ANNAPOLIS, Md. — The Maryland House approved a new congressional map Monday that could enable Democrats to win the state's only Republican-held U.S. House seat, but leadership in the state Senate has said since October the bill doesn't have enough support to advance in that chamber — largely due to concerns it could backfire.
The Maryland House pushed forward with unusual mid-decade redistricting at the urging of Democratic Gov. Wes Moore in response to redistricting in other states.
Democrats now hold a 7-1 advantage over Republicans in the state's U.S. House delegation. The new map would make it easier to defeat Republican Rep. Andy Harris and enable Democrats to win all eight seats.
President Donald Trump launched mid-decade redistricting efforts last summer, when he urged Republican officials in Texas to redraw maps to help the GOP win more seats in hopes of preserving a narrow House majority.
Maryland Democrats spent much of the four-hour debate on Monday criticizing Trump's presidency. Del. C.T. Wilson, a Democrat who is the sponsor of the bill containing the map's new boundaries, said the measure is needed "to help ensure that this administration finally has a Congress that puts his power in check.''
Republicans who oppose the new map focused on how Harris' district, which is mostly on the state's largely rural Eastern Shore, would jump over the Chesapeake Bay to include more Democratic voters to help oust Harris.
''It is about nothing except party politics," Del. Jason Buckel, a western Maryland Republican who is the House minority leader, said.
But Del. Marc Korman, a Democrat in the Montgomery County suburbs of the nation's capital, argued that the district has extended over the bay several times since the 1960s — including once by court order — and five different Republicans still won the seat when it did, including Harris.