Missouri Senate approves Trump-endorsed redistricting plan to boost GOP prospects
In a savvy political chess move that has Democrats scrambling, the Missouri state Senate just handed President Donald Trump a fresh win by passing a new congressional map designed to reflect the state's rightward tilt, as Fox News reports.
This development caps a heated special session where Republicans pushed through a redistricting plan likely to flip a Democratic seat, part of a larger cross-country skirmish with states like Texas and California jockeying for House advantages ahead of the 2026 midterms.
Missouri, once a swing state but now solidly conservative after years of shifting voter preferences, finds itself at the center of this redistricting drama.
Missouri's political shift fuels changes
The action follows similar moves in Texas, where Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed a redistricting bill creating more right-leaning districts at the expense of Democratic ones.
Hours after Abbott's signing, Missouri's Republican Gov. Mike Kehoe announced the special session to tackle their own map.
Kehoe, who recently delivered the State of the State address, praised the plan as embodying "Missouri’s conservative, commonsense values" that deserve full representation in government -- a sentiment that rings true for those tired of one-size-fits-all progressive policies.
Special session spurs partisan fireworks
The Missouri House of Representatives passed the bill earlier in the week, setting the stage for the Senate's 21-11 vote on Friday.
With Republicans controlling both chambers, Democrats had few tools to block it, though they didn't go down without a fight.
Over the weekend, Missouri Democrats staged a sit-in, refusing to leave the chamber in protest, and followed up with a rally at the Capitol on Wednesday.
Democrats rally against move
State House Minority Leader Ashley Aune accused Republicans of trying to "rig our maps and eliminate our representation in Congress," but one might argue that's rich coming from a party that's no stranger to map-tweaking in blue strongholds.
Former Rep. Russ Carnahan, chair of the Missouri Democratic Party, warned that Republicans are "bowing down to Washington demands" and would face angry voters, yet in a state leaning heavily right, such changes might just align with grassroots demands for fairer conservative voices.
Democrat Rep. Emanuel Cleaver testified before a Senate committee, calling the plan "immensely unpopular" based on polls, but popularity contests aside, electoral maps should prioritize balanced representation over fleeting public moods.
Cleaver's district a prime target
The new map specifically targets Cleaver's Kansas City-area district, extending it eastward to incorporate more rural, right-leaning voters.
This shift is expected to flip the seat Republican, giving the GOP a commanding 7-1 edge in Missouri's House delegation.
Cleaver vowed legal action if Kehoe signs the bill, saying, "If you fight fire with fire long enough, all you’re going to have left is ashes" -- a poetic warning, though conservatives might counter that adapting to a state's evolving politics prevents the ashes of outdated districts.
Trump celebrates
Following the Senate vote, President Trump hailed the map as "FANTASTIC" on social media, predicting it "will help send an additional MAGA Republican to Congress in the 2026 Midterm Elections."
Trump's team aims to avoid a repeat of the 2018 midterms, when Democrats regained the House, by bolstering the GOP's slim majority through these strategic redraws.
Rep. Suzan DelBene, chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, blasted the map as "gerrymandered" and paired with "undemocratic legislation," but Republicans could point out that both sides play this game, with the goal being stronger voices for everyday Americans over elite agendas.





