Florida GOP takes up DeSantis House map overhaul

Summary

Florida lawmakers were set to consider a DeSantis congressional map that could boost GOP House prospects and prompt court challenges.

Why this matters

The fight could reshape Florida’s U.S. House delegation ahead of the 2026 elections and test how far state leaders can go under Florida’s redistricting rules. It also may be the last major redistricting battle of the cycle.

Florida lawmakers were set to take up a new congressional map from Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday that could improve Republicans’ chances in several Democratic-held U.S. House seats.

Florida Republicans held 20 of the state’s U.S. House seats, and the plan aimed to leave Democrats with four.

In a letter to lawmakers, DeSantis’ team said population changes since the 2020 census and a pending U.S. Supreme Court case from Louisiana justified redrawing the map. Legal challenges were expected under Florida’s Fair Districts Amendment, approved by voters in 2010, which limits partisan gerrymandering.

Last year, Florida’s Supreme Court struck down part of that amendment protecting minority voting power in redistricting. DeSantis’ counsel, David Axelman, argued in a letter that the amendment’s remaining provisions no longer applied on their own.

The Legislature opened a special session Tuesday, with the Senate expected to move first. State Sen. Don Gaetz, the Republican sponsoring the bill, said members of Congress with concerns “should contact the governor.” The special session was scheduled to end Friday.

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