Court battle begins over Republican challenge to California’s Prop. 50

Court battle begins over Republican challenge to California’s Prop. 50



Republicans and Democrats squared off in court Monday in a high-stakes battle over the fate of Californiaโ€™s Proposition 50, which reconfigures the stateโ€™s congressional districts and could ultimately help determine which party controls the U.S. House in the 2026 midterms.

Dozens of California politicians and Sacramento insiders โ€” including GOP Assembly members and Democratic redistricting expert Paul Mitchell โ€” have given depositions in the case or could be called to testify in a federal courtroom in Los Angeles over the next few days.

The GOP wants the three-judge panel to temporarily block Californiaโ€™s new district map, claiming it is unconstitutional and illegally favors Latino voters.

An overwhelming majority of California voters approved Proposition 50 on Nov. 4 after Gov. Gavin Newsom pitched the redistricting plan as a way to counter partisan gerrymandering in Texas and other GOP-led states. Democrats acknowledged the new map would weaken Republicansโ€™ voting power in California, but argued that it would just be a temporary measure to try to restore the national political balance.

Attorneys for the GOP cannot challenge the new redistricting map on the grounds that it disenfranchises swaths of California Republicans. In 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that complaints of partisan gerrymandering have no path in federal court.

But the GOP can bring claims of racial discrimination. They argue that California legislators drew the new congressional maps based on race, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment and the 15th Amendment, which prohibits governments from denying citizens the right to vote based on race or color.

Republicans face an uphill struggle in blocking the new map before the 2026 midterms. The hearing comes just a few weeks after the U.S. Supreme Court allowed Texas to temporarily keep its new congressional map โ€” a move that Newsomโ€™s office says bodes poorly for Republicans trying to block Californiaโ€™s map.

โ€œIn letting Texas use its gerrymandered maps, the Supreme Court noted that Californiaโ€™s maps, like Texasโ€™s, were drawn for lawful reasons,โ€ Brandon Richards, a spokesperson for Newsom, said in a statement. โ€œThat should be the beginning and the end of this Republican effort to silence the voters of California.โ€

In Texas, GOP leaders drew up new congressional district lines after President Trump openly pressed them to give Republicans five more seats in the U.S. House of Representatives. A federal court blocked the map, finding racial considerations probably made the Texas map unconstitutional. But a few days later, the Supreme Court granted Texasโ€™ request to pause that ruling, signaling that they view the Texas case โ€” and this one in California โ€” as part of a national politically motivated redistricting battle.

โ€œThe impetus for the adoption of the Texas map (like the map subsequently adopted in California),โ€ Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. argued, โ€œwas partisan advantage pure and simple.โ€

The fact that the Supreme Court order and Alitoโ€™s concurrence in the Texas case went out of their way to mention California is not a good sign for California Republicans, said Richard L. Hasen, professor of law and director of the Safeguarding Democracy Project at UCLA School of Law.

โ€œItโ€™s hard to prove racial predominance in drawing a map โ€” that race predominated over partisanship or other traditional districting principles,โ€ Hasen said. โ€œTrying to get a preliminary injunction, thereโ€™s a higher burden now, because it would be changing things closer to the election, and the Supreme Court signaled in that Texas ruling that courts should be wary of making changes.โ€

On Nov. 4, California voters approved Proposition 50, a measure to scrap a congressional map drawn up by the stateโ€™s independent redistricting commission and replace it with a map drawn up by legislators to favor Democrats through 2030.

On Monday, a key plaintiff, Assemblymember David J. Tangipa (R-Fresno) โ€” who serves on the Assembly Elections Committee โ€” testified that the legislative panel was given only four days to analyze the redistricted maps and was not allowed to vote on them.

โ€œIn the language of the bill, it actually states that the Assembly and Senate election committee prepared these maps,โ€ Tangipa said. โ€œThis was a lie.โ€

Tangipa claimed his Democratic colleagues repeatedly brought up increased Black, Latino and Asian representation to further their argument for redistricting.

