National Politics

With TX lawmakers in toe, CA Dems tie redistricting efforts to Trump opposition

Six Texas state Democrats appeared in Sacramento on Friday, backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom and House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, and said despite legal threats, they would not back down from their efforts to retaliate against Republican efforts to recarve congressional districts.

In June, Trump began pressing Texas Republican leaders to consider redrawing their congressional districts to ensure the GOP retained its razor-thin House majority in the 2026 midterms. Dozens of Texas Democrats fled Austin Sunday to California, New York, Illinois and Massachusetts to break the Republicans’ quorum and stop them from moving forward. In response, Texas GOP leaders have issued arrest warrants, issued the lawmakers $500 daily fines, and filed lawsuits to force them from office.

“We are running from nothing,” Texas Rep. Ann Johnson said during a press conference with Newsom, Pelosi, and other California Democrats. “We are running to the front lines to stand with other Democrats across the state of Texas, across the state of California, across this nation, to ensure that each and every individual has the opportunity to pick, to decide that government is for the people by the people, and not the politicians selecting them.”

Texas Rep. Ann Johnson, D-Houston, speaks during a news conference on redistricting at the Governor's Mansion in downtown Sacramento on Friday. California legislative leaders met with Texas Democratic lawmakers about Republican plans to redistrict.
Texas Rep. Ann Johnson, D-Houston, speaks during a news conference on redistricting at the Governor's Mansion in downtown Sacramento on Friday. California legislative leaders met with Texas Democratic lawmakers about Republican plans to redistrict. DANIEL HEUER dheuer@sacbee.com

Newsom has become the Democrats’ most public champion to respond in kind by asking the legislature to approve a November special election that would ask California voters to temporarily approve new congressional boundaries. He and state leaders tied their efforts, which would move more liberal voters to five districts currently held by Republicans, to voters’ growing discontent with Trump on issues like immigration enforcement, tariffs, and a $1 billion fine that his administration levied on UCLA this week, which Newsom called “extortion.”

“That’s what’s at stake with this conversation...It’s all about elevating the deeper consciousness of the line that Donald Trump continues to cross,” Newsom told reporters. “It’s not about him playing by a different set of rules. There are no rules for Donald Trump. This is a serious moment in American history.”

Pelosi compared the absconding Texas Democrats to the Founding Fathers, calling them “defenders of democracy.”

House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, delivers remarks during a news conference on redistricting at the Governor's Mansion in downtown Sacramento on Friday. California legislative leaders met with Texas Democratic lawmakers about Republican plans to redistrict.
House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, delivers remarks during a news conference on redistricting at the Governor's Mansion in downtown Sacramento on Friday. California legislative leaders met with Texas Democratic lawmakers about Republican plans to redistrict. DANIEL HEUER dheuer@sacbee.com

“We thank you not only for your courage, but for your patriotism,” she said. “At the beginning of our country, Thomas Paine said, ‘The times have found us.’ And now the times have found us, especially our Texas delegation, to save our constitution.”

Legislative Democrats overcame their initial reticence and have thrown their weight behind Newsom, who has asked that new maps be drawn for the 2026, 2028, and 2030 election cycles. If he succeeds, congressional redistricting power would revert back after 2030 to the independent Citizen Redistricting Commission.

Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, D-Hollister, said Friday that the map would come out next week, ahead of the Aug. 22 deadline that Secretary of State Shirley Weber set for lawmakers to decide if the election will take place. The Legislature returns from summer break on Aug. 18, and is expected to immediately begin work on related legislation.

California Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, D-Hollister, speaks during a news conference on redistricting at the Governor's Mansion in downtown Sacramento on Friday. California legislative leaders met with Texas lawmakers about Republican plans to redistrict.
California Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, D-Hollister, speaks during a news conference on redistricting at the Governor's Mansion in downtown Sacramento on Friday. California legislative leaders met with Texas lawmakers about Republican plans to redistrict. DANIEL HEUER dheuer@sacbee.com

The Republican effort to redraw districts in their favor has now expanded to Indiana, Missouri, and Florida, all states where redistricting power lies with Republican-held legislatures, making it likely that even if California successfully redistricts, it won’t be enough to offset the GOP’s gains.

Newsom said few other states could act with the “scale and scope” of California: “It’s always the right thing to do the right thing.”

“California has to be prepared to respond. It is our sacred responsibility to California, to our country, and we know that there is no bottom to Trump’s dystopian plan,” said Senate President pro Tem Mike McGuire, D-Santa Rosa.

“I’m firm in my belief that if the legislature puts a redistricting initiative on the ballot, I believe the people of the Golden State will do the right thing. I trust the voters of California more than I would ever trust Trump and his lackeys in Texas.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom delivers remarks during a news conference on redistricting at the Governor's Mansion in downtown Sacramento on Friday. California legislative leaders met with Texas Democratic lawmakers about Republican plans to redistrict.
Gov. Gavin Newsom delivers remarks during a news conference on redistricting at the Governor's Mansion in downtown Sacramento on Friday. California legislative leaders met with Texas Democratic lawmakers about Republican plans to redistrict. DANIEL HEUER dheuer@sacbee.com

This story was originally published August 8, 2025 at 4:46 PM with the headline "With TX lawmakers in toe, CA Dems tie redistricting efforts to Trump opposition."

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Lia Russell
The Sacramento Bee
Lia Russell covers California’s governor for The Sacramento Bee’s Capitol Bureau. Originally from San Francisco, Lia previously worked for The Baltimore Sun and the Bangor Daily News in Maine.
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