Six States Voting Today

By Jim Ellis — Tuesday, May 16, 2026

A half‑dozen states are holding their nominating elections today, and several major races will be decided. Runoffs in the top contests are likely in Alabama and Georgia. Nominations will be settled tonight in Idaho, Kentucky, Oregon, and Pennsylvania.

Below, we highlight the notable races in each state.

Alabama

Sen. Tommy Tuberville is well positioned to secure the Republican gubernatorial nomination tonight, while Rep. Barry Moore (R‑Enterprise) and Attorney General Steve Marshall appear most likely to advance to a Republican Senatorial runoff.

Because of redistricting, only Congressional Districts 3 (Rep. Mike Rogers-R), 4 (Rep. Robert Aderholt-R), and 5 (Rep. Dale Srong-R) hold their primaries today.

The primaries for Disricts 1, Open Seat; 2, Rep. Shomari Figures (D); 6, Rep. Gary Palmer (R); and 7, Rep. Terri Sewell (D); have been postponed to Aug. 11. Districts 3, 4, and 5 saw no boundary changes in the new 2026 map, so there was no reason to delay the primary in those particular domains.

Georgia

Two statewide races will dominate Georgia’s political landscape tonight. With Gov. Brian Kemp term‑limited, both parties are holding open contests to choose their nominees. In the Republican primary, businessman Rick Jackson and Lt. Gov. Burt Jones have consistently placed first and second in most polling.

Should the results track those trends, Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and Attorney General Chris Carr would be sidelined from advancing. On the Democratic side, the key question is whether former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms can reach the 50 percent threshold needed to secure the nomination outright.

In the Senate race, first‑term incumbent Jon Ossoff (D) has raised more money than any other U.S. candidate. In the Republican primary, it appears likely that Reps. Mike Collins (R‑Jackson) and Buddy Carter (R‑Pooler/Savannah) will advance ahead of former University of Tennessee head football coach Derek Dooley.

Four open seats in Districts 1, 10, 11, and 13 will likely see party runoffs form in each campaign. Among the notable candidates expected to advance are Jim Kingston (R), son of former longtime Congressman Jack Kingston (R), in District 1; and Public Service Commissioner Tricia Pridemore in District 11.

In District 13, the primary results will determine the general‑election matchups ahead of the July 28 special election to replace the late Rep. David Scott (D‑Atlanta). Two leading contenders, state Sen. Emanuel Jones (D‑Decatur) and state Rep. Jasmine Clark (D‑Lilburn), are opting not to run in the special election.

Idaho

Expect a quiet primary night in Idaho as incumbent Sen. Jim Risch (R) and Reps. Russ Fulcher (R-Meridian) and Mike Simpson (R-Idaho Falls) all appear set for strong general election runs.

Gov. Brad Little (R), seeking a third term, faces eight minor Republican challengers and is not expected to encounter significant resistance heading into November.

Kentucky

The two major Kentucky contests are the open US Senate race and the Republican primary challenge to seven‑term Rep. Thomas Massie (R‑Garrison), a frequent critic of President Trump.

On the Republican side, Rep. Andy Barr (R‑Lexington) appears to have made all the right moves in the closing stretch of the campaign to secure the party’s nomination. If such holds true tonight, he would have the inside track to succeed retiring Sen. Mitch McConnell (R).

For Democrats, the contest is between former state Rep. Charles Booker and 2020 US Senate nominee Amy McGrath. Booker leads in most polling, while McGrath holds the financial advantage.

As President Trump successfully targeted the Indiana state Senators who opposed his redistricting push, as well as Sen. Bill Cassidy (R‑LA), who lost his primary on Saturday, Rep. Massie now becomes his most recent potential political target.

The Congressman’s Republican primary challenger is retired Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein, who holds the President’s endorsement. Polling has been competitive, but Gallrein posted a 51–44 percent advantage, outside the survey’s margin of error, in the most recently released poll (Grayhouse; May 16–17; 435 likely KY‑4 Republican primary voters).

Republican officeholders who have opposed President Trump have generally fared poorly in subsequent elections, so tonight will show whether that pattern continues in Rep. Massie’s case.

Oregon

There is little suspense in today’s Oregon primary. Incumbents seeking re-election appear secure in their respective contests. The most notable race is the Republican gubernatorial primary, where 2022 nominee Christine Drazan is viewed as the favorite over state Rep. Ed Diehl (R‑Stayton) and 2010 nominee and retired professional basketball player Chris Dudley.

Whoever wins the GOP nomination will enter the general election as a clear underdog against Gov. Tina Kotek (D), who is seeking a second term.

Pennsylvania

The electorates in three U.S. House races will select Democratic nominees tonight, and all three could prove pivotal in determining control of the chamber in the general election.

In the Allentown/Bethlehem‑anchored 7th District, freshman Rep. Ryan MacKenzie (R‑Lower Macungie) is headed for a hard‑fought general‑election campaign in this politically competitive district.

Democrats have three strong contenders vying for the nomination tonight: State Firefighters Union president Bob Brooks, former federal prosecutor Ryan Crosswell, and Northampton County Executive Lamont McClure. The 7th District general election is expected to draw national attention.

