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Virginia Supreme Court Strikes Down Redistricting Amendment

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Case Summary

Virginia Supreme Court voids redistricting amendment, keeps current maps in place The Supreme Court of Virginia on Friday struck down the voter-approved redistricting amendment, upholding a lower court ruling that had declared the measure unconstitutional less than 24 hours after last week’s special election and briefly halted its implementation. State Democrats later said they would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court of the United States. The high court found that the amendment itself was flawed because lawmakers approved the proposal after voting had already started in the 2025 House of Delegates elections, depriving more than 1.3 million Virginians of an opportunity to weigh the issue when choosing their representatives. The 4-3 ruling leaves the state’s current congressional districts — which give Democrats a 6-5 advantage — in place throughout the 2026 midterm election and the rest of the decade, instead of proposed districts that Democrats believed could produce a 10-1 advantage.

Latest development

Virginia Supreme Court strikes down redistricting amendment vote

Media Coverage · May 9, 2026

The Virginia Supreme Court ruled that a constitutional amendment to redraw the state's electoral districts was invalid. The court's decision effectively blocks the amendment from being put to a statewide vote. This outcome could impact the state's electoral scene in the upcoming elections.

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Virginia Supreme Court strikes down redistricting amendment vote

Media Coverage · May 09, 2026

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Coverage

2 articles

2 sources tracked

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1 Presiding Judge

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Judge

D. Arthur Kelsey

What the record shows

The court metadata has not been resolved yet, so Juryvine is keeping the page conservative until a reliable court match lands.

The newest docket activity we have is a media coverage dated May 09, 2026.

The visible party/entity graph currently includes D. Arthur Kelsey.

Press monitoring has found 2 related articles from 2 distinct sources.

update What Changed This Week

2 events
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Media Coverage 4 hours ago
The Virginia Supreme Court has struck down a voter-approved redistricting amendment, keeping the current congressional districts in place. This decision means that the state's current 6-5 Democratic advantage in the House of Representatives
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Virginia Supreme Court voids redistricting amendment, keeps current maps in place The Supreme Court of Virginia on Friday struck down the voter-approved redistricting amendment, upholding a lower court ruling that had declared the measure unconstitutional less than 24 hours after last week’s special election and briefly halted its implementation. State Democrats later said they would appeal the decision to the Supreme Court of the United States. The high court found that the amendment itself was

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Case Timeline

2 events
newspaper
Media Coverage May 9, 2026

Virginia Supreme Court strikes down redistricting amendment vote

The Virginia Supreme Court ruled that a constitutional amendment to redraw the state's electoral districts was invalid. The court's decision effectively blocks the amendment from being put to a statewide vote. This outcome could impact the state's electoral scene in the upcoming elections.

newspaper
Media Coverage May 9, 2026

Virginia Supreme Court voids redistricting amendment , keeps current maps in place

The Virginia Supreme Court has struck down a voter-approved redistricting amendment, keeping the current congressional districts in place. This decision means that the state's current 6-5 Democratic advantage in the House of Representatives will remain unchanged. The court ruled that lawmakers approved the proposal after voting had already started in the 2025 House of Delegates elections, depriving voters of an opportunity to weigh in on the issue.

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newspaper

Press Coverage

2 articles
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2 outlets · 2 articles

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2 records on file

Last updated

3 hours, 22 minutes ago

Juryvine aggregates docket entries from PACER/CourtListener, press coverage, and GDELT signals. Ingestion timestamps do not appear in the What Changed feed — that reflects real court activity only.