Partisan Redistricting Battles Erupt in California and Texas, Shaping U.S. House Control
Intense partisan battles over congressional redistricting are unfolding in California and Texas, as political leaders clash to redraw maps and influence U.S. House control.

Majority Of Dems Say Gerrymandering ‘Never Acceptable’ — But Support It In California
California lawmakers voting on Newsom-backed redistricting plan today — after Texas GOP advances new maps

California Dems, Newsom hit back after Texas passes Trump redistricting map

Obama Comes Off Sidelines to Defy Trump’s Gerrymandering
Overview
California Governor Gavin Newsom is resisting Donald Trump's calls to alter the state's congressional maps, despite Republican efforts to benefit from redistricting in upcoming elections.
Texas lawmakers debate a new map potentially adding five GOP seats, prompting Democrats to leave the state for 15 days to prevent a quorum and block the vote.
California Democrats propose gaining five U.S. House seats, challenging the independent redistricting commission and planning to approve their map without Republican votes.
Barack Obama supports California's governor in mid-decade redistricting, while Nancy Pelosi and Eric Holder lead a group raising $2 million for Democratic litigation.
Ongoing redistricting efforts spark intense partisan clashes, with Democrats and Republicans arguing over new congressional maps, highlighting the national battle for U.S. House control.
Analysis
Center-leaning sources cover this story neutrally by presenting a balanced account of the redistricting efforts in California and Texas. They detail the actions and motivations of both Democratic and Republican parties, including their legal challenges and political justifications. The reporting avoids loaded language, instead focusing on factual descriptions of the legislative processes and the stated aims of the involved politicians, allowing readers to form their own conclusions.