To the north in the Scranton area, freshman Rep. Rob Bresnahan (R‑Dallas Township) is set to face Scranton Mayor Paige Cognetti (D) in the general election. Both candidates are unopposed in their respective primaries tonight. This race is expected to be another highly competitive general‑election contest.

In the Harrisburg‑anchored 10th District, Rep. Scott Perry (R‑Dillsburg) will again defend his politically marginal seat. His likely opponent is 2024 nominee Janelle Stelson, a former news anchor who held him to a 51–49 percent victory two years ago. Dauphin County Commissioner Justin Douglas is challenging her in the Democratic primary, but Stelson is favored.

Louisiana Sen. Cassidy Loses

By Jim Ellis — Monday, May 18, 2026

Senate

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) loses challenge to hold US Senate seat.

Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy suffered a decisive defeat in Saturday’s Republican primary, even failing to qualify for the runoff election.

Rep. Julia Letlow (R-Start), with President Trump’s public support, finished first with a strong 44.8 percent of the vote against three opponents, falling just over five percentage points short of an outright victory. She will advance to the June 27 runoff against State Treasurer, physician, and former Congressman John Fleming, who outpaced Sen. Cassidy to secure second place. Dr. Fleming finished 3.5 percentage points ahead of the two‑term incumbent, a margin of nearly 14,000 votes.

Letlow carried 53 of Louisiana’s 64 parishes — and potentially 54 once all ballots are tallied. She trails Dr. Fleming by a single vote in Grant Parish. Including Grant, Dr. Fleming won eight parishes, all located within the 4th Congressional District that he represented for eight years. Sen. Cassidy managed to prevail in only three parishes, two in the New Orleans metro area and one in Baton Rouge.

The result marked another impressive primary victory for President Trump. He endorsed Rep. Letlow even before she became a Senate candidate. Sen. Cassidy had been Trump’s top Republican intra‑party target, as he is one of only two GOP Senators on the ballot this year — the other being Susan Collins from Maine — who voted for the 2021 impeachment just days before Trump left office after losing the 2020 election.

Clearly, Sen. Cassidy did not anticipate Trump’s return to the Presidency, which proved a grave political miscalculation. Of course, the Senator will remain in office to serve the final seven months of the current term.

Cassidy was first elected in 2014 and re‑elected in 2020, both under Louisiana’s jungle primary system, in which all candidates appear on the same ballot regardless of party affiliation. He defeated three‑term Sen. Mary Landrieu (D) in the 2014 runoff by a 56-44 percent margin. In 2020, he won re‑election outright in the jungle primary, earning 59.3 percent of the vote against 14 opponents, only one of whom was a Republican.

Many Louisiana political observers believe that unseating Sen. Cassidy was one factor motivating the legislature and Gov. Jeff Landry (R) to change the state’s nomination structure. Analysts have suggested that Cassidy would likely have performed better under the previous jungle primary system, where Democrats and Independents could also participate.

Instead of holding a November jungle primary concurrently with the general election followed by December runoffs for any race in which no candidate reached the 50 percent threshold, the legislature and Governor replaced the system with early closed partisan primaries for federal offices and select Louisiana state contests.

Ironically, because of the ongoing redistricting process, primaries for the US House races were not held on Saturday. Once a new 2026 congressional map is finalized, those campaigns will return to the traditional November/December schedule. As before, any candidate who secures a majority in the November vote will be elected outright.

For the Democrats, Saturday’s overwhelming first‑place finisher was farmer Jamie Davis, who captured 47.4 percent of the vote and topped his two opponents in all 64 parishes. It remains unclear whom he will face in the runoff, as the current second‑place candidate, businessman and Navy veteran Gary Crockett, leads non-profit organization executive Nicolas Albares by only 284 votes with several thousand ballots still uncounted.

In both parties, the first‑place finishers came close enough to the 50 percent mark that Rep. Letlow and Davis enter their respective June 27 runoff elections as virtual prohibitive favorites. Given Louisiana’s strong Republican lean, Rep. Letlow would then become the clear general‑election favorite once the runoffs conclude.

The Cassidy defeat brings the number of open US Senate races in the 2026 cycle to 11 – seven from the Republican side and four from the Democratic column. The next major Senate contest arrives on May 26 in Texas, where Sen. John Cornyn and Attorney General Ken Paxton are competing for the Republican nomination in what is expected to be a very close finish.

Louisiana Senate Primary Tomorrow

By Jim Ellis — Friday, May 15, 2026

Primary

Voting in the hard-fought Louisiana Republican primary among Sen. Bill Cassidy, Rep. Julia Letlow (R-Start), and State Treasurer John Fleming takes place tomorrow, and only two things appear certain. First, the race is headed to a runoff because none of the three candidates has majority support. Second, one contender will be eliminated, but polling has not definitively shown which one.

Ever since President Trump was re-elected, it became clear that he would seek to defeat Sen. Cassidy in Louisiana’s Republican nomination contest. Cassidy was one of two Republican Senators who voted to convict Trump in the 2021 impeachment trial, likely under the assumption that the outgoing president would never return to office.

