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    Indiana Senate Rejects Redistricting Map Backed by Trump

    President Donald Trump suffered a significant political setback on Thursday after Indiana Senate Republicans voted down a GOP-favored congressional map designed to secure sweeping party control in the 2026 midterm elections.

    The proposal, crafted to create a 9–0 Republican advantage, failed in a 31–19 vote despite heavy pressure from Trump and the White House.

    While the map successfully passed the Indiana House of Representatives, it collapsed in the Senate, where Republicans hold 39 of 50 seats.

    Indiana Republicans Defy Trump, Leaving Redistricting in Turmoil

    The vote plunges Indiana’s redistricting process into uncertainty and marks one of Trump’s most high-profile defeats in his national effort to reshape congressional lines ahead of a challenging electoral cycle. Several GOP senators had publicly expressed doubts about the map, even as party leadership intensified its lobbying efforts.

    Vice President JD Vance made two trips to Indiana to push for the proposal, while additional discussions occurred during lawmakers’ visits to Washington, DC. Still, Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray had warned for weeks that the GOP caucus lacked the votes to pass the plan—a prediction confirmed by Thursday’s outcome.

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    Trump Responds with Threats and Criticism

    Following the defeat, Trump lashed out at Indiana Republicans, vowing to target lawmakers who opposed the redistricting plan.

    On Truth Social, he wrote: “If Republicans will not do what is necessary to save our Country, they will eventually lose everything to the Democrats. Rod Bray and his friends won’t be in Politics for long, and I will do everything within my power to make sure they will not hurt the Republican Party, and our Country, again.”

    Several Indiana lawmakers reported receiving bomb threats and swatting incidents as political tensions escalated around the vote.

    National Redistricting Landscape Shifts

    As Indiana’s redistricting stalls, Democrats have made gains elsewhere. They could secure up to five new seats in California, benefit from a court-drawn map in Utah, and capitalize on pending redraws in Virginia.

    The failure of the Indiana map may now put pressure on GOP leaders in other battleground states—including Kansas and Florida—to advance their own redistricting plans, though timelines remain unclear.

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