The latest installment was prompted by his outrage that the Virginia legislature and voters had the temerity to redistrict the state's Congressional districts to favor Democratic candidates -- this in response to-- It's kind of a long checkers game. I'd better review it.
In late 2025, Donald Trump, frustrated by his party's bare majority in the U.S. House of Representatives, called on Republican-led states ("About four," per the President) to gerrymander themselves. The effort began with Texas, despite worries by some of that state's GOP politicians that it might dilute solidly-red districts.
In August 2025, the Texas legislature approved a map that gave the state five more Republican-leaning districts than it previously had. This was promptly challenged in court and worked its way up to the U.S. Supreme Court, who let the new maps stand in December of this year.
Meanwhile, California's Governor Gavin Newsom called on their legislature to counter the move. That's not so easy as in Texas: California has an Independent Redistricting Commission that draws their U.S. House maps. So the legislature had to put a referendum before voters in a tearing hurry: would they approve bypassing the Commission for the next set of maps? The referendum was successful. California's new maps moves five districts into the safely-Democrat column.
Over in Missouri, Republicans planned to split up a Democrat-held district centered on Kansas City. That's still in process, having cleared the legislature, been challenged in court and upheld, and challenged by petition, which might result in a referendum to overturn the new maps. Or it might not; that's still up in the air.
The North Carolina legislature successfully redrew their maps and will probably replace a Democratic Congressperson with a Republican.
Utah's been going back and forth. Anti-gerrymandering provisions of state law limit the amount of juggling either party can do, and attempts to carve up Salt Lake City into four districts that combine with the surrounding areas to create safe spaces for GOP candidates have failed after a court challenge. SLC is likely to continue to be represented in the House by a Democrat.
Indiana, four-square Republican, MAGA as can be, lacking any kind of independent board or commission to decide House districts and having no anti-gerrymandering laws, should have been a shoo-in. But Hoosiers are muleish -- and cautious. Redistricting can water down "safe" districts. Confronted with an informal directive from Washington, DC, the State Senate mustered enough votes to stand pat: Indiana districts remain unchanged, and the dissenting Republicans who kept it that way are being primaried.
Maryland has tried to redraw their maps to favor Democrats, an effort which appears stalled. New York has had the same general result.
Florida has changes in the works; their intent is to give Republicans an edge. It's a multistep process with commissions, committees and a special legislative session, and it has only just begun.
And that brings me, at least, to Virginia. Remember Virginia? That state has also cot an independent commission to draw up their House maps; the legislature managed to pass a proposed amendment to bypass it, and put the notion before the state's voters to decide: partisan maps for 2026, or not? They voted to redistrict.
And that effort in Virginia, that result at the end of all the preceding back-and-forth, is what drew Micah Beckwith's ire: "Democrats aren't necessarily all dark, but they are being led by the minions and the voices of darkness—they're going to win. They're playing to win. And so we have to wake up and guys step up. If we go on the battlefield, we will win. The question is, will we enter the battlefield?"
Got it? In a fight they didn't start, on a "battlefield" where the Democrats had to get voter approval to redraw maps while the Republicans can just let the various state legislatures rip,* he's still worried about the "voices of darkness," and warns Republicans, "Evil will find you."
Better yet? Ignoring polls showing increasing voter unhappiness with Republicans, all of this shifting around is pretty much a wash. The balance lies in the few remaining competitive districts -- and in public sentiment. I wouldn't advise either party to count those chickens before they have all come home to roost, no matter how much they want to believe someone's goose is cooked. I know which side I'd like to see lose, but the results remain to be seen.
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* It is nevertheless not a bug but a feature that states decide how to draw their own maps. Nor is it Federally prohibited to draw 'em up to favor one party or another. "Fifty experiments in democracy" doesn't promise they'll all be noble, fair-minded efforts at uplift, or even especially wise. Don't like it? Vote in a new set of crooks!
MAGA is deserving of being declared the penultimate definition of gaslighters.
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