Thursday, October 23

This comes as the Trump administration has been working over time to try to coerce the state’s Republicans to get in line. Earlier this month Trump himself called into a private Senate GOP caucus meeting to pressure legislative leaders into supporting the redistricting effort, Politico reported. And Vice President JD Vance has visited Indiana twice in recent months to try to  convince Indiana Republicans to redraw their district lines for Trump. 

“The White House has put extraordinary pressure, it seems, on state actors, on the Republican side, and we’ll see where things land,” Kareem Crayton, vice president of the Brennan Center’s Washington, D.C., office, told TPM.

It remains publicly unclear which Republican members of the Indiana state Senate are opposed to redrawing maps for, potentially, two congressional districts currently held by Democrats — Dems hold just two of Indiana’s nine seats in the U.S. House. But MAGA Republicans in the state are putting on the pressure, while casting the new maps as a supposed good faith effort to defeat some amorphous, sinister leftist regime. (North Carolina Republicans used similar messaging leading up to their vote on new maps earlier this week, attempting to spin the new maps as an attempt to offset Democrats’ gerrymandering — the opposite of what is happening.)

In a statement on Wednesday, Indiana’s GOP Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith, issued a stark warning to fellow Republicans. 

“Indiana should be leading the nation, not apologizing for being a strong conservative state, while radical Democrat Marxists wage war on our Constitution, our children, and the future of this Republic,” he said. “Washington is being overrun by an anti-American agenda, and instead of joining President Trump in reclaiming our voice, too many in our own Senate choose the path of weakness and political convenience.”

GOP state Sen. Liz Brown, in a post on X, wrote: “Redistricting isn’t a matter of fairness. Democrats don’t want to debate lines — they want to impose them.”

“They’re building a regime, and we’re still filing paperwork,” she added. “Either Indiana learns to fight like it intends to win, or it will be ruled like it deserves to lose. Redraw the map.”

Republican State Senator Tyler Johnson similarly wrote on X: “There is no sidestepping and there is no middle ground in this discussion.  You will see the leftist machine start praising and publicly supporting republicans.  That should be an extremely uncomfortable place to be.”

Outside the state, other Trump allies are threatening primary challenges against those who are not on board with redistricting, continuing an effort that the late Trump ally and CEO of Turning Point USA, Charlie Kirk, began before he was killed last month.

Even though state Senate Republicans do not have enough votes to move the redistricting proposal forward, Republican Gov. Mike Braun said on X on Wednesday that he is “confident the majority of Indiana Statehouse Republicans will support efforts to ensure fair representation in congress for every Hoosier.”

But Trump loyalists are now taking on the redistricting pressure campaign for Trump in Indiana and bullying their Republican colleagues into approving a new map, despite the lack of support in the state Senate. 

This comes as the Trump administration has been working over time to try to coerce the state’s Republicans to get in line. Earlier this month Trump himself called into a private Senate GOP caucus meeting to pressure legislative leaders into supporting the redistricting effort, Politico reported. And Vice President JD Vance has visited Indiana twice in recent months to try to  convince Indiana Republicans to redraw their district lines for Trump. 

“The White House has put extraordinary pressure, it seems, on state actors, on the Republican side, and we’ll see where things land,” Kareem Crayton, vice president of the Brennan Center’s Washington, D.C., office, told TPM.

It remains publicly unclear which Republican members of the Indiana state Senate are opposed to redrawing maps for, potentially, two congressional districts currently held by Democrats — Dems hold just two of Indiana’s nine seats in the U.S. House. But MAGA Republicans in the state are putting on the pressure, while casting the new maps as a supposed good faith effort to defeat some amorphous, sinister leftist regime. (North Carolina Republicans used similar messaging leading up to their vote on new maps earlier this week, attempting to spin the new maps as an attempt to offset Democrats’ gerrymandering — the opposite of what is happening.)

In a statement on Wednesday, Indiana’s GOP Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith, issued a stark warning to fellow Republicans. 

“Indiana should be leading the nation, not apologizing for being a strong conservative state, while radical Democrat Marxists wage war on our Constitution, our children, and the future of this Republic,” he said. “Washington is being overrun by an anti-American agenda, and instead of joining President Trump in reclaiming our voice, too many in our own Senate choose the path of weakness and political convenience.”

GOP state Sen. Liz Brown, in a post on X, wrote: “Redistricting isn’t a matter of fairness. Democrats don’t want to debate lines — they want to impose them.”

“They’re building a regime, and we’re still filing paperwork,” she added. “Either Indiana learns to fight like it intends to win, or it will be ruled like it deserves to lose. Redraw the map.”

Republican State Senator Tyler Johnson similarly wrote on X: “There is no sidestepping and there is no middle ground in this discussion.  You will see the leftist machine start praising and publicly supporting republicans.  That should be an extremely uncomfortable place to be.”

Outside the state, other Trump allies are threatening primary challenges against those who are not on board with redistricting, continuing an effort that the late Trump ally and CEO of Turning Point USA, Charlie Kirk, began before he was killed last month.

