Home Blog World News Democrats hail Virginia’s redistricting plan and warn Republicans’ plan to redraw Florida could backfire – live | US politics
Democrats hail Virginia’s redistricting plan and warn Republicans’ plan to redraw Florida could backfire – live | US politics

Democrats hail Virginia’s redistricting plan and warn Republicans’ plan to redraw Florida could backfire – live | US politics


Jeffries: ‘We will not let Trump rig the midterm elections’

Chris Stein

Chris Stein

Top House Democrats were in a triumphant mood at a press conference held after Virginia voters last night approved new maps that could help Democrats win all but one of the state’s seats in the House of Representatives.

“We will not let Donald Trump rig the midterm elections by gerrymandering maps all across the country without a forceful Democratic response. That is what you saw in Virginia,” the Democratic House minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries, said.

The chair of the House Democrats’ campaign arm, Suzan DelBene, said: “We have held back a Republican power grab and leveled the playing field in the fight for the majority in the people’s house. Last night’s results are what happens when voters decide, and it’s as simple as that.”

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Updated at 16.38 BST

Key events

Joseph Gedeon

House judiciary Democrats have launched a formal inquiry into the alleged drinking habits of the FBI director, Kash Patel, demanding he complete a standardized alcohol abuse assessment and submit the results to Congress.

In a letter sent on Tuesday, led by Jamie Raskin, a Maryland representative, Democrats on the committee called on Patel to take the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (Audit) – a 10-question World Health Organization screening tool used to identify harmful patterns of drinking – along with a sworn statement attesting to his answers. Lawmakers also requested all security clearance questionnaires Patel has completed since taking the role.

FBI Director Kash Patel during a press conference at the US Department of Justice, in Washington, DC, USA, 21 April 2026. (EPA/WILL OLIVER)

The letter cited a pattern of alleged conduct that Democrats argued had directly compromised national security, claiming Patel’s alleged unavailability had led to delays in terror-related decisions – including the issuance of Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (Fisa) warrants – and that his behavior had undermined two high-profile criminal investigations: the manhunt following a mass shooting at Brown University and the search for the assassin of Charlie Kirk. In both cases, the letter alleged, Patel had publicly broadcast inaccurate information.

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Updated at 17.47 BST



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