
Analysis: Texas legislators set the table for the 2022 elections
Read full article: Analysis: Texas legislators set the table for the 2022 electionsThe controversial issues you’ve heard Texas lawmakers debate for most of the year aren’t going away; many of them will be argued all over again during the 2022 elections.
Republicans say Texas’ new political maps are “race blind.” To some voters of color, that translates as political invisibility.
Read full article: Republicans say Texas’ new political maps are “race blind.” To some voters of color, that translates as political invisibility.With partisan fervor, Republicans drew new maps for Congress and the Legislature that dilute the power of voters of color. Now the lawsuits begin, as groups that feel marginalized battle for representation in the halls of power.
Five takeaways from Texas’ third special legislative session
Read full article: Five takeaways from Texas’ third special legislative sessionGov. Greg Abbott’s office says there’s no plan for a fourth special session at this time. If this was the final special session of the year, what did we learn from it?
First lawsuit filed challenging new Texas political maps as intentionally discriminatory
Read full article: First lawsuit filed challenging new Texas political maps as intentionally discriminatoryBefore they’re even signed into law, the state’s new maps for congressional and statehouse districts have been challenged in federal court by the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
Longtime U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett will run in the Austin area's new congressional district
Read full article: Longtime U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett will run in the Austin area's new congressional districtThe Austin Democrat, who has served in Congress since 1995, currently represents the 35th District, which stretches down to San Antonio. He will run in the newly created 37th District located in Travis County.
Analysis: An election slogan you won’t hear in Texas in 2022
Read full article: Analysis: An election slogan you won’t hear in Texas in 2022“Turn Texas Blue” was the Democratic rally cry in the 2020 elections. It didn’t happen, and with the maps the Texas Legislature is drawing, it’s not in the cards for 2022, either.
Lawmakers send to Gov. Greg Abbott new political maps that would further solidify the GOP’s grip on the Texas Legislature
Read full article: Lawmakers send to Gov. Greg Abbott new political maps that would further solidify the GOP’s grip on the Texas LegislatureThe redistricting plans for the House, Senate and State Board of Education were approved Friday.
Texas Republicans pave way for new battleground state House district in Rio Grande Valley over local lawmakers’ objections
Read full article: Texas Republicans pave way for new battleground state House district in Rio Grande Valley over local lawmakers’ objectionsThe likely new district comes as Texas Republicans continue to try to make new inroads in South Texas after the 2020 election.
With surgical precision, Republicans draw two congressional districts that dilute power of Hispanic and Asian voters
Read full article: With surgical precision, Republicans draw two congressional districts that dilute power of Hispanic and Asian votersThe GOP is losing its hold on suburbs of Dallas and Fort Worth as they grow more diverse. Two new districts show how far the party is reaching to entrench rural, white electoral power.
Texas House passes proposed new map for chamber’s 150 districts, aiming to protect Republicans’ majority for the next decade
Read full article: Texas House passes proposed new map for chamber’s 150 districts, aiming to protect Republicans’ majority for the next decadeMembers considered more than 50 amendments to the proposed map during debate that began Tuesday and ended early Wednesday. Some of the biggest changes focused on Dallas and Harris counties.
How a doughnut-shaped district breaks up voters of color near Fort Hood and helps House Republicans
Read full article: How a doughnut-shaped district breaks up voters of color near Fort Hood and helps House RepublicansThe doughnut district would be in Bell County, a traditionally red area that has trended blue in recent years as the diverse community around the nation’s biggest military installation grows.
City of San Antonio expands size of redistricting advisory committee to 2 appointees per district
Read full article: City of San Antonio expands size of redistricting advisory committee to 2 appointees per districtThe City of San Antonio must re-draw its 10 city council districts based on the data from the 2020 U.S. Census. Though council members will ultimately be the ones to approve a new map, likely in summer 2022, the city is using a citizens advisory committee made up of council appointees to help create it.
TribCast: A federal judge temporarily blocks Texas’ near-total abortion ban
Read full article: TribCast: A federal judge temporarily blocks Texas’ near-total abortion banIn this week’s TribCast, Matthew speaks with Alexa and Reese about the ongoing court fights over Texas’ new abortion law and the redistricting process in Texas.
Texas Senate approves congressional map that draws no new Black or Hispanic districts even as people of color fueled population growth
Read full article: Texas Senate approves congressional map that draws no new Black or Hispanic districts even as people of color fueled population growthTexas gained two new seats in Congress based on population growth fueled by people of color. But the Senate’s proposal provides no new majority-Black or majority-Hispanic districts to reflect that growth.
Analysis: When Texas legislators admit they don’t know what they’re doing
Read full article: Analysis: When Texas legislators admit they don’t know what they’re doingWhen lawmakers find something in the law that they don’t like — or that their voters don’t like — they can always say they didn’t know what they were voting on. It happens more than you’d think.
