State Redistricting Info Maryland
Maryland's 2020 redistricting process featured two parallel map-drawing entities: the Legislative Redistricting Advisory Commission (LRAC) – a panel convened by the Senate President and House Speaker, and the Governor's Citizens’ Commission. While the citizens' commission did not have any state constitutional authority to enact a map, it produced and recommended congressional and legislative maps on behalf of the Governor. Under State law the Governor is only required to introduce a legislative map.
Maryland’s congressional map took two tries to become final. During a December 2021 special session, lawmakers overrode Governor Larry Hogan’s veto and enacted the Legislative Redistricting Advisory Commission plan (HB 1) on December 9, 2021. Republican voters immediately challenged the map in Parrott v. Lamone and a companion case, alleging an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander. Senior Judge Lynne Battaglia agreed, striking down the plan on March 25 2022, and giving the General Assembly five days to redraw it. Legislators responded with SB 1012, a court-ordered revision adopted on March 30 2022. Governor Hogan signed it into law on April 4 2022, and the parties withdrew their appeals, making the second map the governing plan for the 2024 and 2026 elections.
State legislative lines followed the constitution’s built-in procedure. On January 27 2022, the legislative map (Senate Joint Resolution 2) - drawn by LRAC was adopted by the General Assembly. The Governor’s separate proposal (the Citizens’ Commission plan) was introduced as Senate Joint Resolution 3 but was never enacted. Within the constitution’s 15-day window, four petitions, including those by Del. Neil Parrott and Del. Kathy Szeliga, were filed directly with the Maryland Court of Appeals, challenging the plan’s compactness and county splits. Special Magistrate Alan Wilner recommended upholding the map, and the Court of Appeals unanimously affirmed on April 13 2022, clearing the way for the plan’s use beginning with the 2022 elections.
last updated: July 2025
News, Meetings & Developments
Mid-Decade Redistricting: Where Else Could It Happen?
A Maryland Democrat Proposes Countering Out-of-Cycle Partisan Redistricting
Baltimore County’s Proposed Council Map Adds Two Members but There’s No Agreement on Map Yet
See Maryland redistricting cases in the Case Library.
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