Chief Political Analyst Explains What’s Happening In Virginia

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Fox News chief political analyst Brit Hume raised concerns Monday about Virginia’s latest redistricting push, arguing that aggressive map-drawing efforts risk skewing election outcomes and could ultimately affect control of Congress.

Virginia voters are set to decide on a constitutional amendment that would allow the state to redraw its congressional districts ahead of the next census cycle. The proposal, which has already cleared the state legislature, would give lawmakers the authority to revisit district lines before the 2026 midterm elections.

That timing has drawn attention because even small changes to district boundaries can shift the balance of power in a closely divided House.

Speaking on “Special Report with Bret Baier,” Hume described the situation as part of a broader national pattern, where both Democrats and Republicans are increasingly willing to redraw maps mid-decade to gain an edge. He framed it as a continuation of hardball political tactics rather than something unique to Virginia, though he singled out the state’s approach as especially notable.

Virginia had previously established a bipartisan commission designed to take redistricting out of lawmakers’ hands and reduce partisan influence.

Hume argued that the current effort effectively reverses that approach, putting control back with elected officials at a moment when control of Congress remains uncertain. In his view, that shift undercuts the original intent of having an independent or bipartisan process.

The concern, as he laid it out, is less about one party or the other and more about the broader impact of gerrymandering. When districts are drawn to favor a particular outcome, he said, it can limit genuine competition and make election results more predictable. He pointed to a long-standing principle often cited in redistricting debates: voters are supposed to choose their representatives, not the other way around.

Host Bret Baier noted that even a handful of seats influenced by redistricting could matter in a tight election cycle. With control of the House often decided by narrow margins, changes in states like Virginia could ripple outward, especially if similar efforts are underway elsewhere.

The amendment now heads to voters, who will ultimately decide whether lawmakers can move forward with new maps. Virginia currently has a slight Democratic advantage in its House delegation, holding a 6–5 split. Depending on how new districts are drawn, that balance could shift.

 

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