Northern districts need to shrink, central districts need to expand in SA redistricting
Read full article: Northern districts need to shrink, central districts need to expand in SA redistrictingSan Antonio’s population has grown by about 8 percent between 2010 and 2020, but it hasn’t happened equally across the city. An initial assessment of Census data by an outside law firm indicates the ideal size of a council district should be about 143,441.
Texas House committee advances proposed map for lower chamber
Read full article: Texas House committee advances proposed map for lower chamberThe draft, which will need a stamp of approval from the full chamber before it can head to the Senate for consideration, is likely to continue to change before the Legislature sends it to Gov. Greg Abbott’s desk for a signature.
Senate approves map cementing GOP dominance in upper chamber, dividing up Tarrant county’s voters of color
Read full article: Senate approves map cementing GOP dominance in upper chamber, dividing up Tarrant county’s voters of colorDemocrats criticized Republicans for “targeting” a North Texas district that had been trending Democratic and for not drawing any new districts where people of color would represent a majority of eligible voters.
This historically red Texas county diversified in the last decade. Now, Republicans are trying to divide up its voters of color.
Read full article: This historically red Texas county diversified in the last decade. Now, Republicans are trying to divide up its voters of color.Sen. Joan Huffman, R-Houston, said the maps were drawn “race-blind.” But Democratic Sen. Beverly Powell, whose district would be turned into a majority-Republican district, said they’re an attempt to deny voters of color their voice in elections.
South Texas was already a political battleground. New maps could alter game plans.
Read full article: South Texas was already a political battleground. New maps could alter game plans.With proposed maps out, U.S. Rep. Vicente Gonzalez, D-McAllen, says he might switch to a neighboring district where U.S. Rep. Filemon Vela, D-Brownsville, is retiring. The initial maps are also sure to impact decisions in regional legislative races.
Analysis: Texas government won’t represent the state’s population unless its political maps do
Read full article: Analysis: Texas government won’t represent the state’s population unless its political maps doThe Texas Legislature is drawing new political maps to reflect the growth of the state recorded in the 2020 census. But their initial proposals don't look like the state demographically or politically.
Texas appears to be paying a secretive Republican political operative $120,000 annually to work behind the scenes on redistricting
Read full article: Texas appears to be paying a secretive Republican political operative $120,000 annually to work behind the scenes on redistrictingAdam Foltz, now on the Texas payroll, played a key role in Wisconsin's redistricting last decade. A federal court threw out some of the maps and called the effort Foltz was involved in "an all but shameful attempt to hide the redistricting process from public scrutiny."
What does Texas redistricting mean for your quality of life?
Read full article: What does Texas redistricting mean for your quality of life?Texas voters who want to ensure community programs are adequately funded in their favor and want more say in the electoral process may want to pay attention to what’s going on in Austin with redistricting.
Proposed new congressional seat in Houston gets prominent GOP candidate
Read full article: Proposed new congressional seat in Houston gets prominent GOP candidateWesley Hunt, an Army combat veteran who ran a close congressional contest last year in the Houston area, announced Tuesday he plans to run for the state's new 38th Congressional District in the same region.
Senate panel advances Texas Senate and State Board of Education maps
Read full article: Senate panel advances Texas Senate and State Board of Education mapsThe initial drafts of both maps have so far attempted to strengthen Republican majorities by protecting incumbents and creating more GOP-friendly districts.
GOP state Rep. Phil King announces he'll run for new Republican-friendly Senate seat held by Democrat Beverly Powell
Read full article: GOP state Rep. Phil King announces he'll run for new Republican-friendly Senate seat held by Democrat Beverly PowellWithin half an hour of declaring his bid, King got the endorsement of the Senate's presiding officer, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick.
Texas reduces Black and Hispanic majority congressional districts in proposed map, despite people of color fueling population growth
Read full article: Texas reduces Black and Hispanic majority congressional districts in proposed map, despite people of color fueling population growthThe proposed congressional map also increases the number of districts where Trump had a majority of voters over Biden in 2020 and protects Republican incumbents who might have been vulnerable by packing their districts with more Trump voters.
Democrat Lizzie Pannill Fletcher is about to find out how badly Texas Republicans want her out of Congress
Read full article: Democrat Lizzie Pannill Fletcher is about to find out how badly Texas Republicans want her out of CongressThe two-term Houston representative holds a congressional seat with a storied Republican lineage. With the GOP-controlled Legislature about to release new district maps, some expect they will try to wrest the seat back into their column.
After losing to a Democrat in 2020, former GOP state Sen. Pete Flores seeks election in newly drawn Republican district
Read full article: After losing to a Democrat in 2020, former GOP state Sen. Pete Flores seeks election in newly drawn Republican districtWithin hours, Flores got the endorsement of Sen. Dawn Buckingham, R-Lakeway, who is vacating the seat to run for land commissioner, and then Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who presides over the Senate.
