HomeCongressMatching Texas: Speaker Perez Launches Bold Push to Redraw FL Congressional Maps

Matching Texas: Speaker Perez Launches Bold Push to Redraw FL Congressional Maps

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TALLAHASSEE, Aug. 7, 2025 — Florida House Speaker Daniel Perez today unveiled the formation of a Select Committee on Congressional Redistricting, aimed at evaluating whether a mid-decade redraw of Florida’s U.S. House map is warranted. His announcement—via memo to House members—comes in response to the Florida Supreme Court’s recent ruling affirming the state’s congressional district layout, which critics say dilutes Black voting influence.

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In the memo, Perez cited the decision in Black Voters Matter Capacity Building Institute, Inc. v. Secretary, Florida Department of State, explaining that it “raises important and distinct questions about the applicability and interpretation of certain provisions of the so‑called ‘Fair Districts’ provisions of the Florida Constitution and their intersection with Federal law.” He reasoned that examining these issues now—rather than after the next decennial reapportionment—would allow the Legislature to seek clarity from the state’s Supreme Court sooner. Still, he clarified, “we do not have the capacity to engage in the full redistricting process experienced during the 2020–2022 term,” so the inquiry will be limited to the congressional map and related legal considerations.

Speaker Perez has instructed House members interested in serving on the new committee to notify his office by August 15, with formal appointments expected in September, coinciding with other committee assignments for the 2026 legislative session.

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This move aligns closely with calls from both Governor Ron DeSantis and former President Donald Trump advocating for mid‑decade redistricting to bolster Republican representation ahead of the 2026 midterms. DeSantis has hinted at a potential special session, while Trump has taken the national stage in urging such efforts and even floated the idea of a mid‑decade census.

The legal backdrop to Perez’s memo is the July 17, 2025 ruling by the Florida Supreme Court affirming the state’s current congressional map. That map, drawn under DeSantis, eliminated a majority‑Black district, breaking a historically significant bloc—from Jacksonville to west of Tallahassee—and divided it among majority‑white districts. The court upheld the map, ruling that reinstating a majority‑Black district would prioritize race in violation of the U.S. Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause. Detractors, including civil rights groups, condemned the ruling for undermining protections in the state’s Fair Districts Amendment.

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Why it matters:

  • It signals a proactive legal strategy to address redistricting conflicts before the next census cycle.
  • It positions Florida squarely in a growing national push by GOP leaders to redraw maps mid‑decade—despite typical norms favoring post‑census timing.
  • The potential outcome could shift Florida’s current 20‑8 Republican‑leaning congressional delegation further toward the GOP — a prospect Democrats warn could prompt further litigation.

As the process takes shape, the key questions revolve around how narrowly the committee will define its legal scope, whether public engagement will be sought, and how swiftly any proposed path forward could move through Florida’s legislative machinery.

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