Powerful labor group backs redrawing California congressional maps to fight Texas and Trump
One of Californiaβs most influential labor organizations endorsed redrawing the stateβs congressional maps to counter President Trumpβs effort to push Republican states, notably Texas, to increase his partyβs numbers in Congress in next yearβs midterm election.
The California Federation of Labor Unions voted unanimously Tuesday to support putting a measure on the ballot in November. The proposal, backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom and many of the stateβs Democratic leaders, would ask voters to temporarily change congressional district boundaries that were drawn by an independent redistricting commission four years ago, with some conditions.
Republicans could potentially lose up to a half dozen seats in Californiaβs 52-member delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives. After it returns for its summer recess on Aug. 18, the California Legislature is expected to vote to place the measure on the statewide ballot in a special election.
βPresident Trump has said that Republicans are βentitledβ to five more congressional votes in Texas. Well, they arenβt entitled to steal the 2026 election. Californiaβs unions refuse to stand by as democracy is tested,β Lorena Gonzalez, president of the federation, said in a statement. βCalifornia Labor is unified in our resolve to fight back against President Trumpβs anti-worker agenda.β
Redistricting β the esoteric redrawing of the nationβs 435 congressional districts β typically occurs once every decade after the U.S. census tallies the population across the nation. Population shifts can result in changes in a stateβs allocation of congressional seats, such as when California lost a seat after the 2020 census the first time in the stateβs history.
The political redistricting process had long been crafted by elected officials to give their political parties an edge or to protect incumbents β sometimes in brazen, bizarrely shaped districts. Californians voted in 2010 to create an independent commission to draw congressional maps based on communities of interest, logical geography and ensuring representation of minority communities.
The ballot measure being pushed by Newsom and others would allow state lawmakers to help determine district boundaries for the next three election cycles if Texas approves a pending measure to reconfigure districts to increase Republican-held congressional seats in that state. Line-drawing would return to the independent commission after the 2030 census.
The California Federation of Labor is committed to spending several million dollars supporting a mid-decade redistricting ballot measure, on top of what it already planned to spend on competitive congressional races next year, according to a person familiar with the plans who asked for anonymity to speak candidly about the strategy.
A spokesperson for several organizations devoted to fighting any effort to change the stateβs redistricting process said that Charles Munger Jr., the son of a billionaire, and who bankrolled the ballot measure to create the independent commission, is committed to making sure it is not weakened.
βWhile Charles Munger has been out of politics since 2016, he has said he will vigorously defend the reforms he helped pass, including nonpartisan redistricting,β said Amy Thoma, spokesperson for the Voters First Coalition. βHis previous success in passing ballot measures in California means he knows exactly what is needed to be successful. We will have the resources necessary to make our coalition heard.β