Even though state Senate Republicans do not have enough votes to move the redistricting proposal forward, Republican Gov. Mike Braun said on X on Wednesday that he is “confident the majority of Indiana Statehouse Republicans will support efforts to ensure fair representation in congress for every Hoosier.”

So far, several states, including Texas, Missouri, and most recently, North Carolina, have succumbed to pressure from the Trump administration and approved revised congressional maps that are expected to flip seats currently held by Democrats for Republicans. The new maps approved in Texas will likely flip as many as five seats.  

But Trump loyalists are now taking on the redistricting pressure campaign for Trump in Indiana and bullying their Republican colleagues into approving a new map, despite the lack of support in the state Senate. 

This comes as the Trump administration has been working over time to try to coerce the state’s Republicans to get in line. Earlier this month Trump himself called into a private Senate GOP caucus meeting to pressure legislative leaders into supporting the redistricting effort, Politico reported. And Vice President JD Vance has visited Indiana twice in recent months to try to  convince Indiana Republicans to redraw their district lines for Trump. 

“The White House has put extraordinary pressure, it seems, on state actors, on the Republican side, and we’ll see where things land,” Kareem Crayton, vice president of the Brennan Center’s Washington, D.C., office, told TPM.

It remains publicly unclear which Republican members of the Indiana state Senate are opposed to redrawing maps for, potentially, two congressional districts currently held by Democrats — Dems hold just two of Indiana’s nine seats in the U.S. House. But MAGA Republicans in the state are putting on the pressure, while casting the new maps as a supposed good faith effort to defeat some amorphous, sinister leftist regime. (North Carolina Republicans used similar messaging leading up to their vote on new maps earlier this week, attempting to spin the new maps as an attempt to offset Democrats’ gerrymandering — the opposite of what is happening.)

In a statement on Wednesday, Indiana’s GOP Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith, issued a stark warning to fellow Republicans. 

“Indiana should be leading the nation, not apologizing for being a strong conservative state, while radical Democrat Marxists wage war on our Constitution, our children, and the future of this Republic,” he said. “Washington is being overrun by an anti-American agenda, and instead of joining President Trump in reclaiming our voice, too many in our own Senate choose the path of weakness and political convenience.”

GOP state Sen. Liz Brown, in a post on X, wrote: “Redistricting isn’t a matter of fairness. Democrats don’t want to debate lines — they want to impose them.”

“They’re building a regime, and we’re still filing paperwork,” she added. “Either Indiana learns to fight like it intends to win, or it will be ruled like it deserves to lose. Redraw the map.”

Republican State Senator Tyler Johnson similarly wrote on X: “There is no sidestepping and there is no middle ground in this discussion.  You will see the leftist machine start praising and publicly supporting republicans.  That should be an extremely uncomfortable place to be.”

Outside the state, other Trump allies are threatening primary challenges against those who are not on board with redistricting, continuing an effort that the late Trump ally and CEO of Turning Point USA, Charlie Kirk, began before he was killed last month.

Even though state Senate Republicans do not have enough votes to move the redistricting proposal forward, Republican Gov. Mike Braun said on X on Wednesday that he is “confident the majority of Indiana Statehouse Republicans will support efforts to ensure fair representation in congress for every Hoosier.”

Indiana Senate Republicans, as of this week, have said they do not have the votes needed to approve a revised congressional district map. The White House has been attempting to force Republican-controlled state legislatures around the country to create new congressional maps that favor Republicans to help ensure Republicans maintain control of the U.S. House in the upcoming midterm elections. It is typical practice for redistricting to take place once a decade after the Census has been taken —not mid-decade as a way to predetermine a midterm election.

So far, several states, including Texas, Missouri, and most recently, North Carolina, have succumbed to pressure from the Trump administration and approved revised congressional maps that are expected to flip seats currently held by Democrats for Republicans. The new maps approved in Texas will likely flip as many as five seats.  

But Trump loyalists are now taking on the redistricting pressure campaign for Trump in Indiana and bullying their Republican colleagues into approving a new map, despite the lack of support in the state Senate. 

This comes as the Trump administration has been working over time to try to coerce the state’s Republicans to get in line. Earlier this month Trump himself called into a private Senate GOP caucus meeting to pressure legislative leaders into supporting the redistricting effort, Politico reported. And Vice President JD Vance has visited Indiana twice in recent months to try to  convince Indiana Republicans to redraw their district lines for Trump. 

“The White House has put extraordinary pressure, it seems, on state actors, on the Republican side, and we’ll see where things land,” Kareem Crayton, vice president of the Brennan Center’s Washington, D.C., office, told TPM.

It remains publicly unclear which Republican members of the Indiana state Senate are opposed to redrawing maps for, potentially, two congressional districts currently held by Democrats — Dems hold just two of Indiana’s nine seats in the U.S. House. But MAGA Republicans in the state are putting on the pressure, while casting the new maps as a supposed good faith effort to defeat some amorphous, sinister leftist regime. (North Carolina Republicans used similar messaging leading up to their vote on new maps earlier this week, attempting to spin the new maps as an attempt to offset Democrats’ gerrymandering — the opposite of what is happening.)

