GOP puts pressure on 'ruby red' state to make up for Virginia gerrymander loss
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis at the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport on the day of the opening of a temporary migrant detention center informally known as "Alligator Alcatraz" in Ochopee, Florida, U.S., July 1, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

Republicans are pointing fingers after a narrow redistricting loss in Virginia undermined President Donald Trump's national gerrymandering crusade, effectively erasing months of GOP gains and creating a stalemate in the high-stakes redistricting battle.

Republican insiders acknowledged their party should have invested more heavily and earlier in Virginia, where Democrats narrowly won a referendum on a new congressional map that could provide the party as many as four additional House seats that, combined with Democratic gains in California and a court-drawn seat in Utah, has eliminated the advantage the GOP built from new maps in Texas, North Carolina, Ohio and Missouri, reported Politico.

"You'd be hard pressed to find a single Republican tonight who doesn't think the GOP should've done more in Virginia," one GOP operative said. "It actually hurts more that it was so close."

The spending disparity proved significant. Democrats' campaign, led by Virginians for Fair Elections, raised $64 million — nearly three times what Republicans spent. House Majority Forward, a Democratic nonprofit aligned with House leadership, contributed nearly $38 million. Despite Republicans having $297 million available through the Trump-aligned MAGA Inc. since last year, they never deployed comparable resources to Virginia.

“If they had spent some money, they could have won tonight and someone’s got to own that and explain why that decision was made,” said a second Virginia-based GOP strategist.

The defeat has prompted recriminations extending beyond Virginia. Republicans targeted Indiana's GOP legislature for rejecting the White House's push to redraw maps for partisan advantage. Trump allies have spent significant resources trying to defeat the Indiana Republicans who resisted the effort.

Some Republicans questioned the entire redistricting arms race. Rep. Kevin Kiley, a Republican-turned-independent targeted by California Democrats' gerrymander, argued the conflict had spiraled uncontrollably. "Now that this whole thing has just gotten completely out of hand, there have been no winners, and it's created such instability, maybe this is the time that we can come together and say, 'Alright, enough is enough,'" he said.

National Republican Congressional Committee Chair Richard Hudson expressed hope Virginia's Supreme Court, which reserved authority to review the new map, might void Democrats' effort. "This close margin reinforces that Virginia is a purple state that shouldn't be represented by a severe partisan gerrymander," he said.

Republicans now look to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis to help fix the problem they created.

He has delayed a special redistricting session until after Virginia voted and has yet to release a map proposal, but now the pressure's on the rumored 2028 GOP presidential candidate.

“To my friends in Tallahassee: in a state that is ruby red, it’s time to respond to what we saw tonight in Virginia with a redistricting plan that reflects Florida’s true partisan lean — and adds 3–4 GOP seats to our supermajority,” said former Trump White House spokesperson Harrison Fields in a social media post. “Virginia is a purple state being drawn as deep blue. Florida should draw a map that’s even redder — and get it passed ASAP.”