A Virginia judge has ruled that a Democratic-backed plan to redraw the state’s congressional map ahead of the 2026 midterm elections is illegal and cannot take effect as proposed.
🚨 BREAKING: A Virginia Judge just issued an injunction against the Democratic effort to redistrict the state and ruled that it isn't valid for a referendum until after the 2027 election. pic.twitter.com/eZsbkGMn61
— Greg Price (@greg_price11) January 27, 2026
The ruling came in response to a lawsuit filed by Republican lawmakers, who argued that the Democratic-led effort violated state constitutional requirements and sought to bypass established redistricting procedures.
In the decision, the judge agreed that the proposed changes failed to comply with Virginia’s redistricting rules, effectively halting the plan unless it is revised to meet legal standards.
Democratic legislative leaders in Virginia had pushed a constitutional amendment that would allow the General Assembly to redraw the state’s congressional districts mid-decade — a departure from the bipartisan commission system voters approved in 2020. Democrats say the change is needed to counter Republican-led redistricting in other states, but Republicans argue the process was invalid and rushed.
Tuesday’s decision held that the proposed redistricting plan — brought up as a constitutional amendment — violated procedural requirements and could not be implemented before proper legal steps or voter approval are completed. This effectively blocks any new congressional map from being used in the 2026 midterm cycle under the Democrats’ current timeline.
Despite the court setback, the fight over Virginia’s congressional map is far from over.
Democrats will pass a redistricting amendment in January that will then go to voters in April. If approved – Democrats will redraw the 11 congressional districts drawing 10 zones that will be predominately Democratic and 1 heavy Republican.
— Tim Anderson (@AssocAnderson) December 4, 2025
Virginia will go from a 6-5… pic.twitter.com/bz2L0CE9Qu
Democrats are pressing ahead with a legislative and constitutional amendment strategy designed to put the issue before voters in April 2026. A statewide vote would ultimately decide whether a new map can take effect.
Republicans, however, are signaling that the legal battle is just beginning and may continue challenging the effort at every stage.
This is a breaking news story. Please check back for updates.
READ NEXT: Satellite Images Reveal Devastating Effectiveness Of US Firepower






Bi-Partisan is a dirty concept to Democrats.
That’s too much like compromise or fairness.
It’s their way or no way.