Redistricting would split cities, counties throughout CA

Redistricting would split cities, counties throughout CA

Spread the love

Lodi, a Northern California city of 66,000 people, will be divided among three congressional districts if a Democratic Party-backed redistricting map goes into effect.

And Democratic suburbs of Sacramento would become part of the district of U.S. Rep. Kevin Kiley, a Republican, which will see a dramatic change in its shape. Currently the district mainly lies along the California-Nevada border, but Sacramento is roughly 400 miles west of the border.

Geographically and politically, the district would take a turn to the left.

Kiley is one of five Republicans who stand to lose their seats in Congress under the redistricting, GOP leaders in the Legislature told The Center Square as they blasted Democrats for severe gerrymandering, including in Republican strongholds in Orange and San Diego counties.

Besides Kiley, the other Republican congressmen at risk of losing their seats are U.S. Reps. Darrell Issa, Doug LaMalfa, David Valadao and Ken Calvert, GOP legislative leaders said before Thursday’s floor votes in the Assembly and Senate, where the Democrats backing redistricting hold a supermajority.

The legislation is expected to pass Thursday, which means it would go before voters in a Nov. 4 special election that Republican lawmakers warn will cost more than $235 million.

Currently California has nine Republican congressmen, making up roughly 17% of the state’s 52 representatives in the U.S. House. That’s already less than the approximately 25% of registered voters who, according to the California Secretary of State’s Office, are Republicans.

If Democrats achieve their goals with redistricting, there would be only four California Republicans in the U.S. House or approximately 8% of the delegation.

Democratic legislators said the redistricting is necessary to counter the unfair redistricting in Texas for the state’s gain of five Republican seats before the 2026 mid-term election.

Republicans aren’t buying it.

“It’s amazing the hypocrisy and cynicism of our Democratic colleagues while they’re wailing and screaming about Texas,” California Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones, R-San Diego, told The Center Square. “If it’s wrong in Texas, it’s wrong here also. Neither state should be messing with redistricting mid-decade.”

Jones and other Republican legislators are blasting the unusual geometry of districts that are splitting counties and cities.

“They’re splitting up Republican seats into multiple seats to dilute the Republican votes,” Jones said.

“All you have to do is look at District 1, from the ocean to the Nevada border,” he said. “To get the population they needed, they split up Santa Rosa and the Napa Valley.”

Jones pointed to Issa, a Republican congressman, and his district that currently consists of central and eastern San Diego County and part of Riverside County. Jones said the historically Republican district is redrawn to favor Democrats.

“The lines that they drew are ridiculous,” Jones said. “I think they chopped his seat into three or four other seats.

“They split Ventura County,” Jones said, referring to the historically Republican city of Simi Valley being put with heavily Democratic Los Angeles County and its beachside city of Malibu in a district shaped like a backward “C.”

Simi Valley would be in a different congressional district than the much closer Ventura County city of Thousand Oaks.

“The lines they drew for Riverside County are all over the place,” Jones said. “There are lots of examples. They chopped up Orange County.”

A Center Square review of the map found heavily Republican Orange County is being divided so that its congressional districts include parts of Democratic Los Angeles County. The division is to the point that Fullerton, a city of more than 140,000 people, is split among two congressional districts. Brea, another Orange County city, has been put into a predominantly Los Angeles congressional district.

“It’s sliced and diced like a pie,” said Assemblymember Laurie Davies, a Republican who lives in the Orange County city of Laguna Niguel. “People across the street from each other will have different congressional people representing them.”

She said her legislative district would be split among three congressional districts, which means she would have to deal with three congressional members, instead of the current one, on federal issues such as getting sand to prevent beach erosion.

But another kind of erosion – that of voters’ trust – will happen with the redistricting, Davies and other Republicans warned.

“If this goes on the ballot, I think the people will shut it down,” Davies said. She noted her polling and calls she received show her constituents overwhelmingly oppose the redistricting.

Assemblymember Tom Lackey, chair of the Assembly Republican Caucus, called the redistricting “100% gerrymandering.”

“That’s why we as members of the superminority are trying to get them (Democrats) to share with us who’s responsible for drawing up these maps,” the Palmdale legislator told The Center Square. “They won’t disclose who that person is. How transparent is that?”

Davies criticized the rushed redistricting effort, noting Republicans didn’t see the map until Monday. Democratic-led election committees in the Assembly and Senate on Tuesday approved the bills making up the Election Rigging Response Act.

