Lines of Power: America’s Redistricting Arms Race

Lines of Power: America’s Redistricting Arms Race America’s congressional boundaries used to be redrawn like clockwork—once a decade after the census, with a handful of court fixes in between. That cadence is gone. We’ve entered a period in which maps can—and increasingly do—change mid-cycle, lawsuits are planned like campaign stops, and data science has turned map-drawing into an industrial process. Both parties now treat redistricting not as a compliance chore but as an organizing principle for national power. What follows are five key points that, in our judgment, define the current redistricting arms race—and what it may yield before the 2026 midterms. 1) The rulebook has subtly—but decisively—changed The single biggest reason the fight never ends is that the legal terrain now encourages permanent motion. In 2019, the Supreme Court took federal courts largely out of the business of policing partisan gerrymandering (Rucho v. Common Cause), pushing disputes to state courts and state ...