True to form, Trump is now seeking political retribution. The only other Republican Senator on the 2026 ballot who voted to convict him in the impeachment trial is Maine’s Susan Collins. But because Republicans view her as their only chance of holding that seat, she has thus far avoided presidential opposition.

President Trump endorsed Rep. Letlow even before she officially entered the Senate race. The campaign’s true surprise, however, is State Treasurer and former Congressman Fleming’s strength. He has turned the Senate primary into a genuine three-way contest – a development few observers anticipated.

On the eve of the primary, it remains unclear which of the three candidates will be eliminated tomorrow, and it is entirely possible that Sen. Cassidy could even fail to qualify for the runoff election.

Four polls have been released since April 26 – from Emerson College, BDPC (a Louisiana polling firm), Fabrizio, Lee & Associates, and Quantus Insights. The two challengers have led in at least one of the recent surveys, while the incumbent has failed to place first.

The Emerson College poll (April 24-26; 455 likely Louisiana Republican primary voters; multiple sampling techniques) finds a virtual two-way tie, with Sen. Cassidy trailing outside the survey’s margin of error. The ballot test shows Fleming leading Letlow, 28-27 percent, while Sen. Cassidy attracts only 21 percent support.

The BDPC poll (April 28-30; 600 likely Louisiana Republican primary voters) projects Letlow leading beyond the survey’s margin of error, with Sen. Cassidy and Dr. Fleming tied for second place but well behind. The ballot test favors Letlow, 33-21-21 percent.

The Fabrizio, Lee & Associates study (April 4-5; 600 likely Louisiana Republican primary voters; live interview and text) also finds Rep. Letlow leading, with Sen. Cassidy in second place and Dr. Fleming falling short of runoff qualification. The Fabrizio ballot test posts a 32-26-21 percent split.

The most recent survey, from Quantus Insights (May 6-7; 1,015 likely Louisiana Republican primary voters; online), paints yet another distinctly different picture. Here, Rep. Letlow leads with 42 percent support, the strongest showing for any candidate in the recent polling, though still well below the 50 percent threshold needed to avoid a runoff. Thus, despite Letlow’s sizable advantage, the Quantus numbers still point toward a secondary election.

Dr. Fleming places second with 30 percent support in the Quantus result, while Sen. Cassidy trails badly at just 20 percent among Republican primary voters.

The cumulative results of these polls suggest that Rep. Letlow is likely to qualify for the second round, while it remains a toss-up whether Sen. Cassidy or Dr. Fleming will join her in the runoff. This is a rare situation in which, on the eve of a primary election, it is uncertain whether an incumbent will even advance to the runoff.

One area in which Sen. Cassidy leads is campaign resources. Through the April 26 pre-primary reporting period, he had raised $13.3 million and retained more than $5.5 million for the final stretch before the primary. By comparison, Dr. Fleming raised $11.2 million, including $9.6 million from individuals other than himself, while Rep. Letlow has raised just under $4.4 million.

Since the 2026 election has thus far proved to be turnout rather than persuasion driven, Sen. Cassidy using his financial advantage to deploy his vote base to the maximum degree will greatly improve his chances of securing a runoff position.

With inconsistent polling results over a prolonged period, virtually anything could happen tomorrow. The runoff election is scheduled for June 27.

Redistricting: Alabama, Yes — SC, No

By Jim Ellis — Thursday, May 14, 2026

Alabama

Click the map above or here to see an interactive version: Alabama Congressional Districts map.

The US Supreme Court acted quickly and decisively earlier this week to resolve the Alabama redistricting situation.

The high court vacated all lower-court federal injunctions related to Alabama’s 2023 congressional map, which had previously been ruled a racial gerrymander. The Court’s opinion in Callais v. Louisiana effectively invalidated the prior rulings, clearing the way for Alabama to proceed with enacting a new congressional redistricting plan.

Gov. Kay Ivey (R) summoned the legislature into a special redistricting session following the Callais decision, and lawmakers moved to reinstate the congressional map they passed in 2023. The plan is expected to give Republicans an additional seat and return the state to a 6R–1D delegation. The map shifts the 2nd District back into southeastern Alabama after a court order had previously required the creation of a second majority minority district anchored in the city of Montgomery.

Returning to the 2023 map resolves a major Republican redistricting challenge in southern Alabama. With Rep. Barry Moore (R-Enterprise) running for the Senate, former Rep. Jerry Carl (R) had been set for a Republican primary battle with state Rep. Rhett Marques (R-Enterprise) in the open 1st District, which stretched from Mobile to the Georgia border.

Under the newly enacted plan, however, Carl and Marques will run in separate Republican-leaning districts, each of which would make them nominal favorites in their respective congressional campaigns.

Now seeing a legal resolution, Gov. Ivey announced that the primaries for the affected districts, meaning CDs 1, 2, 6, and 7, are now scheduled for Aug. 11. The remaining districts, 3, 4, and 5, will continue their nomination process on May 19, the state’s original primary election date. Because the boundaries of those latter three districts remain unchanged, there is no need to postpone their primaries.

