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Be afraid. Be very afraid.
If Democrats successfully implement their gerrymandering plan in Virginia, the U.S. House of Representatives will almost certainly be controlled by anti-white woke Democratic Socialist.
Virginia voters approved a constitutional amendment allowing lawmakers to redraw congressional districts, but a judge quickly blocked its implementation. The legal fight now heads to the state’s highest court, leaving uncertainty over which maps will govern upcoming elections and almost certainly influence control of Congress.
If Virginia Democrats prevail, the consequences will reach every American. Policies such as DEI mandates, anti-white racial preferences, and unrestricted open-border immigration could return with little restraint. Critics warn that millions of illegal immigrants could gain voting rights as Democratic Socialists seek a permanent grip on control.
Here are nine things we need to know.
1. The plan collapsed overnight.
On April 21 Virginia voters narrowly approved a constitutional amendment that would have let the Democratic-controlled General Assembly redraw the state’s congressional districts ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, only for a circuit court judge to halt the process the very next day. But, it's not over.
2. Voters approved it by a razor-thin margin.
In a special statewide election on April 21, the amendment narrowly passed with 51.5 percent of the vote. Certification of the results appeared imminent, which would have allowed the new map to take effect this fall.
3. Democrats aim for a massive 10-to-1 advantage.
The Democratic proposal would have reshaped several districts to create a potential 10-to-1 advantage for their party.
4. This shattered Virginia’s long-standing redistricting tradition.
Virginia’s congressional maps are normally drawn once a decade by a bipartisan redistricting commission established after the 2020 census. The current boundaries, adopted in 2021, produce a 6-to-5 Democratic edge among the state’s 11 U.S. House seats.
Last year, Democratic lawmakers passed legislation and a proposed amendment granting the legislature temporary authority to redraw those lines for elections through 2030, with the commission resuming its role after the next census. Supporters framed the move as a necessary response to aggressive map-drawing in other states.
5. A judge delivered a brutal smackdown.
On April 22, however, Tazewell County Circuit Court Judge Jack Hurley ruled the referendum process unconstitutional. The judge found the ballot language misleading and said the measure failed to satisfy constitutional requirements for public notice and amendment procedures. He issued a permanent injunction blocking state officials from certifying the election or implementing any new districts. Virginia’s existing 2021 congressional map will therefore remain in place for the 2026 elections while the ruling is appealed, most likely to the Virginia Supreme Court.
6. This fight has exploded into a national war.
The episode reflects the high-stakes partisan contest over congressional boundaries that is playing out across multiple states this year.
7. This could hand Democrats control of the U.S. House.
If Virginia's Democrats prevail, it will likely lead to a Democratic majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. If fully enacted, the new Virginia map would give Democrats a strong structural advantage in the state’s delegation and meaningfully improve their chances of regaining or expanding their majority in the U.S. House of Representatives.
8. The state's Supreme Court flipped its position.
The Supreme Court previously allowed the April 21 referendum to occur despite legal challenges, but that was only about letting voters decide — not about the underlying legality of the amendment process.
9. An all-out legal battle is now underway.
Virginia Attorney General Jay Jones (D) immediately appealed and filed a motion to stay the ruling. The case is fast-tracked and will likely reach the Virginia Supreme Court (which has the final say) very soon.
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