The fight for control of the U.S. House is increasingly shifting from the ballot box to redistricting battles across the country following a series of decisions in statehouses around the country as well as the U.S. Supreme Court.
Just days after Tennessee’s Republican-led legislature approved a new congressional map that removes the state’s only Democrat-held, majority-Black district — resulting in an all-Republican delegation — a new “Crystal Ball” redistricting analysis points to broader implications for the political landscape.
The developments come as Democrats, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.), assess the potential impact on their party’s chances of regaining control of both chambers.
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The shift follows a recent Supreme Court decision striking down Louisiana’s racially-gerrymandered congressional map, a ruling expected to influence redistricting efforts across several Southern states:
Here is the new CRYSTAL BALL report after the Tennessee redistricting.
STATUS OF THE REDISTRICTING WARS . . .
COMPLETED:
California +5 Dems
Utah +1 Dems
Texas +5 GOP
Florida +4 GOP
North Carolina +1 GOP
Missouri +1 GOP
Ohio +2 GOP
Tennessee +1
GOP TOTAL COMPLETED:… pic.twitter.com/lODbc7xCRj
— Ben Hart (@BenHart_Freedom) May 7, 2026
COMPLETED:
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California: +5 Dems
Utah: +1 Dems
Texas: +5 GOP
Florida: +4 GOP
North Carolina: +1 GOP
Missouri: +1 GOP
Ohio: +2 GOP
Tennessee: +1 GOP
TOTAL COMPLETED: +6 Dems, +14 GOP
PENDING:
Alabama: +1 GOP (80% Happening)
Louisiana: +2 GOP (90% Happening)
Mississippi: +1 GOP (30% Happening)
Virginia: +0 Dems (Overturned by VA Supreme Court)
MOST LIKELY OUTCOME: +17 GOP, +6 Dems → NET GAIN OF +11 SEATS FOR THE REPUBLICANS!
On Friday, the Virginia Supreme Court struck down a Democrat-inspired gerrymandered congressional map that would have given the party four of the five seats currently held by Republicans in a state that is about as evenly divided as any in the country.
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“On March 6, 2026, the General Assembly of Virginia submitted to Virginia voters a proposed constitutional amendment that authorizes partisan gerrymandering of congressional districts in the Commonwealth. We hold that the legislative process employed to advance this proposal violated Article XII, Section 1 of the Constitution of Virginia. This constitutional violation incurably taints the resulting referendum vote and nullifies its legal efficacy,” said the 4-3 ruling.
“Virginians voted by a wide margin” in 2020 “to reform the redistricting process in the Commonwealth in an effort to end partisan gerrymandering,” the ruling continued. “They adopted Article II, Section 6-A of the Constitution of Virginia to create the Virginia Redistricting Commission. Under the 2020 amendment, if this bipartisan commission could not reach a consensus, the responsibility to achieve the amendment’s ultimate goal — ridding political partisanship as much as possible from the redistricting task — would become the constitutional responsibility of the Supreme Court of Virginia.”
“In 2021, partisan disputes in the Virginia Redistricting Commission deadlocked the 16-member commission. When the task fell to us pursuant to Article II, Section 6-A, we unanimously ordered that the prior district maps be replaced with wholly new maps that commentators across a wide spectrum of political views later deemed to be free of partisan bias,” the ruling noted further.
The court said that the Democrat majority in the state legislature earlier this year then decided to put a new politically gerrymandered map to a vote of the people.
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The amendment narrowly passed with barely 50 percent of the vote for and about 47.8 percent against.
“Under the proposed new map, approximately 47% of Virginians that voted for representatives of one of the major political parties in the last congressional election would now be represented by 9% of Virginia’s delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives — while the approximately 51% of Virginians that voted for the other major political party would now be represented by 91% of Virginia’s congressional delegation,” the court wrote.
The ruling was one of the most closely watched this election cycle, and it comes amid efforts by other states to successfully gerrymander their congressional maps. So far, Republican-led states have the upper hand in the redistricting battle, with Florida adding 4 GOP-controlled seats last week and Texas adding five earlier this year.
Democrat-aligned groups immediately sued Florida; the Texas map, however, has been upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. Other states like Missouri and North Carolina have added one GOP seat apiece.