โ€œThey were forcing, through emergency action, maps upon us to dismantle the independent redistricting commission,โ€ Tangipa said. โ€œThey were using emotionally charged arguments, racial justifications and polarized arguments to pigeonhole us.โ€

Defense attorneys, however, referenced multiple instances in depositions and online posts where Tangipa had claimed that there was some โ€œpartisanโ€ or โ€œpoliticalโ€ purpose for the existence of Proposition 50. Tangipa denied this and maintained that he believed that the redistricting effort was race-conscious since his conversations on the Assembly floor.

The hearing began with attorneys for the GOPhoming in on the new mapโ€™s Congressional District 13, which currently encompasses Merced, Stanislaus as well as parts of San Joaquin and Fresno counties, along with parts of Stockton. When Mitchell drew up the map, they argued, he overrepresented Latino voters as a โ€œpredominant considerationโ€ over political leanings.

They called to the stand RealClearPolitics elections analyst Sean Trende, who said he observed an โ€œappendageโ€ in the new District 13, which extended partially into the San Joaquin Valley and put a crack in the new rendition of District 9.

โ€œFrom my experience [appendages] are usually indicative of racial gerrymandering,โ€ Trende said. โ€œWhen the choice came between politics and race, it was race that won out.โ€

Defense attorneys, however, pressed Trende on whether the shift in Latino voters toward Republican candidates in the last election could have informed the new district boundaries, rather than racial makeup.

The defense referenced a sworn statement by Trende in the Texas redistricting case: the Proposition 50 map, he said then, was โ€œdrawn with partisan objectives in mind; in particular, it was drawn to improve Democratic prospectsโ€ to neutralize additional Republican seats.

Many legal scholars say that the Supreme Courtโ€™s ruling on the Texas case means California probably will keep its new map.

โ€œIt was really hard before the Texas case to make a racial gerrymandering claim like the plaintiffs were stating, and itโ€™s only gotten harder in the last two weeks,โ€ said Justin Levitt, a professor of law at Loyola Marymount University.

Hours after Californians voted in favor of Proposition 50, Tangipa and the California Republican Party filed a lawsuit alleging that the map enacted in Proposition 50 for Californiaโ€™s congressional districts is designed to favor Latino voters over others.

The Department of Justice also filed a complaint in the case, contending that the new congressional map uses race as a proxy for politics and manipulated district lines โ€œin the name of bolstering the voting power of Hispanic Californians because of their race.โ€

Mitchell, the redistricting expert who drew up the maps, is likely to be a key figure in this weekโ€™s battle. In the days leading up to the hearing, attorneys sparred over whether Mitchell would testify and whether he should turn over his email correspondence with legislators. Mitchellโ€™s attorneys argued that he had legislative privilege.

Attorneys for the GOP have seized on public comments made by Mitchell that the โ€œnumber one thingโ€ he started thinking about was โ€œdrawing a replacement Latino majority/minority district in the middle of Los Angelesโ€ and the โ€œfirst thingโ€ he and his team did was โ€œreverseโ€ the California Citizens Redistricting Commissionโ€™s earlier decision to eliminate a Latino district from L.A.

Some legal experts, however, say that is not, in itself, a problem.

โ€œWhat [Mitchell] said was, essentially, โ€˜I paid attention to race,โ€™โ€ Levitt said. โ€œBut thereโ€™s nothing under existing law thatโ€™s wrong with that. The problem comes when you pay too much attention to race at the exclusion of all of the other redistricting factors.โ€

Other legal experts say that what matters is not the intent of Mitchell or California legislators, but the California voters who passed Proposition 50.

โ€œRegardless of what Paul Mitchell or legislative leaders thought, they were just making a proposal to the voters,โ€ said Hasen, who filed an amicus brief in support of the state. โ€œSo itโ€™s really the votersโ€™ intent that matters. And if you look at what was actually presented to the voters in the ballot pamphlet, there was virtually nothing about race there.โ€

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *