Politics
NEW: Dems Humiliated After Appeal To Supreme Court Goes Terribly Wrong
Virginia Democrats are scrambling to salvage a failed redistricting overhaul after the Virginia Supreme Court struck down the voter-approved measure in a razor-thin decision, triggering a rushed appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
But the emergency filing itself is now under fire.
According to a report from All Virginia News, the motion submitted by Democrats seeking intervention from the nation’s highest court was riddled with apparent typos and formatting errors, raising eyebrows as the party pushes a high-stakes legal argument with major political implications.
The controversy stems from last week’s ruling by the Virginia Supreme Court, which found that the redistricting amendment was placed before voters in violation of the state constitution. The court determined that lawmakers moved forward with the proposal after early voting had already begun, undercutting required legal procedures.
The now-invalidated referendum had narrowly passed and was poised to significantly reshape Virginia’s congressional map. Projections suggested it could have shifted the current 6-5 split to as many as 10 seats favoring Democrats out of the state’s 11 U.S. House districts.

Democrats argued in their appeal that the state court misinterpreted when an election officially begins, claiming early voting should not count as the formal start of the election process. They also contend the ruling interferes with authority reserved to state legislatures under federal law.
Republicans, meanwhile, have blasted the effort as a blatant partisan power grab, arguing the proposed map was designed to lock in Democratic control ahead of the 2026 midterms.
The legal fight has quickly become one of the most closely watched redistricting battles in the country, with control of the House potentially hanging in the balance.
Even with the emergency appeal pending, the path forward remains uncertain. Election timelines and logistical hurdles could make it difficult to implement any new map before voters head to the polls.
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