· 2d
In a setback for Trump, Indiana lawmakers defeat redistricting plan
· 1d · on MSN
Indiana Republicans defy Trump and reject his House redistricting push in the state
Indiana Senate Republicans reject Trump’s redistricting push
The Indiana Senate on Thursday voted down a plan to redraw the state’s congressional districts to hand Republicans two more seats, dealing President Donald Trump a rare rebuke from his own party in the face of the president’s months-long campaign to pressure the GOP supermajority in the deep-red state to bend to his will.
A majority of Indiana Republican senators said no to President Donald Trump on redistricting. What makes Hoosiers different?
Indiana's redistricting bill passed its first hurdle in the Senate Monday. Why it matters: It's still unclear if Republicans in that chamber have the votes to pass House Bill 1032, which would give the GOP an advantage in all nine of Indiana's congressional districts and fan the flames of the national redistricting war.
Indiana state lawmakers rejected the hotly debated question of whether they would pass new congressional maps ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
The state Senate failed to pass a measure that would add 2 more Republican seats to Congress as states make new mid-decade maps
The Indiana state Senate’s rejection of President Donald Trump’s redistricting push is one of the most significant GOP rebukes of Trump to date, and at a particularly inauspicious time for him.
Indiana’s redistricting bill advanced out of the Senate Elections Committee Monday evening in a 6-3 vote, with one Republican committee member voting against the bill.
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