DeSantis-appointed judge allows Florida to use GOP gerrymander in 2026
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ORDER
A judge in Florida declined to temporarily block the states aggressive new congressional map on Tuesday, allowing it to remain as a lawsuit challenging it moves forward. The map could give Republicans four additional seats as they try to maintain control of Congress in the November midterm elections.
The voting and civil rights groups that sued this month argue that the map violates a state ban on partisan gerrymandering, known as the Fair Districts amendments, that voters passed in 2010. But Judge Joshua M. Hawkes of the Second Judicial Circuit in Tallahassee wrote in denying the temporary injunction that the groups had not sufficiently proven that their case was likely to succeed.
Judge Hawkes also disagreed with the plaintiffs argument that if the court temporarily blocked the new map, it should reinstate the previous districts. The administration of Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, had argued that a majority-Black district included in the previous map would be unconstitutional under a recent Supreme Court ruling that weakened the federal Voting Rights Act.
Noting that he had to weigh both the plaintiffs argument that the new map violated Floridas ban on partisan redistricting and the states argument that its previous map violated the equal protection clause of the U.S. Constitution, Judge Hawkes sided with the state, writing that the potential partisan intent in the 2026 map is the lesser of the two evils.
BREAKING: In a loss for Florida voters, A DeSantis-appointed judge greenlit the GOP's newly enacted gerrymander for use in the 2026 midterms.
The ruling comes after pro-voting groups argued there was "staggering" evidence the map violates a state ban on partisan gerrymandering.
— Democracy Docket (@democracydocket.com) 2026-05-26T19:52:28.018226754Z
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— Democracy Docket (@democracydocket.com) 2026-05-26T19:56:29.265Z