Should We Pin Our Hopes on Mid-Cycle Redistricting in MD-01?

Here’s what Maryland’s congressional district map is now.

Over the summer, faced with a tanking approval rate and policies the American people despise, and fearing a loss of the GOP’s thin majority in the House, President Donald Trump pressured Texas to redistrict with the goal of adding five Republican seats.
Texas happily complied and now has a new congressional map. A group of individuals and advocacy groups has sued, claiming that the unusual mid-cycle redistricting is unconstitutional because lawmakers illegally relied on race to draw the districts. The Republican legislators claim that is not true, and that they relied on naked partisanship, not race, to draw the new boundaries, which is ok to do.
Texas’s new map has had a cascading effect in blue states, which vowed to counteract the Texas addition of GOP seats, and in red states, which wish to toady up to Trump, too.
Even though Maryland has only one seat to add to the Democrats’ side, state lawmakers have jumped into this battle.
Del. David Moon (D-Montgomery), majority leader in the House of Delegates, has filed a bill that would require Maryland to respond to redistricting by Texas or other states with its own map-drawing session.
Sen. Clarence Lam (D-Anne Arundel and Howard) has filed a bill that would redraw Maryland’s congressional district map in response to the red states doing the same. His bill proposes to use one of the unadopted concept maps offered by the Legislative Redistricting Advisory Commission in 2021.

With his district more competitive with a new map, GOP Rep. Harris — apparently without irony — called the effort "the most partisan thing you could do."
Harris warned that any redistricting could backfire on the Democrats. “We will take this to court, it will go as high as necessary, and in the end, a judge could draw a map that actually has two or three Republican congressmen,” Harris said. “I’d caution the Democrats, be careful what you wish for.”
Sen. Steve Hershey (R-Upper Shore), minority leader in the state Senate, also not seeing the irony, said “Only Maryland Democrats would see election mischief elsewhere and think, ‘Let’s out-cheat the cheaters.’ Delegate Moon’s proposal to redraw Maryland’s congressional maps mid-decade if another state does the same isn’t bold — it’s reckless, shameless, and a transparent grab for partisan advantage.”
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D), has said that “all options need to be on the table … if the president of the United States is putting his finger on the scale to try to manipulate elections because he knows that his policies cannot win in a ballot box.” But Moore has not yet called a special legislative session to address these bills.
Meanwhile, time is getting short.
- The 2026 General Assembly session begins on January 14, 2026.
- The filing deadline for the 2026 election is February 24.
- The primary election is June 23.
While there is still some chance that we may see a more competitive First District in time for the 2026 election, it’s looking less likely.
So, back to Plan A — let’s hope for an unbeatable candidate and work hard to get them elected. Maybe our neighbors are tired of having a representative who kowtows to a dangerous, fascist king. Maybe our neighbors will vote him out of office. Maybe this time we’ll win.
Jan Plotczyk spent 25 years as a survey and education statistician with the federal government, at the Census Bureau and the National Center for Education Statistics. She retired to Rock Hall.
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