In a statement on Wednesday, Indiana’s GOP Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith, issued a stark warning to fellow Republicans. 

“Indiana should be leading the nation, not apologizing for being a strong conservative state, while radical Democrat Marxists wage war on our Constitution, our children, and the future of this Republic,” he said. “Washington is being overrun by an anti-American agenda, and instead of joining President Trump in reclaiming our voice, too many in our own Senate choose the path of weakness and political convenience.”

GOP state Sen. Liz Brown, in a post on X, wrote: “Redistricting isn’t a matter of fairness. Democrats don’t want to debate lines — they want to impose them.”

“They’re building a regime, and we’re still filing paperwork,” she added. “Either Indiana learns to fight like it intends to win, or it will be ruled like it deserves to lose. Redraw the map.”

Republican State Senator Tyler Johnson similarly wrote on X: “There is no sidestepping and there is no middle ground in this discussion.  You will see the leftist machine start praising and publicly supporting republicans.  That should be an extremely uncomfortable place to be.”

Outside the state, other Trump allies are threatening primary challenges against those who are not on board with redistricting, continuing an effort that the late Trump ally and CEO of Turning Point USA, Charlie Kirk, began before he was killed last month.

Even though state Senate Republicans do not have enough votes to move the redistricting proposal forward, Republican Gov. Mike Braun said on X on Wednesday that he is “confident the majority of Indiana Statehouse Republicans will support efforts to ensure fair representation in congress for every Hoosier.”

Indiana Senate Republicans, as of this week, have said they do not have the votes needed to approve a revised congressional district map. The White House has been attempting to force Republican-controlled state legislatures around the country to create new congressional maps that favor Republicans to help ensure Republicans maintain control of the U.S. House in the upcoming midterm elections. It is typical practice for redistricting to take place once a decade after the Census has been taken —not mid-decade as a way to predetermine a midterm election.

So far, several states, including Texas, Missouri, and most recently, North Carolina, have succumbed to pressure from the Trump administration and approved revised congressional maps that are expected to flip seats currently held by Democrats for Republicans. The new maps approved in Texas will likely flip as many as five seats.  

But Trump loyalists are now taking on the redistricting pressure campaign for Trump in Indiana and bullying their Republican colleagues into approving a new map, despite the lack of support in the state Senate. 

This comes as the Trump administration has been working over time to try to coerce the state’s Republicans to get in line. Earlier this month Trump himself called into a private Senate GOP caucus meeting to pressure legislative leaders into supporting the redistricting effort, Politico reported. And Vice President JD Vance has visited Indiana twice in recent months to try to  convince Indiana Republicans to redraw their district lines for Trump. 

“The White House has put extraordinary pressure, it seems, on state actors, on the Republican side, and we’ll see where things land,” Kareem Crayton, vice president of the Brennan Center’s Washington, D.C., office, told TPM.

It remains publicly unclear which Republican members of the Indiana state Senate are opposed to redrawing maps for, potentially, two congressional districts currently held by Democrats — Dems hold just two of Indiana’s nine seats in the U.S. House. But MAGA Republicans in the state are putting on the pressure, while casting the new maps as a supposed good faith effort to defeat some amorphous, sinister leftist regime. (North Carolina Republicans used similar messaging leading up to their vote on new maps earlier this week, attempting to spin the new maps as an attempt to offset Democrats’ gerrymandering — the opposite of what is happening.)

In a statement on Wednesday, Indiana’s GOP Lt. Gov. Micah Beckwith, issued a stark warning to fellow Republicans. 

“Indiana should be leading the nation, not apologizing for being a strong conservative state, while radical Democrat Marxists wage war on our Constitution, our children, and the future of this Republic,” he said. “Washington is being overrun by an anti-American agenda, and instead of joining President Trump in reclaiming our voice, too many in our own Senate choose the path of weakness and political convenience.”

GOP state Sen. Liz Brown, in a post on X, wrote: “Redistricting isn’t a matter of fairness. Democrats don’t want to debate lines — they want to impose them.”

“They’re building a regime, and we’re still filing paperwork,” she added. “Either Indiana learns to fight like it intends to win, or it will be ruled like it deserves to lose. Redraw the map.”

Republican State Senator Tyler Johnson similarly wrote on X: “There is no sidestepping and there is no middle ground in this discussion.  You will see the leftist machine start praising and publicly supporting republicans.  That should be an extremely uncomfortable place to be.”

Outside the state, other Trump allies are threatening primary challenges against those who are not on board with redistricting, continuing an effort that the late Trump ally and CEO of Turning Point USA, Charlie Kirk, began before he was killed last month.

Even though state Senate Republicans do not have enough votes to move the redistricting proposal forward, Republican Gov. Mike Braun said on X on Wednesday that he is “confident the majority of Indiana Statehouse Republicans will support efforts to ensure fair representation in congress for every Hoosier.”

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