Governor of Georgia Brian Kemp (R) has convened a special legislative session to redistrict the state, but not in time for the 2026 midterms.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Governor of Georgia Brian Kemp (R) has ordered a special session to redraw the state’s electoral maps ahead of the 2028 elections—but not the crucial 2026 midterms. 📺 DETAIL: Brian Kemp has called on state lawmakers to “…consider enacting, revising, repealing, or amending general law for the division of the State into appropriate districts from which members of the Georgia State Senate, the Georgia State House of Representatives, the United States House of Representatives to the United States Congress, or any other state office elected by district… to take effect for the 2028 election cycle.” The legislative session is scheduled for June 17, following the Supreme Court’s ruling against racially gerrymandered, Democrat-leaning districts in Louisiana v. Callais back in late April. The ruling declared the mandatory creation of majority-minority districts under the Voting Rights Act unconstitutional. However, unlike several other Southern governors, Kemp is not attempting to implement changes in time for the 2026 midterms, meaning any reforms the Georgia legislature passes will do nothing to help the GOP maintain a House majority for the remainder of President Donald J. Trump’s term. 💬 KEY QUOTE: “I think it is wrong to artificially inject race into our politics. I am very pleased that the Supreme Court has erased this, you know, from our legal framework. And I look forward to state legislators being able to redistrict based on communities of interest.” – Josh McKoon, Chairman of the Georgia Republican Party. 🎯 IMPACT: Georgia’s redistricting effort could reshape the state’s political landscape, most likely favoring Republicans while disadvantaging Democrats, who tend to have an advantage districts racially gerrymandered to create a minority majority. However, Kemp is drawing criticism for not attempting to implement redistricting in time for the 2026 midterms, a half-measure that will not help the GOP retain a congressional majority. In recent months, other states have pursued redistricting proposals to benefit the leading party in November. In California and Virginia, proposed congressional map redraws have favored Democrats, whereas states like Texas and Florida have put forward changes favoring Republicans. However, despite the accelerating scramble to redraw, not all states are pursuing redistricting ahead of the midterms. This week, Tate Reeves, the Governor of Mississippi, announced that redrawing the state’s maps was unnecessary, although he hinted at a push for a redraw in the future. |
🚨 IT'S OFFICIAL: Southern GOP states are now calling SPECIAL SESSIONS to redraw their Congressional maps, infuriating Hakeem Jeffries Temu Obama even more!
Set to redraw for 2026 is a South Carolina special session
GEORGIA will go for 2028 — but SHOULD do 2026!
PLAY HARDBALL.… pic.twitter.com/Tj4gyC0kom
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) May 14, 2026
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