The Guardian: Indiana voters go to the polls today in a test of the Republican party’s staying power after the party’s state lawmakers resisted Donald Trump’s bruising campaign to pressure them into redrawing the congressional districts.
The vote has turned into a statewide referendum on political retribution.
Seven state senators who voted against Trump’s mid-decade redistricting push now face challengers endorsed by the president, who said that “every one of these people should be “primaried,” after the effort failed.
Trump-aligned dark money groups have spent upwards of $7m on TV ads in Indiana this year, according to a tally from AdImpact – the majority spent targeting Republicans who allied themselves with Democrats in the December redistricting vote.
Goode voted against Trump’s redistricting push after hosting a town hall event in which 71 people spoke out against the revision and none spoke in favor.
Jim Buck, a state senator from Kokomo, also faces a Trump challenge, after 18 years in office.
Party-spending patterns indicate that they expect to hold the seats – Democratic advertisers make up less than 1% of the $25.5m in ad spending in the Indiana’s 2026 primary contest, AdImpact data shows.
Half of Indiana’s 50 state Senate seats and all 100 state House seats are up for election in 2026.
Unlike in Indiana, lawmakers in Texas, Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio all dutifully passed redistricting measures aimed to boost Republican control. Representatives in Alabama and Tennessee have already called for special sessions to discuss redistricting after last week’s landmark supreme court ruling paved the way for revisions in Louisiana.
Democrats recently redrew the voting maps in California.
