After Texas, Another Red State Moves to Expand GOP House Seats
With Texas’s bitter redistricting fight drawing to a close, Republicans are already turning their attention to Ohio — the next political battlefield in the GOP’s effort to cement long-term control of the U.S. House.
Lawmakers in the Buckeye State are preparing for a high-stakes redraw of congressional maps, a process that could ultimately hand Republicans as many as three additional seats heading into the pivotal 2026 midterm elections.
The playbook, however, looks very different from Texas. In Austin, Democrats staged headline-grabbing walkouts to temporarily derail GOP redistricting efforts. But in Columbus, Democrats are staring at a steeper climb.
Ohio Republicans hold a commanding supermajority in the state legislature, which effectively neutralizes any chance of Democrats denying quorum or slowing the process. The GOP has the numbers to push through a map on its own terms.
The mechanics of Ohio’s redistricting process add further complexity. By law, both parties are supposed to negotiate a bipartisan compromise. But if those talks fail — as many observers expect — control shifts to a seven-member redistricting commission.
Should that body deadlock, the decision ultimately reverts to the legislature, where Republicans can impose their map with a simple majority vote. Political insiders on both sides agree this outcome is not just possible, but likely.