INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana's Republican-led senate voted against a redrawn congressional map Thursday that would have favored their party in the 2026 elections, despite months of pressure by President Donald Trump for a rare mid-cycle redistricting.
Twenty-one senators from the Republican supermajority and all 10 of the chamber's Democrats voted down the redistricting proposal. Trump has urged GOP-led states to gerrymander their U.S. house districts ahead of the midterms to create more winnable seats for Republicans. It's an unusual move, since the district boundaries are usually adjusted based on the census every 10 year.
Ahead of the vote, Trump again criticized Indiana senators who resisted the plan, repeating his vow to back primary challengers against them.
''If Republicans will not do what is necessary to save our Country, they will eventually lose everything to the Democrats,'' Trump wrote on social media. Some Indiana lawmakers have also received violent threats during the debate over the last month. Half of the state Senate is up for reelection in 2026.
Democratic state senators spoke against the redistricting legislation one by one during Thursday's session.
''Competition is healthy my friends,'' said Sen. Fady Qaddoura. ''Any political party on earth that cannot run and win based on the merits of its ideas is unworthy of governing.''
Outside the state Senate chamber, redistricting opponents chanted ''Vote no!'' and ''Fair maps!'' while holding signs with slogans like ''Losers cheat.''
The proposed map was designed to give Republicans control of all nine of Indiana's congressional seats, up from the seven they currently hold. It would effectively erase Indiana's two Democrat-held districts by splitting Indianapolis into four districts that extend into rural areas, reshaping U.S. Rep. André Carson's safe district in the city. It would also eliminate the northwest Indiana district held by U.S. Rep. Frank Mrvan.