State Redistricting Info Texas
The maps below are currently under litigation
Texas gained two new U.S. House seats after the 2020 census, and lawmakers moved quickly. The 87th Legislature’s third special session adopted a congressional map on Oct. 19, 2021, with Governor Greg Abbott signing it into law on Oct. 25, 2021. Litigation followed immediately. LULAC v. Abbott was filed on Oct. 18, 2021, and soon other plaintiffs followed. A three-judge federal district panel consolidated the suits on Nov. 19, 2021, and the U.S. Department of Justice added its own §2 Voting Rights Act claim on Dec. 6, 2021. Pre-trial skirmishes continue - most recently, the Fifth Circuit dismissed an interlocutory discovery appeal in May 2025, keeping the consolidated case on track for a late-2025 trial on the merits. Even though the 2021 map governs the 2022 and 2024 elections, Abbott placed congressional redistricting on the agenda at a special session that opened July 21, 2025. On Aug 22, the legislature adopted HB 4 in a second special session, and Governor Abbott signed the map into law on Aug 29.
The state legislative lines followed a parallel, but more crowded, path. The Senate map cleared the Legislature on Oct. 15, 2021, and the House map on the 16th; both became law with the governor’s signature on Oct. 25, 2021. All federal challenges were consolidated against the maps on Nov. 19, 2021, and the panel soon denied a preliminary injunction aimed at Fort Worth’s Senate District 10 on Feb. 1, 2022, allowing the new districts to be used in that year’s primaries. Subsequent orders trimmed some claims but left the core Voting Rights Act allegations for trial alongside the congressional case. As of mid-2025, the 2021 House and Senate plans remain in force for the 2024 elections, with a consolidated trial expected later this year that will determine whether Texas must revisit its legislative maps before 2026.
Note: The Texas legislature and governor "re-enacted" the state Senate and House maps passed in 2021 to ensure compliance with a state law that required Texas "to apportion districts in the first regular session after the publishing of the results of the federal census." The 2021 maps were adopted in a special session shortly after the census results were received.
Last updated: August 2025
News and Developments
Texas Enacts the 1st Mid-Decade Congressional Map Designed to Increase Republican Representation in Congress
Mid-Decade Redistricting: Where Else Could It Happen?
A Brief History of Mid-Decade Redistricting in Texas
Texas Legislature Releases its First Congressional Map in Special Session
Texas Redistricting Update: July 2025
Tarrant County Commissioners Seek to Defend its Commissioner District Map Against Voting Rights Act and 14th Amendment Claims
See Texas redistricting cases in the Case Library.
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