Bulwark Takes - Rep. Casar: Texas Gerrymandering Could Backfire Badly
Episode Date: July 19, 2025Rep. Greg Casar joins Lauren Egan to discuss the aggressive push to redraw congressional maps in Texas ahead of the 2026 midterms, an effort that could violate the Voting Rights Act, suppress minority... votes, and set a dangerous precedent nationwide.
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What's up guys, it's Lauren Egan here at the Bullwork and I've
got Representative Greg Kassar here with me today. He is the
chair of the House Progressive Caucus and he represents a
Texas district that includes part of Austin and San Antonio.
Congressman, welcome to the bulwark.
Thanks so much for having me.
Yeah, of course.
So I want to talk with you today because there's honestly just like some crazy
shit going on in Texas right now with redistricting.
Can you just set the table for us, get us up to speed on what's been happening?
This is a five alarm fire with the chance
of spreading outside of Texas all over the country.
It's the biggest thing happening in American politics
right now that you haven't heard about.
Donald Trump just got done, as we know,
ramming through a bill to kick 17 million people
off of their health care, giving money to his billionaire
buddies, doing all sorts of corrupt
stuff and he has no plan for winning the midterm elections, but this is his plan for rigging
those elections. And he's starting off in Texas and then he's said himself, if you don't
believe me, he said himself, he then wants to go do this in other parts of the country.
He's demanding that Texas Republicans do his bidding,
radically change their own districts in order to basically,
as he said, claim five more districts for himself,
for Republicans, but in doing so,
he wants to, in ways we've never seen before,
violate the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
change districts in ways that have been illegal
for about 60, 70 years,
and chop up communities of color to suppress their votes,
get rid of Democratic members of Congress,
and then actually leave very vulnerable sitting members
of the Republican Party in Congress.
And those folks, those sitting Republicans have to decide
whether they wanna stand up for their own constituents
and for voting rights laws
and stand up for their own districts
or just be Trump's water boys.
And at this moment, it looks like
they're just gonna be Trump's water boys.
And so folks need to speak up and speak out
in a really big way,
because if they're able to try to steal and rig elections
by changing the rules in the middle of the game here,
five seats in Texas, and then multiple ones in Ohio,
and then they wanna go to other states.
A lot of us have been talking about
how we could maybe hold Trump accountable
in the midterm elections.
They could be trying to prevent that
from ever even happening starting next week.
Yeah. So just to drill down on how this all went down, basically Trump and his political team has been putting pressure on Governor Abbott, as I understand it, for quite some time to call this
special session and to redraw the congressional maps there. And then last week Abbott caved and
he did it and he called this special session session Were you surprised that Abbott decided to go along with this or did you have any hope that maybe Republicans would?
Tell Trump no there's always some small hope that
Republicans could do the right thing especially in the face of
Such death and disaster and destruction here in the Texas Hill country.
I'm sitting in Travis County right now where we had multiple people including children die in the
July 4th floods. And so this special session should be about rebuilding and relief, not about
redistricting. And we heard for a little while that maybe they weren't going to go and make this whole thing about politics.
But then the rumor that I've heard is that Donald Trump called Governor Abbott and went and called
Texas Republicans and said, no, you guys work for me and I need you to deliver these seats for me.
And these Texas Republicans don't want to change their own
districts. They don't want to go represent a whole different part of the state in order to change
the Democratic districts adjoining to them. That puts those Texas Republicans at electoral risk
to a Republican primary challenge from the new areas they suddenly represent. They stop
representing some towns, now they represent whole new ones. It puts them at a real in a real
legal problem because to do this they have to even further violate the Voting
Rights Act beyond the already gerrymandered, racially gerrymandered
maps. And it also could leave them more vulnerable to a Democratic challenger.
But Donald Trump is not thinking about the law.
He's not thinking about long-term.
He's not thinking about the Republican party.
He's just thinking about himself and he's basically just call him the shots.
And I just haven't seen Texas Republicans find a backbone ever since
Donald Trump was elected again.
And I'm not going to hold my breath.
Yeah.
And I mean, just like a quick refresher, typically redistricting happens
once a decade after the new census is done. Right. It just happened a few years ago. Right. Like
it's 2025. We're like a good five years away from when this is supposed to happen again.
Have you talked to your colleagues in the Republican caucus about this? I'm just curious,
like what are they saying? If you're even having conversations with them? No, yeah. I mean, look, I respect private conversations with everybody, even my Republican
colleagues. But what I'll tell you in general, from the many of them that I've spoken with,
is that they all oppose this as far as I can tell. But nobody, and none of them have been able to,
or seemingly willing to speak out publicly
to stop it.
