Indiana’s Republican-controlled State Senate voted 28–21 on Tuesday evening to adjourn until January 2026, rejecting a special session for congressional redistricting aggressively pushed by the Trump administration. The proposed session aimed to secure two additional GOP seats ahead of the 2026 midterms.
🚨BREAKING🚨
— The Political HQ (@ThePoliticalHQ) November 18, 2025
The Indiana State Senate has voted against a special session.
The redistricting push in Indiana meant to net Republicans two seats is officially dead.
Indiana currently has nine U.S. House seats, with Republicans holding seven and Democrats two. The special session sought by President Trump, Vice President Vance, and Governor Mike Braun targeted the two Democratic-held districts — the increasingly competitive 1st District, which includes Gary and Chicago-area suburbs, and the heavily Democratic 7th District in Indianapolis — with the goal of making them Republican-leaning.
🚨 BREAKING: The red state of INDIANA has the chance to pass this Congressional map for the 2026 midterms
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) October 23, 2025
SHIFT:
🔴 Republican: +2
🔵 Democrat: -2
There is NO EXCUSE it can’t be done.
Make sure your local Indiana Senator knows redistricting is a MUST — or we’ll lose ground to… pic.twitter.com/rGeNvh0qUC
Despite intense pressure, including threats of primary challenges against dissenting senators, GOP leaders repeatedly said they lacked the votes to advance a new map. Some Indianapolis insiders believed the governor’s influence might shift the outcome, but it did not.
CNN provides more information about the growing conflict within the party:
Indiana takes on more urgency for national Republicans after a federal court invalidated Texas Republicans’ new map that would have given them a better shot at gaining five new seats. While Texas officials immediately moved to appeal the ruling, losing that prospective five-seat gain could put the GOP multiple seats behind Democrats in the redistricting battle Trump triggered.
However, despite Trump taking to social media this week to threaten to back primary challenges to senators who oppose redistricting, there were no signs at the statehouse on Tuesday that the opposition would yield.
“I’ve been a legislator 42 years. I’m not going to change my vote,” said Sen. Vaneta Becker, an Evansville Republican who told CNN her office has received more than 750 calls opposing redistricting and 37 in favor.
“Hoosiers are not used to being sort of in blackmail position. It does not bode well,” Becker said.

Tuesday’s decision preserves the current district lines, a win for Democrats who avoid a mid-decade redraw. Trump, however, has signaled he will continue pushing redistricting fights in other states as Democrats secure victories in California, Utah, and Virginia.
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