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After districts are redrawn, 6 lawmakers face challenge

Los Angeles Times

|

November 06, 2025

The new boundaries put the Republicans at risk of losing their seats in the House.

- DAKOTA SMITH

After districts are redrawn, 6 lawmakers face challenge

California Republicans in Congress are vastly outnumbered by their Democratic counterparts in the state—and it may get worse.

Five of the nine GOP seats are at risk after California voters passed Proposition 50 in Tuesday's special election. The measure, put on the ballot by the Democratic-led state Legislature, reshaped California congressional districts in a way that was specifically designed to unseat Republican incumbents.

The new maps target areas held by Reps. Kevin Kiley and Doug LaMalfa in Northern California, Rep. David Valadao in the Central Valley, and Reps. Ken Calvert, Young Kim and Darrell Issa in Southern California. The radical reconfiguration not only put Republicans in danger, but probably protects vulnerable Democratic officeholders by adding more voters from their own party into their reconfigured districts.

Already, California's Republican members hold just nine seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, while Democrats have 43.

Proposition 50's passage also sets off an intraparty fight for a newly created Republican seat in Riverside and Orange counties, which will pit two GOP incumbents against each other — Calvert of Corona and Kim of Anaheim Hills — knocking one of them out of office. Calvert and Kim on Wednesday announced they planned to run for that seat.

"With the passage of Prop. 50, Californians were sold a bill of goods, allowing [Gov.] Gavin Newsom and his radical allies in Sacramento an unprecedented power grab to redraw the Congressional map and silence those who disagree with his extreme policies," Calvert said in a statement.

Newsom and other Democratic leaders argue that redistricting, which normally happens once a decade by an independent commission, was necessary after GOP leaders in Texas redrew their own congressional districts at the request of President Trump in a bid to add more seats for their party and retain Republican control of the House.

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