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Buttigieg Rallies Against Redistricting09/19 06:08

   

   INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg rallied 
Democrats against redistricting in his home state of Indiana Thursday as 
pressure grows on Republican state lawmakers to redraw the state's 
congressional districts.

   Buttigieg -- a contender to represent Democrats aiming to win back the 
presidency in 2028 -- was the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, before he launched 
into the national political scene by running for president in 2020 and emerged 
victorious from the Iowa caucus that year.

   Indiana Republicans have been hesitant to redistrict so far compared to 
other states where the GOP holds control. But Democrats have little power to 
stop the move if Republican leaders choose to create a new map.

   "Indiana Republicans are being pressured by Washington Republicans to do 
something that they know in their hearts is wrong," Buttigieg said.

   Typically, states redraw their congressional districts every 10 years with 
the census. But President Donald Trump wants to give his party an advantage in 
the 2026 election in order to keep majority control in the House of 
Representatives, as midterms tend to favor the party out of power. Republicans 
in Texas and Missouri have moved to create advantageous new seats while 
California Democrats have countered with their own new proposal.

   Indiana lawmakers however have not yet answered the redistricting call and 
have kept their cards close, emblematic of the state's independent streak and 
its more measured approach to politics.

   But pressure from Trump to redraw House districts has been mounting on 
Republicans in the state he won by 19 percentage points in 2024. First-term 
Gov. Mike Braun, a Republican, said Tuesday that a legislative session on 
redistricting probably will happen, and it could come as soon as November. But 
he doesn't want to call a special session unless there will be a successful 
outcome.

   "I've been very clear. I want it to be organic," he said in a video reported 
by WRTV in Indianapolis.

   A large crowd gathered inside the statehouse in Indianapolis Thursday 
afternoon to see Buttigieg speak.

   "It's an issue of fairness," said Judy Jessup, an Indianapolis resident. 
"The voters should get to choose politicians, not the other way around."

   Buttigieg is the biggest Democratic voice to come out of Indiana in recent 
memory. Following the 2020 election, Buttigieg and his family moved to Traverse 
City, Michigan, and he served as Secretary of Transportation under the Biden 
administration.

   In an excerpt from her upcoming memoir, Kamala Harris said that Buttigieg 
was her first pick for 2024 running mate, but she said running with Buttigieg, 
who is openly gay, was too risky. He didn't address the comments on Thursday.

   Braun could call a special session, but it would be up to lawmakers to 
create a new map. Republicans hold a supermajority in both chambers in Indiana, 
meaning Democrats could not stop or delay a special session by refusing to 
attend, like their peers in Texas briefly did. Republicans also outnumber 
Democrats in Indiana's congressional delegation 7-2. Some Republicans see an 
opportunity to gain all nine seats in the state.

   The GOP would likely target Indiana's 1st Congressional District, a 
Democratic stronghold encompassing Gary and other cities near Chicago. 
Three-term Democratic Rep. Frank Mrvan won reelection in 2022 and easily 
retained the seat in 2024 even after Republicans redrew the district to be 
slightly more favorable to the GOP.

   Republicans could also zero in on the 7th Congressional District, composed 
entirely of Marion County and the Democratic stronghold of Indianapolis, but 
they would invite more controversy by slicing up Indiana's largest city and 
diluting Black voters' influence.

   "Both of those districts are filled with Black voters," state Sen. Andrea 
Hunley, who represents Indianapolis, said at the rally. "This is a racist power 
grab to silence voters who look like me."

   Texas passed a new map that would help Republicans win up to five new seats, 
and Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe, a Republican, is expected to sign legislation 
soon that would help Republicans win seven of the state's eight districts. 
Meanwhile, California Democrats are launching a campaign to build support ahead 
of a Nov. 4 referendum on new U.S. House districts that were made to offset 
wins made by Texas Republicans.

   Utah and Ohio may soon have new congressional district maps, and elected 
leaders in other states also are considering mid-decade redistricting, 
including Republicans in Florida and Kansas and Democrats in Maryland and New 
York.

 
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