“It’s disastrous,” Davies told The Center Square. “They [Democrats] are taking representation away from the voters.”

Lackey asked why California is so occupied with Texas when the Golden State has its own large number of not-so-golden issues.

“We have an insurance problem. We have a homelessness problem. We have crises that we are ignoring right now such as affordability,” Lackey said. “What in the world are we doing with gerrymandering?”

Jones, the Senate Republican leader, said his advice to Democrats is: “Quit focusing on [President Donald] Trump and Washington, D.C. Start focusing on California and doing the job you were elected to do in California. California voters did not elect Democratic senators and Assembly members to fight Republicans in D.C.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump-endorsed candidates win key Texas races in runoff

Trump-endorsed candidates win key Texas races in runoff

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square All Republican congressional candidates endorsed by President Donald Trump won their runoff elections Tuesday night in Texas. All have also never been elected to office...
State absenteeism change follows lowered academic benchmarks

State absenteeism change follows lowered academic benchmarks

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Months after lowering academic proficiency benchmarks, the Illinois State Board of Education has changed its rating system...
Pope’s AI warnings match Americans’ responses; Cabinet reaction mixed

Pope’s AI warnings match Americans’ responses; Cabinet reaction mixed

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Pope Leo XIV, a Chicago native, on Monday continued the legacy of his predecessor with a social encyclical addressing artificial intelligence – as much a...
Exclusive: Poll says taxpayer funds shouldn't go to public college athletic departments

Exclusive: Poll says taxpayer funds shouldn’t go to public college athletic departments

By Jon StyfThe Center Square American taxpayers are against using tax money to fund public college athletic departments in the era of name, image and likeness payments to athletes, according...
Exclusive: Poll shows Americans opposed to legalized sports wagering

Exclusive: Poll shows Americans opposed to legalized sports wagering

By Jon StyfThe Center Square Sports betting legalization is supported by just 31% of Americans with 47% saying they are opposed, according to a new Overton Insights poll exclusively provided...
Illinois Quick Hits: Independents launch campaigns for governor, Congress

Illinois Quick Hits: Independents launch campaigns for governor, Congress

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Independent gubernatorial candidate Collin Corbett has filed petitions to challenge Gov. J.B. Pritzker and Republican Darren Bailey...
South Carolina off the redistricting bandwagon

South Carolina off the redistricting bandwagon

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Cross South Carolina off the redistricting list that has swept the nation since the storm blew out of Texas in July. Usually done after apportionment...
Beecher Village Graphic.2

Beecher to Rewrite Ordinance on Ebikes, Golf Carts to Match State Law

Beecher Village Board Meeting | May 11, 2026 Article Summary: The Beecher Village Board on Monday, May 11, 2026, unanimously directed the village attorney to draft an ordinance amending village...
Meta to ask appeals court to end biometrics suit over Messenger filters

Meta to ask appeals court to end biometrics suit over Messenger filters

By Scott Holland | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A Southern Illinois federal judge will allow Meta to ask a federal appeals panel if its Facebook Messenger program can be subject...
Paxton pushes Cornyn out of longtime U.S. Senate seat

Paxton pushes Cornyn out of longtime U.S. Senate seat

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Tuesday ousted four-term incumbent U.S. Sen. John Cornyn during a night of major upsets and a race that got...
Costco says no refunds owed to customers for tariff price hikes

Costco says no refunds owed to customers for tariff price hikes

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square CHICAGO — Warehouse club retail giant Costco says it doesn't owe its customers any refunds for higher prices they paid when Costco...
Dems decide against joining fraud roundtable at White House

Dems decide against joining fraud roundtable at White House

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square Democratic attorneys general decided against attending a Tuesday roundtable at the White House to discuss fraud in welfare, including Medicaid. Speaking to reporters during a...
VA launches MDMA trial years in the making for veterans

VA launches MDMA trial years in the making for veterans

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs on Tuesday launched a clinical trial testing MDMA-assisted therapy for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder and alcohol use disorder,...
AI safety regulations advance in Springfield, despite industry concern

AI safety regulations advance in Springfield, despite industry concern

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A push to regulate artificial intelligence products in Illinois has taken a major step toward becoming law....
EXCLUSIVE: U.S. Border Patrol chief retires after historic drop in illegal border crossings

EXCLUSIVE: U.S. Border Patrol chief retires after historic drop in illegal border crossings

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Mike Banks, who was the first U.S. Border Patrol chief during President Donald Trump’s second term, has reentered retirement after helping bring illegal border crossings...