đ° Full Story
On April 21, 2026, Virginians headed to the polls in a one-question referendum that could temporarily return congressional mapmaking to the Democratic-controlled General Assembly and reshape the stateâs 11-seat U.S. House delegation.
The legislatureâs plan, if enacted, would leave Democrats positioned to win as many as 10 of 11 districts â a net gain of up to four seats â and would remain in place until authority reverts to the bipartisan redistricting commission after the 2030 census.
Early voting was heavy, with more than 1.35 million ballots cast, and the campaign drew nearly $100 million in spending from both sides.
High-profile figures weighed in: former President Barack Obama, House Democratic leaders and Gov.
Abigail Spanberger backed the âyesâ campaign as a counter to Republican mid-decade maps, while former President Donald Trump, Speaker Mike Johnson, ex-Gov.
Glenn Youngkin and other Republicans urged a ânoâ vote, calling it a power grab.
Polls showed a narrow lead for supporters, and the measure faces ongoing legal scrutiny though the Virginia Supreme Court allowed it to proceed.
The result could influence which party controls the narrowly divided U.S. House in November.






đŹ Commentary