Virginia, Republicans and redistricting
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Virginia's redistricting fight heads to the state Supreme Court after a county judge blocked certification of a narrowly approved ballot measure.
The state’s voters approved a map that could give Democrats four more House seats, putting the party on more even footing in the nation’s redistricting war.
Virginia votes Tuesday on its 5th congressional map in two census cycles, a change that could hand Democrats 10 of 11 seats in Washington.
Virginia voters have delivered a significant win to Democrats, as the party aims to pick up four more U.S. House seats in the state.
A congressional map approved by Virginia voters that aims to help Democrats net four US House seats in November’s midterms faces another legal hurdle just one day after its passage.
A Tazewell Circuit Court judge has blocked the state from certifying the results of a referendum on Virginia's congressional districts, ruling that all votes cast in the election are "ineffective."
Democrats now hold six of the state’s 11 seats in the U.S. House, but the new map could allow the party to win 10 of them.
Virginia voters approved a map that gives Democrats the chance to net as many as four US House seats, CNN’s Decision Desk projects, in a major boost to the party’s effort to win House control in the midterms.
A judge voided the results of Virginia's state referendum, barring lawmakers, at least temporarily, from implementing a new congressional map.
Former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli (R) said he believes the state Supreme Court is likely to strike down the state’s newly approved congressional map. His comments come as the legal fight over the referendum intensifies following a lower court ruling blocking its certification.
Virginia voters approve a redistricting map shifting the state to a 10-1 Democratic edge, sparking fierce Republican backlash and court challenges.