A federal judge on Thursday refused to block Tennessee’s newly approved congressional map, handing Republicans a significant early victory in the escalating battle over redistricting ahead of the midterm elections. U.S. Chief District Judge Chip Campbell denied a request from Tennessee Democrats for a temporary restraining order that would have stopped the state from immediately implementing the new U.S. House map.
The ruling does not end the broader legal fight, but it represents a major setback for Democrats seeking to halt the Republican-backed redistricting plan before upcoming election deadlines.
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The lawsuit was filed by Democratic candidates and Tennessee voters, including Rep. Steve Cohen, state Rep. Justin Pearson and Columbia Mayor Chaz Molder.
The plaintiffs argue the new map creates election chaos because it was adopted after key election deadlines were already in motion.
Several Democratic candidates were reportedly drawn out of the districts where they had planned to run, creating uncertainty as candidate qualification deadlines approach.
GOP Gets Massive Redistricting Win
The emergency request sought to block both state and local election officials from enforcing the newly approved boundaries while the litigation continues.
Campbell, who was appointed to the federal bench by President Donald Trump, rejected that request.
The decision suggests the court may believe the election process has already progressed too far to justify emergency intervention, particularly with the candidate qualifying deadline arriving on Friday.
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Tennessee Republicans approved the new map during a special legislative session last week as part of a broader push to strengthen GOP control of the state’s congressional delegation.
Republicans hope the redraw will allow the party to capture all nine of Tennessee’s U.S. House seats.
Democrats argue the timing of the map change unfairly disrupts the election process and undermines candidates who had already organized campaigns under previous district boundaries.
Despite Thursday’s ruling, multiple legal challenges remain active.
A separate federal lawsuit is still pending, and another challenge is moving forward in Davidson County Chancery Court.
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Those cases could still affect whether the new map remains in place long term, though immediate relief appears increasingly difficult as election preparations continue.
Tennessee’s fight is part of a much larger nationwide redistricting war as both parties seek every possible advantage in the battle for House control.
Republican-led states have aggressively pursued mid-decade redistricting efforts following recent Supreme Court decisions that gave states broader room to redraw congressional boundaries.
Democrats have attempted countermeasures in some states, but recent court rulings have generally favored GOP efforts.
If Tennessee’s map survives the remaining legal challenges, Republicans could eliminate one of the state’s few remaining Democratic footholds in Congress, Axios reported.
With election deadlines fast approaching, the legal clock is now working heavily in Republicans’ favor.
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves canceled a special legislative session on redistricting on Wednesday, citing a favorable federal appeals court ruling that eliminated the immediate need to redraw state Supreme Court districts.
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But the Republican governor made clear that congressional map changes — including potential moves to reshape or eliminate the majority-Black 2nd District long held by Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson — remain firmly on the table for action
The cancellation of the May 20 session came one day after the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals vacated a lower court order that had found Mississippi’s Supreme Court districts violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by diluting Black voting power.
Reeves, speaking on SuperTalk Mississippi radio, called the judicial redraw unnecessary but stressed congressional reform is “not a question of if. It’s a question of when.”
The developments in Mississippi reflect a broader redistricting surge across the South, triggered by the U.S. Supreme Court’s April 29 decision in Louisiana v. Callais.
In that 6-3 ruling, the high court struck down Louisiana’s congressional map as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander, sharply limiting how race can be used as the predominant factor in drawing districts under the Voting Rights Act.
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