Although Alabama is a runoff election state, the districts holding delayed primaries will not be subject to a secondary runoff. Instead, the candidates receiving the highest number of votes in their respective primaries will secure their party nominations and advance to the general election.

There had been speculation that the legislature might attempt to draw a 7R – 0D congressional map, but the lawmakers ultimately bypassed the opportunity in order to quickly enact a new plan.

South Carolina

While Alabama moved forward with redistricting, the South Carolina legislature did not. Falling two votes short of the two-thirds majority needed to suspend the regular order rules to move a new bill, lawmakers will conclude the 2026 legislative session today without making any changes to the state’s congressional map.

The opportunity for change, however, may not be over. Gov. Henry McMaster (R) still has the power to call a special legislative session for the purpose of drawing a new congressional map. If convened quickly, a revised plan could still be implemented for the 2026 election cycle.

In a special session, only a simple majority vote would be required to bring the measure forward and secure final passage. Since the state House approved the proposed map with two-thirds support and the Senate fell only two votes short of that threshold, Republicans would likely have sufficient backing to enact a new 7R–0D congressional map.

Gov. Henry McMaster has previously said he would not call a special session, but he could still change course. It is clear that President Trump and congressional Republican leaders are likely to lobby him to move forward with a new federal redistricting map.

Now that Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and Tennessee have all enacted new congressional maps in recent days, it remains to be seen if South Carolina will ultimately follow suit.

Nebraska & WV Primary Results

By Jim Ellis — Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Nebraska

The big story emerging from the Nebraska primary is whether Cindy Burbank, who last night overwhelmingly won the Democratic primary with 90 percent of the vote over Pastor Bill Forbes, will now withdraw from the race, thereby giving Independent Dan Osborn a clear path to challenge Sen. Pete Ricketts (R) in the general election.

Controversy arose over pre-primary comments she made about endorsing Osborn if she were to become the Democratic nominee before exiting the race. Those remarks prompted the Secretary of State to disqualify her candidacy, arguing that she had violated Nebraska’s candidate oath, which requires individuals seeking office to pledge that they will serve if nominated and elected.

Burbank sued to retain her place on the ballot and prevailed in court. At the time of her reinstatement, she again pledged to remain in the race and serve if elected. Whether she ultimately keeps that promise remains to be seen.

It is clear that Burbank, who raised less than $5,000 for her statewide primary campaign, is unlikely to mount a significant challenge against Sen. Ricketts. Osborn, by contrast, has already raised more than $4 million for his campaign and is clearly emerging as Sen. Ricketts’ principal opponent.

In the House races, the 2nd District Democratic primary is ending in a close contest between political consultant Denise Powell and state Sen. John Cavanaugh (D-Omaha). It appears Powell will upset Sen. Cavanaugh who was considered the favorite for the nomination.

With about 6,300 votes remaining to be counted, Powell led 38.9 – 36.8 percent. The eventual winner, presumably Powell, will advance to the general election to face Omaha City Councilman Brinker Harding, who was unopposed in the Republican primary.

The 2nd District represents a prime Democratic conversion opportunity from an electorate that twice opposed President Trump and where Republican incumbent Don Bacon is retiring after what will be 10 years of service in the US House.

In the 1st Congressional District, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Chris Backemeyer won the Democratic primary and will now challenge incumbent Rep. Mike Flood (R-Norfolk) in the general election.

In the 3rd CD, which stretches across the width of the state from the Wyoming and Colorado borders to Iowa and Missouri, veteran Rep. Adrian Smith (R-Gering) will face agribusiness associate Becky Stille in the general election. Nebraska’s 3rd District is one of the safest Republican seats in the country. Rep. Mike Flood is also considered a prohibitive favorite for re-election.

In the Governor’s race, incumbent Jim Pillen won renomination in the Republican primary with more than 75 percent of the vote. His general election opponent will be former state Sen. Lynne Walz (D), a cousin of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the former Democratic Vice Presidential nominee.

West Virginia

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito won an easy Republican primary victory last night in the Mountain State, scoring a 66 percent win over state Sen. Tom Willis (R-Berkeley) and four minor intra-party opponents.

In the general election, she will face former Morgantown City Councilwoman Rachel Fetty-Anderson who secured a 33-27 percent victory over former state Senate President Jeff Kessler and three lesser-known Democratic candidates. Sen. Capito now becomes a prohibitive favorite in the general election.

In the congressional races, 1st District Rep. Carol Miller (R-Huntington) will square off against retired public policy analyst Vince George, who won the Democratic primary.

In northern District 2, the new Democratic nominee is political organizer Ace Parsi, who scored a close 40-38 percent victory over educator Stephanie Spears Tomana. Parsi will now face freshman Rep. Riley Moore (R-Harpers Ferry), who was unopposed for renomination.

Along with Sen. Capito, both Reps. Miller and Moore are strong favorites in the general election.

Nebraska & WV Primaries Today

By Jim Ellis — Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Two more states are holding their regular primary elections today: the Cornhusker State of Nebraska and the Mountain State of West Virginia. We have entered a primary election cycle where various states hold primaries every week from now through June 30. In May, primaries will be held today, the 12th, and on the 16th, 19th and 26th. In June, 17 more primaries will be held on every Tuesday of the month — on the 2nd, 9th, 18th, 23rd, and 30th.

