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Democrats, Voting Rights Groups Challenge DeSantis’ Map

Florida Politics

‘See You in Court’: Democrats, Voting Rights Groups Unload on DeSantis Redistricting Map

From House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries to local Tampa Bay officials, critics are calling the Governor’s proposed congressional map blatantly illegal.


The ink was barely dry on Governor Ron DeSantis’s proposed congressional redistricting map before a wave of condemnation rolled in from Democratic leaders, voting rights advocates, and editorial boards—all warning the plan violates Florida’s constitution, dilutes minority voting power, and will be dead on arrival in court. Republicans, at least publicly, expressed delight.


Jeffries to DeSantis: ‘See You in Court’

U.S. House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries called the map “blatantly illegal and political malpractice” and coined the term “DeSantis Dummymander”—a label that spread quickly across political social media Monday.

“By nakedly targeting communities of color to intentionally dilute their voting strength, the DeSantis Dummymander also clearly violates the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. … The DeSantis Dummymander will not stand. See you in Court.”
— House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries

DCCC Executive Director Julie Merz called the map “a corrupt partisan power grab that violates Florida’s strict prohibition of partisan gerrymanders” and predicted it would backfire.


Florida Democrats: ‘He Drew It for Donald Trump’

Florida Democratic Party Chair Nikki Fried framed the map as less about Florida’s representation and more about the Governor’s national ambitions.

“Ron DeSantis didn’t draw this map for Florida; he drew it for the only Floridian he cares about: Donald Trump. He would willfully break the law and screw over the people of Florida for a morsel of relevance.”
— FDP Chair Nikki Fried

Fried also invoked bipartisan opposition to the process itself—not just the outcome.

 


Voting Rights Groups: ‘Party Over Fair Elections’

Voter access advocacy group All Voting is Local raised a practical concern beyond the constitutional debate: election administration chaos. Florida State Director Brad Ashwell said instituting a new map ahead of November’s elections will create “voter confusion and unnecessary work for local election officials who are already bogged down by frequent policy changes and new hurdles.”


DeSantis’s Counsel: Fair Districts Is Dead—All of It

The legal architecture underpinning the map is laid out in the transmittal letter from EOG General Counsel David Axelman, which argues that Florida’s Fair Districts Amendment (FDA)—passed by voters in 2010—is unconstitutional in its entirety and no longer applies. Read EOG_Transmittal Letter.

 


South Florida Takes the Hardest Hit—Tampa Bay Too

The map’s sharpest edges are felt in South Florida, where the proposed lines would reshape five congressional districts spanning Districts 20 through 28—five of which are currently held or were most recently held by Democrats.

The net effect in South Florida, critics say: Democratic voters packed into fewer districts, expanding the Republican map statewide. 

Tampa Bay faces an equally dramatic shake-up. Under the proposal, the region’s only Democratic-leaning congressional district—currently represented by Rep. Kathy Castor—would be redrawn to tilt slightly Republican, leaving nearly 500,000 active Democratic voters in Hillsborough and Pinellas counties without a single Democratic representative in Congress.

“It’s crazy. For Tampa Bay to be wiped out of ANY congressional Democrat is pretty amazing.”
— Victor DiMaio, President, Hillsborough County Democratic Hispanic Caucus


The Bigger Picture

The proposed Florida map is part of a coordinated national redistricting push encouraged by President Donald Trump, who has urged Republican-led states to redraw congressional maps to protect GOP House control heading into the 2026 midterms. Florida’s move mirrors similar efforts in other red states.

In 2015, the Florida Supreme Court found that two South Florida districts had been drawn to favor a political party in violation of Fair Districts—and ordered the map redrawn before the 2016 elections. Critics say history is about to repeat itself, only faster and with higher stakes.


Rick’s Blog will continue covering Special Session D and the redistricting fight in Tallahassee and the courts. Follow updates at ricksblog.biz.

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