Texas came to the Supreme Court on Friday, asking the justices to clear the way in which for it to make use of a brand new congressional map meant to extend the probabilities that Republicans can retain management of the U.S. Home of Representatives. On Tuesday, by a vote of 2-1, a three-judge district court docket in Texas barred the state from utilizing the map within the 2026 elections, concluding that the map unconstitutionally kinds voters primarily based on race. Texas Solicitor Basic William Peterson urged the court docket to pause that ruling, telling it that “[t]he confusion sown by the district court docket’s eleventh-hour injunction poses a really actual danger of stopping candidates from being positioned on the poll and will effectively name into query the integrity of the upcoming election.”
Peterson requested the justices to place the three-judge district court docket’s ruling on maintain by Dec. 1; he additionally requested the court docket to problem an order, generally known as an administrative keep, that will quickly pause the ruling to provide the justices time to contemplate the state’s request. In an order distributed shortly after 7:30 p.m. EST on Friday evening, Justice Samuel Alito – who fields emergency requests from the fifth Circuit, which incorporates Texas – granted the executive keep and instructed the challengers to file their response by 5 p.m. EST on Monday, Nov. 24.
The dispute has its roots in a call from President Donald Trump earlier this 12 months for Texas to redraw its congressional map to create 5 further districts favorable to Republicans. Republicans presently maintain a slim majority within the Home: 219 to 214, with two vacant seats. As described by the Brookings Institution, in 20 of the previous 22 midterm elections, the president’s social gathering has misplaced seats within the Home.
Based on a story in The New York Times, lawmakers in Texas had been cautious of the president’s request to create new Republican districts. They feared that transferring Republican voters from “secure” Republican districts to Democratic districts may jeopardize Republican incumbents within the districts from which these voters had been transferred.
However on July 7, the pinnacle of the civil rights division on the Division of Justice, Harmeet Dhillon, despatched the state a letter during which she asserted that 4 of the state’s districts had been unconstitutional as a result of they had been “coalition districts” – majority-minority districts during which there was nobody racial majority. Dhillon advised the state that if it didn’t redraw these districts instantly, DOJ would take authorized motion.
On July 9, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott put redistricting on the agenda for a particular session of the state’s Legislature. He instructed legislators to attract a brand new congressional map that will handle the considerations talked about in Dhillon’s letter.
In August, Texas adopted a brand new congressional map. Republicans presently maintain 25 of the state’s 38 seats within the Home of Representatives; below the brand new map, they hoped to win as much as 30 of these 38 seats.
Even earlier than Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed the invoice enacting the brand new map, six totally different teams of plaintiffs (led by the League of United Latin American Residents, a civil rights group) went to federal court docket to problem the map. They argued that it was the product of unconstitutional racial gerrymandering, and so they requested a three-judge district court docket – which below federal legislation hears challenges to the constitutionality of the apportionment of congressional districts – to quickly block the state from utilizing the map for the 2026 elections.
The state defended the brand new map, arguing that it was enacted purely for political and partisan, moderately than racial, causes – and specifically, in response to Trump’s demand for 5 new Republican seats within the Home of Representatives.
On Nov. 18, U.S. District Decide Jeffrey Brown, a Trump appointee, blocked the state from utilizing the 2025 map and ordered the state to make use of the map that the Texas Legislature adopted in 2021 for the 2026 midterm elections. In a 160-page opinion joined by Senior U.S. District Decide David Guaderrama, Brown acknowledged that “politics performed a job in drawing the 2025 Map. However,” he wrote, “it was way more than simply politics. Substantial proof reveals that Texas racially gerrymandered the 2025 Map.”
Brown cited Dhillon’s July 7 letter to the state and referred to as her assertion that the “coalition” districts violate the Structure “legally incorrect.” “Removed from searching for to ‘rectify . . . racial gerrymandering,’” he wrote, the letter “urges Texas to inject racial concerns into what Texas insists was a race-blind course of.” And certainly, Brown continued, Abbott “explicitly directed the Legislature to redistrict primarily based on race. In press appearances, the Governor plainly and expressly disavowed any partisan goal and as a substitute repeatedly said that his aim was to get rid of coalition districts and create new majority-Hispanic districts.”