Nebraska

Several Nebraska races are of note today, but none more unique than the US Senate Democratic primary.

As we saw in 2024, Independent Dan Osborn emerged as the de facto Democratic challenger to Sen. Deb Fischer (R) with the party’s official support. This year, he returns to challenge Sen. Pete Ricketts (R), who is on the ballot seeking his first full six-year term.

Ricketts, the state’s former Governor, was appointed in 2023 to replace resigned Sen. Ben Sasse (R). He was then elected in 2024 with 62 percent of the vote to serve the remaining two years of the current term.

The Democratic primary is the race to watch tonight. Two candidates are on the ballot, and the eventual nominee could ultimately withdraw from the race.

Democratic activist Cindy Burbank previously stated that she supports Dan Osborn and would withdraw from the race and endorse him if she became the Democratic nominee. The Secretary of State subsequently disqualified her candidacy, citing a Nebraska law requiring candidates to sign an oath affirming that they will assume office if elected. Burbank challenged the decision in court, and a judge later reinstated her candidacy.

The other Democratic candidate is pastor Bill Forbes, who says he supports Sen. Ricketts. So, it is likely that he would remain on the ballot should he win the party nomination in order to draw some Democratic votes away from Mr. Osborn.

Neither Democratic primary candidate has raised significant funds. According to the March 31 Federal Election Commission financial disclosure reports, Burbank had raised just $4,296 for her campaign, while Pastor Forbes reported only $1,000.

All of this points toward a general election featuring Sen. Pete Ricketts and Independent Dan Osborn. The race is expected to become expensive, but the Senator remains the clear favorite to win comfortably, regardless of what early polling may suggest.

Gov. Jim Pillen is seeking a second term and faces only minor opposition in the Republican primary. Democrats, meanwhile, are holding a two-way primary, with former state Sen. Lynne Walz, a cousin of Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (D), expected to win the party’s nomination tonight. Gov. Pillen is favored for re-election.

Two of the state’s three congressional incumbents are seeking re-election. Rep. Mike Flood (R-Norfolk) is unopposed for renomination and will likely face former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Chris Backemeyer, who is expected to emerge from tonight’s Democratic primary. With a partisan lean of 56.7R – 40.4D, according to Dave’s Redistricting App, Rep. Flood should face little difficulty in the general election.

Third District veteran Rep. Adrian Smith (R-Gering) sees only minor opposition in tonight’s Republican primary. He represents Nebraska’s safest Republican congressional district, with a partisan lean of 75.2 – 22.8D according to Dave’s Redistricting App. NE-3 is a sprawling district that stretches across the state from the Wyoming and Colorado borders to the Iowa and Missouri lines.

The state’s key general election battle will take place in the Omaha anchored 2nd Congressional District, where five-term Rep. Don Bacon (R-Papillion) is retiring. The district’s electorate has twice voted against President Trump, supporting Kamala Harris 52-47 percent in 2024 and Joe Biden with a 52-46 percent margin in 2020.

The 2nd District is considered one of Democrats’ top conversion opportunities in the country. Republicans will formally nominate Omaha City Councilman Brinker Harding tonight, as he runs unopposed for the party’s nomination.

The Democratic field is crowded, with six candidates competing for the nomination. The contest is largely centered on state Sen. John Cavanaugh (D-Omaha), whose father served in the US House in the 1970s, political consultant and Democratic activist Denise Powell, and former US Department of Veterans Affairs Deputy Assistant Secretary Kishla Askins.

West Virginia

A quiet primary night is expected in the Mountain State. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R) is seeking a third term and, although she faces five Republican challengers, the most notable being state Sen. Tom Willis (R-Berkeley), she is widely expected to secure renomination with ease. Sen. Capito is also a prohibitive favorite in the general election.

In the House, Rep. Carol Miller (R-Huntington) faces only a minor opponent in tonight’s primary. In the 2nd District, freshman Rep. Riley Moore (R-Harpers Ferry) is unopposed for renomination. Both incumbents are considered strong favorites for re-election in November.

Redistricting Review, Post Virginia

Virginia Congressional Districts / Dave’s Redistricting App (6D-5R map)

By Jim Ellis — Monday, May 11, 2026

The Virginia state Supreme Court decision to uphold the lower court ruling, finding that the legislature violated its own rules by rushing a referendum onto the ballot and, in the process, violated the Old Dominion Constitution, has significantly altered the outlook for the House midterm elections.

Instead of the cumulative effect of the new congressional maps being largely a wash, with neither party gaining a significant number of seats, Republicans are now positioned to net between 8 and 12 seats. Added to their current 220 seats, the new maps could expand their current prospective majority to more than 230 seats.

