Jasmine Crockett One Step Closer to Being Redistricted Out of Office

Democratic Rep. Jasmine Crockett (TX) is facing a political earthquake after Texas Republicans advanced a sweeping mid-decade redistricting plan that could eliminate her seat entirely — and leave her outside the district she currently represents.

Crockett, a first-term congresswoman from Dallas known for combative exchanges, has frequently lashed out against the plan to dismantle five Democratic-held U.S. House districts in Austin, Dallas, Houston, and South Texas, reshaping the state’s political map to favor Republicans heading into the 2026 midterm elections.

One of the biggest casualties is Crockett’s 30th Congressional District. Under the new boundaries, she would no longer reside within the district’s lines — a major complication for any re-election bid.

“I currently don’t live in the [Congressional District] 30 that they created… that’s not where I live now,” Crockett said. “They are supposed to take that into consideration, and these are some of the things that the court will look at when they’re trying to determine whether or not there were problems with creating the maps. It’s really awful.”

Crockett slammed the plan as a “hot mess” and accusing Republicans of racial targeting, pointing out that several affected districts are held by black Democrats, including veteran Houston Rep. Al Green, famous for repeatedly and futilely attempting to impeach former President Donald Trump.

“It is so sad that these people have no integrity and could care less about doing what’s right,” Crockett claimed. “They want to exhaust us, and I want us to dig deep and show them even more energy than they could have ever imagined coming from us, us being we, the people. We are the state that actually brought the country Roe v. Wade; it is time for us to rise.”

On X, Crockett accused Republicans of trying to “cheat” to hold onto power.

“Republicans in Texas just rolled out their proposed Congressional map that cut 5 Democratic seats out of thin air,” she wrote. “Let’s be clear: these maps are not about representation, it’s a power grab to silence voters and suppress votes… If your big idea is ‘cheat harder,’ maybe it’s time to rethink your politics.”

Her remarks came just days before the Texas Senate took up the map. On Tuesday, the Republican-controlled chamber passed it in a 19–2 vote along party lines. Nine of the 11 Senate Democrats walked out moments before the vote in protest, leaving the floor nearly empty but unable to block the outcome.
The plan creates up to five new Republican-majority U.S. House seats. In a statement, the Senate Democratic Caucus blasted the effort as “politicians picking their voters instead of voters choosing their leaders” and accused Republicans of hijacking a special session that was supposed to address flood relief.

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who presides over the Senate, praised the vote and vowed to push the map until it becomes law.

“The Texas Senate will continue passing this map each legislative session to accurately reflect our state until House Democrats return from their ‘vacation’ and get back to work for the people of Texas,” Patrick said.

The proposal now moves to the Texas House, where progress is frozen. More than 60 House Democrats — at least 50 of them out of state — have been holed up in cities like Chicago, New York, and Boston for more than two weeks to prevent a quorum, halting all legislative business.

Gov. Greg Abbott has made it clear he will keep summoning lawmakers until the map is passed.

“Democrats can run to another state, but they can’t outrun the will of Texans,” Abbott posted on X. “If there’s no quorum Friday, Special Session #2 will start immediately… I’ll call special after special until the Texas first agenda is passed.”

For Crockett, the stakes couldn’t be higher. If the map withstands legal challenges, she will have to either move to remain in her district, attempt to run in an unfamiliar one, or potentially face another Democratic incumbent in a primary.

The fight over Texas’s political lines is far from over, but one thing is clear: Jasmine Crockett’s days in office are most likely numbered.

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