California state capitol and grounds with flags against a blue sky.
The California Supreme Court Wednesday denied Republicans’ petition asking the court to stop state officials from putting a redistricting measure on the ballot – the second GOP challenge to the state’s redistricting it’s thrown out in one week.
The decision appears to smooth the way for the measure to appear on the ballot in November.
Democrats in the California legislature passed a proposed congressional map last week aimed at countering a Texas gerrymander that could add five Republican seats in Congress in 2026. As part of their “Election Rigging Response Act,” California lawmakers also authorized a special election Nov. 4 for voters to decide whether the state will adopt the new map via a constitutional amendment.
The GOP lawsuit argued that lawmakers aren’t authorized to draw their own congressional map because California’s redistricting process is run by an independent commission.
The Republican plaintiffs who brought the suit are represented by Dhillon Law Group, a firm founded by Assistant U.S. Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon, who runs the U.S. Department of Justice’s (DOJ) civil rights division.
President Donald Trump issued his own legal threat this week, saying the DOJ will sue California to stop its redistricting plan.
Last Thursday, the court rejected a Republican petition arguing the legislature was prohibited from acting on the plan for several more weeks because new legislation requires a 30-day review period.