The following is an update on where the affected states stand in terms of 2026 electoral outlook under the new congressional maps, Starting with Virginia first:

Virginia

On Friday last week, the state Supreme Court invalidated the statewide redistricting referendum vote, upholding the lower court ruling that said the legislature violated its own rules and the state constitution in rushing the referendum to the ballot. While congressional redistricting is now effectively closed for this year here, meaning the 6D-5R map will remain in place for the 2026 elections, the process could be revisited in time to produce a new Virginia map for the 2028 cycle.

Certainly, the state Supreme Court ruling is a big win for Republicans, but the victory is likely to be short lived. For 2026, however, expect all Virginia incumbents to be favored for re-election.

California; Texas

The nation’s two most populous states became the focal points of the early redistricting battles, with party leaders in both parties predicting that their new maps would yield a net gain of five seats for their respective parties.

A closer examination of the partisan data and voting histories in the affected areas, however, suggests that gaining five seats under these new maps may be ambitious. What does appear likely, however, whether the eventual gain is three, four, or five seats, is that the two states will largely cancel each other out in terms of national seat gains.

Alabama

After the US Supreme Court’s ruling in the Callais v. Louisiana established clearer criteria for the construction of minority districts, the Alabama legislature reinstated a congressional map it had originally passed in 2023, only to have it later struck down by a court as a partisan gerrymander. Under the Supreme Court’s new directive, however, the plan could no longer be characterized as a racial gerrymander.

There is one remaining legal hurdle for the map to overcome, so it is possible that Gov. Kay Ivey (R) could suspend the congressional primaries until the map issue is resolved. Campaigns competing in the regularly scheduled May 19 primary for other offices would likely still be allowed to proceed.

The 2023 map would eliminate the majority minority 2nd District that a previous court had ordered drawn. Assuming no further legal complications arise, Alabama’s congressional delegation would likely revert to a 6R-1D partisan split. Rep. Shomari Figures’ (D-Montgomery) 2nd District would be dismantled and shifted back into southeastern Alabama, like its configuration during the previous decade.

Florida

The new Florida map has cleared the legislative process and now must face a legal challenge before the state Supreme Court. The plaintiffs are expected to file suit pertaining to the state ballot initiative voters approved to establish criteria for drawing legislative and congressional districts.

It is probable the court will rule that the map, which is predicted to net the Republicans three to four seats, is a partisan gerrymander with a projected 24R-4D partisan split; but other provisions of the voter-passed initiative may violate the SCOTUS’ Louisiana ruling. But the new map will likely stand for now, and net the GOP three to four seats.

Louisiana

The Bayou State is at the center of the determinative racial gerrymandering ruling, and Louisiana is now moving toward adopting a new congressional map that would produce a 5R-1D partisan split; thus, returning to the configuration that existed before the series of court rulings that ultimately reached the US Supreme Court.

The new map is reportedly being designed to preserve a Baton Rouge-anchored seat for Rep. Cleo Fields (D) while eliminating the New Orleans-based district that Rep. Troy Carter (D) currently holds.

Mississippi

Gov. Tate Reeves (R) has called a special redistricting legislative session, but only for the purpose of redrawing the state’s Supreme Court districts.

With the primary election already held on March 10, ordering a new round of congressional redistricting would effectively invalidate the 2026 primary, requiring all candidates to re-file and compete under a revised map. As a result, it appears unlikely that Mississippi congressional redistricting will take place in 2026.

Missouri

The Missouri map was enacted months ago, but opponents gathered enough signatures to qualify a repeal initiative for the ballot. The Missouri Supreme Court is now considering whether to stay the new map pending the vote or allow it to remain in effect for the 2026 election cycle. In the meantime, candidates have already filed under the current district lines.

If the map is allowed to stand, Republicans are expected to gain one seat in the delegation at the expense of veteran Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Kansas City), though the Congressman has already filed for re-election. According to the Dave’s Redistricting App statisticians, the new 5th District has a partisan lean of 56.6R – 41.1D.

North Carolina

The Tar Heel State was among the first to complete the redistricting process, and the new congressional map will stand. The revised plan effectively shifts one district from Democratic to Republican control. Rep. Don Davis (D-Snow Hill) now sees his eastern North Carolina district move from a lean Democratic seat to one that is likely to favor a Republican in the general election.

In 2024, Rep. Davis won re-election by a margin of less than 1.5 percentage points. Retired Army officer Laurie Buckhout (R) is returning for a rematch, and this time the political landscape is more favorable to her chances of unseating the Congressman. With North Carolina’s primary having been held on March 3, the general election field is now set, and campaigning is underway.

South Carolina

While Gov. Henry McMaster (R) has said he would not call the legislature into a special redistricting session, lawmakers — still meeting in regular session — are moving forward with efforts to redraw the state’s congressional map.

Because the session is nearing adjournment, new legislation, including any proposal to adopt a revised congressional redistricting plan, would require a two-thirds vote of members to be added to the legislative calendar.

Republicans believe they have the votes to advance a 7R-0D plan from the House of Representatives, though they may be slightly short of the necessary support in the state Senate. If the new redistricting map is to pass, it will need to do so this week.

Tennessee

The Tennessee legislature and Governor passed a new 9R-0D congressional map soon after the Supreme Court ruled on the Louisiana racial gerrymandering case. With the Tennessee primary not scheduled until Aug. 6, the new map will stand. As a result, Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis), the state’s only remaining Democratic member of the House, faces long odds of returning to the next Congress.