Brown additionally contended that the Purcell principle – the concept courts ought to usually not change election guidelines shortly earlier than an election – didn’t preclude him from blocking the brand new map. The Purcell precept, he wrote, is “not nearly counting the variety of days till the subsequent election” however as a substitute “units a versatile commonplace primarily based on a fact-intensive evaluation that considers the disruption an injunction would trigger.” On this case, he mentioned, barring Texas from implementing the brand new map “wouldn’t trigger vital disruption” as a result of “we’re nonetheless one 12 months out from the final election and 4 months out from the first election.” Furthermore, he noticed, Texas “remains to be working below the 2021 Map” – and can even maintain a run-off for a particular election in late January subsequent 12 months utilizing that map.
In a 104-page dissent filed on Wednesday, Decide Jerry Smith of the U.S. Court docket of Appeals for the fifth Circuit was sharply essential of each the bulk’s opinion and of Brown personally, describing Brown’s conduct as “essentially the most outrageous … by a decide that I’ve ever encountered in a case during which I’ve been concerned.” Brown, Smith contended, had failed to provide him “any affordable alternative to reply” to his opinion earlier than it was filed.
Turning to the substance of Brown’s opinion, Smith referred to as it “essentially the most blatant train of judicial activism that I’ve ever witnessed.” “As a result of the ‘apparent purpose’ for the 2025 redistricting ‘in fact, is partisan achieve,’” Smith contended, “Decide Brown commits grave error in concluding that the Texas Legislature is extra bigoted than political.”
In its 40-page submitting on Friday evening, the state advised the court docket that almost all’s order “comes far too late within the day below Purcell” as a result of the deadline for candidates to file for election, Dec. 8, is simply 17 days away. In different circumstances, the state emphasised, the Supreme Court docket has relied on Purcell to dam preliminary injunctions when main elections had been 5 or 6 months away; Texas, the state famous, will maintain its main election on March 3, 2026, “with early voting starting on February 17, 2026, lower than three months from now. Altering the first date may very well be ‘catastrophically unhealthy.’” Furthermore, the state continued, “[t]he district court docket’s treatment compounds its Purcell error”: It ought to have given the Legislature an opportunity to provide you with a brand new map of its personal, moderately than ordering the state to make use of the 2021 map, which the Legislature had repealed.
Even placing Purcell apart, the state wrote, the Supreme Court docket also needs to pause the three-judge district court docket’s order as a result of the entire components that the justices think about when deciding whether or not to grant momentary aid are met on this case. First, the state is more likely to prevail on the deserves of the dispute as a result of the decrease court docket’s ruling is inconsistent with the Supreme Court docket’s 2024 determination in Alexander v. South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP, during which a majority rejected the decrease court docket’s conclusion that the state’s Republican-controlled Legislature had improperly relied too closely on race in drawing the challenged district. Amongst different issues, the state mentioned, the challengers on this case had not submitted their very own map, displaying {that a} Legislature may have drawn a distinct map that achieved the state’s objectives however with out relying so closely on race – “a mistake that this Court docket already held ‘could be clear error.’” Second, the state wrote, the challengers won’t be harmed if the 2026 elections happen below the brand new map as a result of that map is “‘the established order’ on which counties, candidates, and voters have been relying.” In contrast, “the last-minute disruption to state election procedures—and ensuing candidate and voter confusion—demonstrates each the irreparable hurt that the [district court’s] preliminary injunction will trigger” the state “and that the general public curiosity overwhelmingly favors a keep and reversion to the 2025 maps.”
The state requested the justices to deal with its utility as its enchantment from the bulk’s ruling and to permit the case to “proceed on to deserves briefing.” The Supreme Court docket, it famous, “has accomplished so within the redistricting context in order that election litigation doesn’t proceed longer than mandatory.”
Circumstances: Abbott v. League of United Latin American Citizens
Advisable Quotation:
Amy Howe,
Texas asks Supreme Court docket to permit it to make use of redistricting map struck by decrease court docket as racially discriminatory,
SCOTUSblog (Nov. 21, 2025, 8:06 PM),
https://www.scotusblog.com/2025/11/texas-asks-supreme-court-to-allow-it-to-use-redistricting-map-struck-by-lower-court-as-racially-discriminatory/