Texas Republicans have the redistricting tools to preserve their power. Here's how they can do it.
Read full article: Texas Republicans have the redistricting tools to preserve their power. Here's how they can do it.Lawmakers must redraw the state’s political maps to account for a decade’s worth of growth, but the process leaves enough room for political manipulation. Here’s how it’ll work.
Texas Senate opens redistricting debate with proposed map one senator labels “intentional discrimination”
Read full article: Texas Senate opens redistricting debate with proposed map one senator labels “intentional discrimination”The first draft of the Senate map was authored by a Republican who chairs the Senate Redistricting Committee. It immediately drew fire from a Democratic member who said her district was being redrawn to dilute voting power of people of color.
In a changing Texas, Republicans will begin redistricting with more freedom to draw their maps
Read full article: In a changing Texas, Republicans will begin redistricting with more freedom to draw their mapsFacing demographic changes that work against their political dominance, Republicans will be able to redraw politically advantageous maps — and shield themselves from the change — without federal oversight for the first time in decades.
Barely underway, Texas redistricting draws its first lawsuit challenging Legislature’s authority to redraw legislative maps
Read full article: Barely underway, Texas redistricting draws its first lawsuit challenging Legislature’s authority to redraw legislative mapsTwo Democratic state senators filed the federal suit arguing the Texas Constitution does not allow lawmakers to meet in special session to draw up state House and Senate districts. They’re asking the courts to do it instead.
Analysis: The partisan debate over voting laws is a prologue to redistricting
Read full article: Analysis: The partisan debate over voting laws is a prologue to redistrictingThe summer fight over voting and election law has been fierce. It may well be a prologue to a bigger battle just ahead: redrawing the state’s political maps.
Analysis: Texas lawmakers have two contentious voting fights ahead — if they can stay in the same room
Read full article: Analysis: Texas lawmakers have two contentious voting fights ahead — if they can stay in the same roomAfter a standoff that lasted more than a month, the Texas House appears to have enough state representatives in Austin to conduct business. The divisions are deep, relationships are frayed and redistricting lies ahead.
Analysis: Texas government grinds to a stop — of the governor’s choosing
Read full article: Analysis: Texas government grinds to a stop — of the governor’s choosingIt’s happening slowly, but during the Texas government’s long summer, with legislative walkouts, fights over voting rights, and new battles over what’s safe and what’s not, Gov. Greg Abbott is mostly getting his way.
People of color make up 95% of Texas’ population growth, and cities and suburbs are booming, 2020 census shows
Read full article: People of color make up 95% of Texas’ population growth, and cities and suburbs are booming, 2020 census showsThe state’s Hispanic population is now nearly as large as the non-Hispanic white population, with Texas gaining nearly 11 Hispanic residents for every additional white resident since 2010. Those trends set up a pitched battle for political control when state lawmakers redraw legislative districts.
As Texas Republicans line up for 2022 primaries, Democrats are waiting on Beto O'Rourke and redistricting
Read full article: As Texas Republicans line up for 2022 primaries, Democrats are waiting on Beto O'Rourke and redistricting“Whatever Beto decides to do is the domino that affects everybody," said Royce Brooks, executive director of Annie’s List, the Texas Democratic women-in-politics group.
Why is redistricting political and what will the process look like in Texas? KSAT Explains
Read full article: Why is redistricting political and what will the process look like in Texas? KSAT ExplainsRedistricting is a complicated process that helps define our political landscape for the next decade. In this episode of KSAT Explains, we examine how this once-a-decade process has become so contentious, and break down preclearance and gerrymandering in Texas.
‘Let’s talk Texas’: State Senate redistricting committee looking for public input in virtual regional hearings
Read full article: ‘Let’s talk Texas’: State Senate redistricting committee looking for public input in virtual regional hearingsSAN ANTONIO – Every 10 years the Texas Legislature is tasked with redistricting, the redrawing of district maps for the state’s congressional, legislative and State Board of Education boundaries. Redistricting is based on new census data each decade, but this year that census data has been delayed. As Texas lawmakers await the data, which will determine size of districts and potentially add a handful of new congressional seats for the state, the Texas Senate Redistricting Committee has announced they will begin regional hearings to get public input. “The pandemic has presented new challenges for all of us, but it will not prevent the Senate Redistricting Committee from soliciting input from Texans about their local communities--especially about local and regional considerations related to redistricting,” said Senator Joan Huffman, R-Houston, who chairs the committee. The committee is encouraging all Texans to make their voices heard in one of a dozen hearings.
How a decade of voting rights fights led to fewer redistricting safeguards for Texas voters of color
Read full article: How a decade of voting rights fights led to fewer redistricting safeguards for Texas voters of colorIn a state with a long history of discrimination, lawmakers on Tuesday will kick off the 2021 round of political mapmaking — the first in nearly half a century without federal oversight.