Utah

Months ago, the Utah court system invalidated the state’s 4R–0D congressional map, ruling that the legislature had disregarded voter-approved criteria for drawing district boundaries. As a result, the courts imposed a new map that creates a Salt Lake City–based district that Democrats are expected to win. Overall, Utah’s redistricting is projected to result in a net gain of one Democratic seat.

Redistricting: Tennessee & Alabama

Click on the map above to see a larger image size, or go here to see the map on the Tennessee Legislature’s site: https://www.capitol.tn.gov/common/img/US-House_2026_Proposed.jpg

By Jim Ellis — Friday, May 8, 2026

Tennessee

The Volunteer State’s legislature passed a new congressional map, and Gov. Bill Lee (R) signed the legislation into law late this week. The map will likely produce a new 9R-0D congressional delegation.

Principally, the map divides the previous 9th District that contained the city of Memphis and was almost wholly contained in Shelby County into sections. The draw creates a new 9th CD that houses part of Shelby County but then stretches to the outer Nashville suburbs. Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) has represented the 9th CD since the beginning of 2007 as a Caucasian in a 60 percent African American district.

Despite having a white Representative, the 9th was a protected majority minority district under the Voting Rights Act. With last week’s US Supreme Court ruling on the Callais v. Louisiana case, the TN-9 District may be redrawn because race can now be used as a factor in redistricting only if the underlying situation involves prisons or if there is demonstrative evidence that a racial community historically has been directly barred access to voting. Since neither of the criteria exists in this area, the new map was drawn.

The new 9th stretches from the south Memphis suburbs easterly along the Mississippi border and past the city of Shelbyville before turning north to move into the outer Nashville suburbs found in Franklin County. The seat transforms from one where Kamala Harris attracted 70.8 percent of the district vote to a CD where President Trump would have defeated her with a 59.9 – 38.8 percent margin.

Rep. Andy Ogles’ (R-Columbia) 5th District is also vastly different under the new map. Part of the reason for the drastic change was to give Rep. Ogles a different Republican district to help him survive certain political fallout that was endangering his re-election chances.

The 5th, while continuing to begin in the area south and west of Nashville, then moves northwest to capture part of the city of Clarksville near the Kentucky border before moving to the Missouri border and then south along the Arkansas border all the way through Shelby County and the city of Memphis to Mississippi. The new 5th would have yielded President Trump a 60.9 – 37.8 percent win, a slight uptick over the previous 5th CD where Trump defeated Harris, 58.1 – 40.3 percent.

The new map changes every congressional district in Tennessee’s central and western regions. The most negatively affected seat for an incumbent is Rep. David Kustoff’s (R-Germantown), who sees his 8th CD that occupies most of far western Tennessee and stretches from the Kentucky border to Mississippi into one that has a more west to east construction.

In terms of partisanship, Kustoff takes a major hit but would still have a solidly Republican district. Under the previous 8th, President Trump defeated Harris by a whopping 70.0 – 28.9 percent spread. Under the new plan, the Trump victory margin would have been 59.4 – 39.2 percent or a negative swing from Rep. Kustoff’s perspective of a net 20.9 points. Still, the new 8th will be rated as safely Republican.

Aside from Rep. Diana Harshbarger’s (R-Kingsport) northeastern District 1 where President Trump would have captured 78.4 percent of the vote, the remaining 8 congressional districts all fall between 67.2 percent Trump to 59.4 percent.

With the Tennessee candidate filing deadline already passed, but the state’s primary not until Aug. 6, the Governor has plenty of time to change the US House filing schedule in order to implement the new map for the 2026 election.

Alabama

Decisions were made with regard to Alabama redistricting, too. Because this state is in precisely the same situation as Louisiana, their remedy will be similar. Instead of drawing a new map, however, the legislature says it will revert to a plan passed in 2023, but which was declared a racial gerrymander.

With the ruling criteria established from the Callais v. Louisiana case before the Supreme Court, the legislative leaders believe the previously drawn 2023 map will be legal under the definitive SCOTUS ruling. Therefore, they have reinstituted the plan. The question remains as to whether a court will approve the maneuver in time for the 2026 election.

The Alabama primary is scheduled for May 19, so obviously the Governor will have to establish a new nomination date for the state’s US House races. Should the 2023 map stand, it is likely that freshman Rep. Shomari Figures (D-Montgomery) will be the odd man out, since this map basically restores the footprint of the 2021 map. This means that both the cities of Mobile and Montgomery will anchor their own districts as opposed to being placed in the same 1st District as is the current case.

The change to the 2023 map would very likely return Alabama to a 6R-1D delegation as compared to the current 5R-2D division.

The Ohio Outlook

To see an interactive view of this 2026 Ohio Congressional Districts map, click on the image above or go to Dave’s Redistricting App.

By Jim Ellis — Thursday, May 7, 2026

Ohio Elections

The Indiana and Ohio primaries were held on Tuesday, and while the Indiana general election appears quiet, we will see plenty of action in the Buckeye State of Ohio.

