Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis calls April special session on redistricting

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Wednesday called for a special legislative session to take up a redraw of the state’s congressional map in April, following through on his promise to dive into the national mid-decade redistricting fray.
“Every Florida resident deserves to be represented fairly and constitutionally,” DeSantis said in a post on X. “This Special Session will take place after the regular legislative session, which will allow the Legislature to first focus on the pressing issues facing Floridians before devoting its full attention to congressional redistricting in April.”
DeSantis said the session will occur April 20-24, which would run right up against the state’s April 24 candidate filing deadline, though that could be moved. Florida’s primaries are set to take place in August.
DeSantis made it clear he wanted to delay consideration of a new congressional map as long as possible in anticipation of a potential U.S. Supreme Court ruling that could weaken the Voting Rights Act and make it easier for Florida Republicans to draw additional GOP-friendly districts.
Other Republicans in the state wanted to move forward sooner. Florida House lawmakers convened a brief committee hearing last month that formally kick-started the redistricting process in an effort to address the issue during a regular legislative session.
Republicans currently control 20 of Florida’s 28 congressional districts, and hope that a new map could allow them to pick up three to five seats.
While several Republican- and Democratic-run states have openly worked to boost their parties during an unusually aggressive mid-cycle redistricting push, the Florida constitution’s bans partisan gerrymandering, creating a key hurdle the lawmakers will need to circumvent to enact a new map before this fall’s midterm elections.
The redrawing of district lines typically happens at the start of each decade, after the census results are released. But President Donald Trump kicked off a national redistricting battle over the summer, when he called on Republican-controlled states across the country to draw new maps to shore up the GOP’s narrow House majority. Texas, Missouri and North Carolina all enacted new maps boosting Republicans.
Republicans have so far not been able to build as robust of an advantage as they initially hoped, after California Democrats retaliated with a new map last year. Virginia Democrats have also taken steps to do the same this year.
And national Republicans were dealt a blow in December when the Indiana Senate rejected a redrawn congressional map after a monthslong pressure campaign.




