When Indiana adopted new U.S. House districts four years ago, Republican legislative leaders lauded them as ''fair maps'' that reflected the state's communities.
But when Gov. Mike Braun recently tried to redraw the lines to help Republicans gain more power, he implored lawmakers to "vote for fair maps.''
What changed? The definition of ''fair.''
As states undertake mid-decade redistricting instigated by President Donald Trump, Republicans and Democrats are using a tit-for-tat definition of fairness to justify districts that split communities in an attempt to send politically lopsided delegations to Congress. It is fair, they argue, because other states have done the same. And it is necessary, they claim, to maintain a partisan balance in the House of Representatives that resembles the national political divide.
This new vision for drawing congressional maps is creating a winner-take-all scenario that treats the House, traditionally a more diverse patchwork of politicians, like the Senate, where members reflect a state's majority party. The result could be reduced power for minority communities, less attention to certain issues and fewer distinct voices heard in Washington.
Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky fears that unconstrained gerrymandering would put the United States on a perilous path, if Democrats in states such as Texas and Republicans in states like California feel shut out of electoral politics. ''I think that it's going to lead to more civil tension and possibly more violence in our country,'' he said Sunday on NBC's ''Meet the Press.''
Although Indiana state senators rejected a new map backed by Trump and Braun that could have helped Republicans win all nine of the state's congressional seats, districts have already been redrawn in Texas, California, Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio. Other states could consider changes before the 2026 midterms that will determine control of Congress.
''It's a fundamental undermining of a key democratic condition,'' said Wayne Fields, a retired English professor from Washington University in St. Louis who is an expert on political rhetoric.