The Senate and Governor’s races will be hotly contested and expensive. Former Sen. Sherrod Brown (D) returns in a comeback attempt after losing his seat in 2024 to current Sen. Bernie Moreno (R). Now against appointed Sen. Jon Husted (R), we will see a different race.

It is important to remember that former Sen. Brown received 230,000-plus more votes in his 2024 losing effort than he did when he last won in 2018. Yet, he still lost by just under four percentage points, thus showing how far Ohio has moved to the political right.

We can expect this year’s race to be expensive, and it will continue to feature close polling. In the campaign’s final two weeks, if the typical Ohio pattern remains true in 2026, Husted will pull away and win with a comfortable single-digit margin.

The open Governor’s race, featuring Republican businessman and former presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, and Democratic ex-Ohio Health Director Amy Acton will also be very expensive and potentially end in a closer finish than the Senate campaign. Dr. Acton was in charge of the state’s COVID response, so expect her decision to advocate and implement a full shutdown during the pandemic to become a campaign issue.

In the US House campaigns in Ohio, six contests are of note. The most vulnerable seats under the new Ohio congressional map, to which the bipartisan elected officials redistricting commission unanimously agreed, are those of Reps. Marcy Kaptur (D-Toledo) and Greg Landsman (D-Cincinnati).

Former state Rep. Derek Merrin, who won Tuesday’s 9th District Republican primary, was also the nominee in 2024; in that ’24 contest, Merrin came within seven-tenths of a percentage point of unseating Rep. Kaptur, now fourth in US House seniority having been first elected in 1982.

The redistricting map made Democratic Rep. Kaptur’s Toledo-anchored 9th CD even more Republican. Under the new plan, President Trump would have carried the seat by a 55-44 percent margin, a net four points more Republican than the previous district configuration. This race will be a top national GOP conversion opportunity.

The Democratic House Majority PAC has already committed more than $3 million in advertising buys in the Toledo market to help Rep. Kaptur, so we will see another red-hot campaign here unfold over the next few months.

In Cincinnati, Rep. Landsman’s 1st District is also more Republican when compared to the previous Ohio congressional map. Before the changes, Kamala Harris recorded a 53-46 percent victory margin over President Trump. Rep. Landsman scored a re-election win percentage of 55 in 2024 after unseating veteran Rep. Steve Chabot (R) two years earlier with a 53 percent victory total.

Under the new redistricting map, however, the 1st District dramatically changes. Instead of President Trump losing by seven points, he would have carried the new CD-1 with a three-point margin. Therefore, we see a net 10-point swing in Republicans’ favor, which certainly makes the 1st District 2026 campaign a major national target.

Former CIA case officer Eric Conroy became the consensus Republican candidate, and he easily won Tuesday’s Republican primary with 70 percent of the vote against two opponents.

But the Democratic incumbent is no pushover. Rep. Landsman already possesses $2.9 million in his campaign account, and the House Majority PAC has reserved $1.9 million in Cincinnati media time to aid his campaign.

Democrats are also targeting other races that appear as long shots. The House Majority PAC has reserved media airtime (including digital advertising) in the Cleveland market ($1.175 million) largely to target Rep. Max Miller (R-Rocky River) in the new 7th CD. Winning the Democratic nomination on Tuesday night is Brook Park City Councilman Brian Poindexter.

Some of the Cleveland market buy could also be used to support Rep. Emilia Sykes (D-Akron). Her 13th District was thought to be a major target in 2026, but the new map actually made the seat more Democratic. Therefore, the top Republican candidate, former state legislator Kevin Coughlin who held the Congresswoman to a 51-49 percent victory in 2024, dropped out of the race. As a result, Democrat Sykes is in strong position for re-election without much help needed from outside organizations.

The House Majority PAC is also investing heavily in the Dayton and Columbus markets.

In the 10th District, the Democrats are targeting veteran Rep. Mike Turner (R-Dayton). A $2.8 million media reservation in the Dayton market suggests their efforts are serious. The new Democratic nominee is nurse and Air Force veteran Kristina Knickerbocker, who defeated five Democratic opponents with one-third of the primary vote.

It remains to be seen if Knickerbocker can mount a serious challenge, but the HMP’s big monetary commitment suggests that they will make OH-10 a top national priority.

Finally, in what is clearly a long-shot effort, the House Majority PAC has reserved $1.8 million in Columbus media time to challenge Rep. Mike Carey (R-Columbus). His 15th District seat is a mid-50s Republican domain, which makes unseating a GOP incumbent very difficult.

The new Democratic nominee, defeating the 2024 challenger on Tuesday, is college professor Don Leonard. Party leaders believe he would be a stronger candidate than former state Rep. Adam Miller who lost to Carey 56-44 percent in the last election.

Though the media time is reserved, the buyer can make changes and cancellations (with a financial penalty) before the actual payment comes due. Therefore, if these challenges do not materialize to a satisfactory degree, the House Majority PAC leaders can transfer the money to fund other races.

Expect the Ohio electorate to play a major role in determining which party will control the House in the next Congress.