Newsom calls for special November election to block Trump from βriggingβ 2026 midterms

Gov. Gavin Newsom, Democratic lawmakers and their allies on Thursday launched a special election campaign urging California voters to approve new congressional districts to shrink the stateβs Republican delegation, a move that could determine control of Congress next year and stymie President Trumpβs agenda.
The special election effort is a response to Republican-led states, notably Texas, pushing at Trumpβs behest to redraw their congressional maps to favor Republicans and reduce the number ofDemocrats in the narrowly divided U.S. House of Representatives.
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Speaking to a fired-up partisan crowd at the Japanese American National Museum in downtown Los Angeles, Newsom described the effort by Republicans as a desperate effort by a failed president to hold on to power by keeping Congress under his control.
βHe doesnβt play by a different set of rules β he doesnβt believe in the rules,β Newsom said. βAnd as a consequence, we need to disabuse ourselves of the way things have been done. Itβs not good enough to just hold hands, have a candlelight vigil and talk about the way the world should be. We have got to recognize the cards that have been dealt, and we have got to meet fire with fire.β
The governor was joined by Californiaβs U.S. senators, Alex Padilla and Adam Schiff; Southern Californiaβs Democrats in Congress, and union leaders who would provide the funding and volunteers for the campaign.
The ballot measure, the βElection Rigging Response Act,β would temporarily scrap the congressional districts enacted by the stateβs voter-approved independent redistricting commission.
βWe are ready to do whatever it takes to stop this power grab and fight back against any and all attacks on our democracy, on our students and on public education,β said Erika Jones, secretary-treasurer of the California Teachers Assn., which represents 310,000 public school teachers.
The gerrymandering plan in California could increase the Democratic Partyβs dominance in the state by making five House districts more favorable to Democrats, according to a draft map reviewed by The Times. Those changes could reduce by more than half the number of Republicans representing California in Congress.
Outside the rally, which took place on a historic site where Japanese American families boarded buses to incarceration camps during World War II, Border Patrol agents gathered and arrested at least one person. Newsom told the crowd inside that he doubted it was a coincidence.
Republicans criticized Newsomβs effort as antidemocratic and a thinly veiled attempt to boost a future presidential campaign.
The ballot measure, said Christian Martinez, spokesperson for the National Republican Congressional Committee, the campaign arm of House Republicans, is about βconsolidating radical Democrat power, silencing California voters and propping up his pathetic 2028 presidential pipe dream.β
For Newsomβs plan to work, the Democratic-led state Legislature must vote to place the ballot for Nov. 4. The final decision would be up to California voters.
California should not βstoop to the same tactics as Texas,β said Amy Thoma, spokesperson for the Voters First Coalition, which includes Charles Munger Jr., the son of a billionaire who bankrolled the ballot measure that created the independent commission.
βTwo wrongs do not make a right, and California shouldnβt stoop to the same tactics as Texas. Instead, We should push other states to adopt our independent, nonpartisan commission model across the country,β Thoma said. She said Munger will vigorously oppose any proposal to circumvent the independent commission.
Former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who championed independent redistricting in California and around the country, βbelieves that the politicians in Texas are ripping off the people with their gerrymander and that Californiaβs best way to respond is by standing with the people, not by stooping to their level and rigging our system against the voters,β said his spokesperson, Daniel Ketchell.
Since voters approved independent congressional redistricting in 2010, Californiaβs districts have been drawn once per decade, after the U.S. census, by a panel split between registered Democrats, registered Republicans and voters without a party preference.
The commission is not allowed to consider the partisan makeup of the districts, nor protecting incumbents, but instead looks at βcommunities of interest,β logical geographical boundaries and the Voting Rights Act.
The current map was drawn in 2021 and went into effect for the 2022 election.
Newsom is pushing to suspend those district lines and put a new map tailored to favor Democrats in front of voters on Nov. 4. That plan, he has said, would have a βtrigger,β meaning a redrawn map would not take effect unless Texas or another GOP-led state moved forward with its own.
Sara Sadhwani, who served on the redistricting commission that approved the current congressional boundaries, said that while she is deeply proud of the work she and her colleagues completed, she approved of Newsomβs effort because of unprecedented threats to democracy.
βExtraordinary times call for extraordinary measures,β Sadhwani said, citing the immigration raids, the encouragement of political violence and the use of National Guard troops in American cities. βAnd if that wasnβt enough, we are watching executive overreach that no doubt is making our Founding Fathers turn in their graves. … These are the hallmarks of a democracy in peril.β
If voters approved the ballot measure, the new maps would be in effect for the 2026, 2028 and 2030 elections, until the independent commission redraws the congressional boundaries in 2031.
To meet Newsomβs ambitious deadline, the Legislature would need to pass the ballot language by a two-thirds majority and send it to Newsomβs desk by Aug. 22. The governorβs office and legislative leaders are confident in their ability to meet this threshold in the state Assembly and Senate, where Democrats have a supermajority.
Newsom first mentioned the idea in mid-July, meaning the whole process could be done in about five weeks. Generally, redrawing the stateβs electoral lines and certifying a measure to appear before voters on the ballot are processes that take months, if not more than a year.
In California, the gerrymandering plan taking shape behind closed doors would increase the Democratic Partyβs dominance in the state by making five House districts more favorable to Democrats, according to a draft map reviewed by The Times.
Those changes could reduce by more than half the number of Republicans representing California in Congress. California has the nationβs largest congressional delegation, with 52 members. Nine are Republicans.
In the plans under discussion, a Northern California district represented by Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale) could shift to the south, shedding rural, conservative voters near the Oregon border and picking up left-leaning cities in Sonoma County. Sacramento-area Rep. Kevin Kiley (R-Rocklin) would see his district shift toward the bluer center of the city.
The plan would also add more Democrats to the Central Valley district represented by Rep. David Valadao (R-Hanford), who has been a perennial target for Democrats.
Southern California would see some of the biggest changes: Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Bonsall) would see his safely Republican district in San Diego County become more purple through the addition of liberal Palm Springs. And Reps. Young Kim (R-Anaheim Hills) and Ken Calvert (R-Corona) would be drawn into the same district, which could force the lawmakers to run against each other.
The plan would also shore up Democrats who represent swing districts, such as Reps. Dave Min (D-Irvine) and Derek Tran (D-Orange).
It could also add another district in southeast Los Angeles County, in the area that elected the first Latino member of Congress from California in modern history. A similar seat was eliminated during the 2021 redistricting.
Trumpβs prodding of Texas Republicans to redraw their maps has kicked off redistricting battles across the nation. That includes Florida, Ohio, Indiana and Missouri, where Republicans control the statehouse, and New York, Maryland, Illinois, New Jersey, Oregon and Washington, where Democrats are in power.
Democratic lawmakers in Texas fled the state to block the Republican-led Legislature from approving a new map, preventing it from reaching the quorum necessary to approve the measure.
A second special session is expected to begin Friday. The absent lawmakers are facing threats of fines, civil arrest warrants and calls for being removed from office.
Times staff writer Taryn Luna in Sacramento contributed to this report.