Florida Gov. DeSantis unveils proposed congressional map that could let GOP flip up to 4 seats
Some Republicans are concerned the governor's move could backfire.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Monday unveiled a proposed new congressional map for the Sunshine State that his office indicates could let Republicans flip up to four seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.
It's a move that could help the party gain seats and counter Democrats' recent redistricting victory in Virginia, if the map passes the Legislature and survives likely legal challenges. But some in the state are concerned about how a new map might backfire on the GOP. It is also another volley in mid-decade redistricting around the country, as another state starts the process usually only done once a decade in the wake of Texas, California and other states doing so.
The new map, provided to ABC News by the governor's office, appears to aim to allow Republicans to flip up to four seats in the U.S. House, leaving just four Democratic-held districts in the state.

The office did not provide any details on how it conducted its analysis, and DeSantis said the redraw is about representation. "Florida got shortchanged in the 2020 Census, and we've been fighting for fair representation ever since. ... Our new map for 2026 makes good on my promise to conduct mid-decade redistricting, and it more fairly represents the makeup of Florida today," DeSantis told Fox News Digital, which was first to report on the new map being unveiled.
Dave Wasserman, senior editor and elections analyst for The Cook Political Report, wrote on Monday that the map appears to target Democratic Reps. Darren Soto, Kathy Castor, Jared Moskowitz and Debbie Wasserman Schultz.
Soto wrote on X, "Gerrymander or Dummymander? This map is an absolutely unlawful violation of the Florida Constitution. The Legislature should reject it. The courts should strike it down. That being said, there are 12+ seats that Democrats could still win under this map in this cycle."
Florida currently has 20 Republican U.S. House members and 7 Democratic ones, as well as one vacant Democratic-leaning district.
The speaker of the Florida House of Representatives, Daniel Perez, confirmed in a memo on Monday that the state House had received the new map and would begin considering it on Tuesday.

An aggressive approach
DeSantis has said Florida's potential redistricting has nothing to do with Virginia's efforts to redraw its congressional map, which passed last week and could net Democrats four congressional seats if it survives court challenges.
Some within the Republican Party have said Florida should aggressively redraw its map to counter Virginia, although others have hedged.
President Donald Trump, for instance, was asked by Fox News in an interview on Sunday about his reaction to Virginia's redistricting and if Florida should 'make a go at it.' (Florida is Trump's home state.) "I do, but that Virginia case is terrible," Trump responded.
A Republican strategist in Florida told ABC News, "I think the people who are interested in taking the most aggressive, fighteresque approach ... feel a bit emboldened" by what happened in Virginia. "The people taking a more strategic, long-term take on this whole process -- I don't think what happened in Virginia changes their opinion at all."
Democrats ready to counter
DeSantis had called a special session that's currently set to begin Tuesday that will include considering mid-decade redistricting, although he had previously delayed the initial date of the session by a week and expanded it to add other issues.
The Legislature also has a complex relationship with the governor, and legislators have been relatively tight-lipped over how it will vote.
The governor has spoken often about mid-decade redistricting in Florida in recent months, but framed his thoughts in terms of Florida needing to redraw its maps due to population reasons -- not for political gain.
But Democrats, flush off of a victory in Virginia, say that they're ready to counter GOP moves. The Virginia election's certification is currently being litigated in courts.

Could it backfire?
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, during a press conference last Wednesday, called potential redistricting in Florida a "DeSantis dummymander" that would backfire on the GOP by weakening seats they currently hold.
"Our message to Florida Republicans is, 'F around and find out'," Jeffries said. "If they go down the road of a 'DeSantis Dummymander', the Florida Republicans are going to find themselves in the same situation as Texas Republicans who are on the run right now."
DeSantis, responding to Jeffries on Wednesday without bringing up redistricting, taunted, "There's nothing that could be better for Republicans in Florida than to see Hakeem Jeffries everywhere around this state ... please, be my guest to come down in Florida. We would love to have you."
Some Republicans, however, have openly expressed concerns that any new map in Florida would endanger GOP-held districts because it would weaken those districts politically as it tries to flip other ones, due to how voters could be moved around or respond to redistricting. It's a key concern in Florida for the GOP, where Hispanic voters -- a major bloc -- who had moved towards the GOP in 2024's elections now appear to be moving towards Democrats.
Democrats have also overperformed in Republican-held districts or even flipped seats in recent Florida special legislative elections, including one held in the district that includes Trump's home of Mar-a-Lago.
"Don't do it. I've said it from the beginning. I've been around enough reapportionments to know it's a slippery slope," Florida Rep. Daniel Webster told Punchbowl News last week.
And Florida Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar told NBC News last week, "Look, I may be at a disadvantage, because my lines in district number 27 in the state of Florida may be moved, but there's nothing I can do about it. And I always look at the bright side. This is American democracy. This is the American electoral system."
The law and Florida's Constitution
There are legal considerations at play as well that were not the case in other states such as Texas, California and Missouri that redistricted -- as Florida's state Constitution also has strict restrictions on redrawing constitutional maps for political gain, thanks to provisions known as the Fair Districts Amendments that voters approved in 2010.
The state's Constitution says that "In establishing congressional district boundaries ... No apportionment plan or individual district shall be drawn with the intent to favor or disfavor a political party or an incumbent."
"It imposes an explicit prohibition on intentionally redrawing districts to favor or disfavor a political party or an incumbent," Jonathan Marshfield, a state constitutional law expert at the University of Florida Levin College of Law, told ABC News.
"And so this is significant in Florida, because the United States Supreme Court has held ... that these were sort of partisan gerrymandering claims are not justiciable in federal court; [there's] essentially no recourse in the same way in federal court as there is in a state court. One of the challenges, I can imagine, is that these new congressional maps are going to be challenged as not complying with the Fair District Amendment of 2010."
Marshfield added that "the law is structured such that challenges will, in fact, focus on their actual intent in drawing the lines where they draw them. And so that is a legally relevant inquiry that will be investigated in the course of the litigation.
DeSantis did not address the amendments in his comments to Fox News. But his general counsel, David Axelman, in a letter sent to the Florida Legislature along with the proposed map, argued that the amendments themselves may be unconstitutional.
"Florida's representation in the U.S. House has also been distorted by considerations of race. Passed in 2010, the Fair Districts Amendments (FDA) to the Florida Constitution require the Legislature to account for race when drawing congressional districts ... This requires the use of race in redistricting-something that the U.S. Supreme Court has signaled is unconstitutional."
A strategist working with Florida House Democrats told ABC News that Democrats in the Legislature don't have procedural mechanisms or leeway to slow down the process of passing a map, unlike in Texas in 2025 where Democrats were able to depart the state and break "quorum" in order to hold up legislation. But the strategist said that won't matter, and that it doesn't matter if the new map benefits Republicans or not.
A strategist working with Florida House Democrats told ABC News that Democrats in the Legislature don't have the same procedural mechanism or leeway to slow down the process of passing a map, unlike in Texas in 2025 where Democrats were able to depart the state and break "quorum" in order to hold up legislation. But the strategist said that won't matter, and that it doesn't matter if the new map benefits Republicans or not.
"Regardless of if it backfires or not, it's still illegal," the strategist argued.
But Marshfield said that those drawing the map will likely have taken the amendment into account: "I'm sure in light of that, that the people drawing the lines, I would assume -- I think the courts assume -- that they have taken care to comply with the law, so that they are taking care to draw the lines in ways that comply with that amendment."



