Good evening. Tonight we’re joined by Nick Corasaniti and Patricia Mazzei, who have the latest on redistricting skirmishes in Virginia and Florida.
Redistricting War Comes Down to Virginia and Florida
The redistricting war that convulsed national politics last year is down to two final major battlegrounds: Florida and Virginia. And with critical deadlines approaching in the next two weeks, neither is going quite according to the partisan plan. In Virginia, Democrats are seeking to enact an aggressive gerrymander that would eliminate as many as four Republican-leaning districts. Tens of millions of dollars have poured into the state to fund campaigns for and against the referendum, the vast majority on the Democratic side. Election Day for the referendum is April 21. But voters in the blue-ish state seem lukewarm to the idea; only 52 percent of likely voters say they support the redistricting effort, according to a Washington Post-Schar School poll. And early voting data is doing little to spell Democrats’ concerns. Turnout so far remains fairly high, but there are no clear conclusions or trends emerging from the early vote universe. Florida Republicans are facing their own challenge, with a special redistricting session set to begin in the legislature in roughly two weeks. The state was thought to be the capstone in a battle sparked by Republicans in Texas to create a midterm advantage through the rare process of redistricting in the middle of the decade, with some in the state looking to draw as many as five new seats. But a recent poll from Emerson College found that 56 percent of voters in the deeply red state think redrawing the congressional maps ahead of the midterms is a “bad idea.” Concerns about the effort in Florida are quite different from those in Virginia. Some Republicans in the state fear newly drawn, aggressive maps could end up costing the state some Republican seats this year, with President Trump facing sagging polling numbers and economic woes spreading. Democrats have also been celebrating victories in recent special elections, including flipping a state legislative district where Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Largo resort is located. “You could put incumbent members at risk,” Representative Greg Steube, a Republican representing a Gulf Coast district, told Politico late last month. The state also faces a high legal hurdle. In 2010, voters in Florida passed the Fair Districts amendments, which effectively ban partisan gerrymandering in the state. So embarking on a new redistricting session would require some other justification. Gov. Ron DeSantis is pointing to a looming decision from the Supreme Court on the fate of the Voting Rights Act, where the court is considering whether to strike down a key provision of the landmark civil rights law and limit the ability of lawmakers to use race as a factor in drawing voting maps. But the court has not issued an opinion yet, and there is only one opinion day scheduled before the Florida redistricting special session is set to start. On Monday, Mr. DeSantis indicated in a news conference that he planned to continue with the push to draw new maps, whether a decision from the Supreme Court comes in time for the special session or not. “We know how that Supreme Court case is going to come out at this point — I don’t think there’s much of a dispute about that,” Mr. DeSantis said. “So, us looking at our map, understanding the issues in that case and fixing it, I think that’s appropriate whether the decision comes before we do it, or after. And it will obviously come sometime between now and the end of June.” But not everyone pushing Florida to redistrict is in a particular hurry. Some officials at the White House have told legislators in Florida to slow down, in part so that other Democratic states do not take retaliatory redistricting measures, according to a person familiar with the discussions. They also noted that Florida has a very late primary this year, held on Aug. 18, and the DeSantis administration has pushed back the filing deadline until mid-June. Of course, the Supreme Court could still upend congressional maps well beyond Florida if the justices were to issue an opinion early in the term striking down a key portion of the Voting Rights Act. But the longer they wait, the less opportunity other states will have to act, having already held primary elections this spring, leaving Florida and Virginia as the last remaining battlegrounds. For now. NUMBER OF THE DAY $342 millionThat’s how much a leading Republican super PAC is planning to drop on TV ads and other get-out-the-vote tactics this fall to keep control of the Senate. Top officials at the PAC, the Senate Leadership Fund, told The Times they plan to target red-leaning states, including Alaska, Iowa and Ohio, but also Democratic-held seats in Michigan, Georgia and New Hampshire. Our colleague Shane Goldmacher has the scoop. Got a tip? 2026 WATCH
In Georgia’s special election, a first test for voters on the Iran warOur colleague Tim Balk laid out the stakes of Tuesday’s special House election in former Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene’s conservative Georgia district. Here’s what you need to know.
ONE LAST THING Mamdani tries a Reddit news conferenceZohran Mamdani, the mayor of New York City, is testing a new way to reach voters: the social media platform Reddit. On Monday, he and two members of his administration dropped a post in the popular Reddit forum r/nyc, a hub for New Yorkers to ask questions and solicit advice, inviting residents to ask him questions about tenant rights. This approach, rather than holding a traditional news conference, yielded him many earnest questions. One exchange stood out. A participant using the handle Dwight_Shrute_ asked Mamdani if any programs were being implemented to encourage the development of affordable housing. “Hi Dwight,” the mayor answered. “Surprised you’re willing to commit time theft during the day to ask a question on reddit, but glad to answer it.” Fans of the long-running sitcom “The Office” no doubt got the joke. Dwight Schrute — played by the actor Rainn Wilson — was a follow-the-rules character who, in the show’s fifth season, insisted he had never once stolen a minute of work time to do anything unproductive. (Mamdani did proceed to answer Dwight’s question: “We’re doing a lot to encourage development,” he said, adding that the city’s housing agency is rolling out several initiatives to speed up the development approval process.) Tyler Pager and Taylor Robinson contributed reporting. Read past editions of the newsletter here. If you’re enjoying what you’re reading, please consider recommending it to others. They can sign up here. Have feedback? Ideas for coverage? We’d love to hear from you. Email us at onpolitics@nytimes.com.
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