And so here's what I think the plan is to stop this.
First, we need a delay.
We need time.
Second, we need to use that time to mobilize people, not just in Texas, but around across
the country.
And then third, if they do do this, we need to hold them accountable
for it. So delay tactics include filibusters and busting quorum, which means Democrats walking out
because if 50 Democrats walk out of the Texas house, you shut down business. We have a long
tradition of filibusters in the Texas Senate. You could remember when Wendy Davis famously filibustered anti-abortion laws in Texas. We need to use that to delay and buy people time
because most folks listening at home right now probably haven't heard about this until today.
And then second, we've got to use that time. One part of the news we haven't talked about yet,
for example, is now that this is becoming public and Trump isn't able to do this in the dark of night, Governor Gavin Newsom in California has started saying, well,
maybe California needs to look at its map. If Texas is going to look at its map, those are the
sorts of things that we can start to have a real conversation about if we buy some time, because
now California Republicans are starting to say, hey, what is Texas doing? You could put us at risk.
That's what we could use with some time is to build pressure
and then also build a legal case against these maps.
Because if they're able to get rid of four or five
of these democratically held districts,
this would be a monumental change for the entire country.
Because there's not five democratic districts in Texas.
There's about 12 Democrats currently elected from the Texas delegation.
There are 12 minority opportunity districts, districts that are overwhelmingly people of color in Texas.
And if they're able to come and basically decimate five of those, that sets a horrible precedent for the entire country.
If Greg Abbott and Donald Trump get their way and the US Supreme Court rubber stamps that, it would have huge impacts for the whole nation.
So we've got to be able to, like I said, delay, use that delay to build pressure all across the country about what this could do and we could hopefully stop the maps. And if we don't fully stop the maps and they are able to implement some of
this, we've got to hold them accountable. Changing five democratic districts likely changes all 38
districts in Texas and that creates big opportunities for Democrats and independents, people of
conscience, whether you're progressive or conservative to say, voters should be picking their politicians.
Politicians gotta stop being able to redraw maps
and rewrite the rules to pick their voters.
We should be investing millions of campaign dollars
in a way we haven't seen in my lifetime in Texas
to target every Republican member of Congress
that goes along with this scheme
and let voters in these newly
drawn districts pick who they want to elect.
Yeah.
I mean, there has been like a lot of conversation about that element of it in the sense that
this is really, you know, kind of worrying that Trump and the Republicans are trying
to do this, but at the same time, and you've talked about this, they could be shooting
themselves in the foot and making, you know, you've got to move voters into some districts.
So if you take voters out of a really red district and you put them in a blue district,
well then that really red district is now a little bit more purple. Do you actually
think that that could happen though? Because that seems to me, you know, just at first
blush to be a bit of wishful thinking, but how are you thinking about whether or not that could actually happen?
I think that these folks that are drawing these maps are all in the White House.
Traditionally, in partisan and even racial gerrymandering, it is people in their home
state, in our case in the state of Texas, those representatives
drawing up the maps.
But what you have is a couple of operatives in Washington, D.C., and in the White House
drawing up maps.
And they're taking their best guess not being in Texas about how Texas voters are going
to vote this time around.
And while I do believe that their goal is to shield Trump from accountability
and get rid of five Democrats, I don't think these are always the most competent people.
And so I do think that Republican members of Congress should be deeply worried that
they could lose in a wave election like 2018 if somebody in Washington, miscalculates and you know doesn't know
about the voting patterns in Texas. I also think those Republican members of
Congress should be worried because if they have to be radically redrawn they
don't just have to look left before crossing the street they've got to look
right because look if you represent one part of rural Texas but then suddenly
you're representing a totally different suburban part of Texas,
there might be longstanding state reps
and state senators on the Republican side
that have represented that area much longer than you
if you're a Republican congressman.
So I do think that if they get this plan through,
they will likely take out some Democratic members,
but they may wind up taking out some of their own either on the left or the right.
You mentioned what Gavin Newsom is proposing in California.
Do you think other blue states like in New York, which also has a lot of congressional
districts, do you think that they should be looking at doing something similar?
I think that those governors and blue states should be telling Republicans
that they will likely reap what they sow. You know, I ultimately let those governors
and legislators speak for themselves, but here's what I've seen. I don't think that California,
having an independent commission, is like a shining light on the hill that inspires Governor Greg Abbott
to establish an independent commission himself. That's not how this works. I believe we should
have independent commissions and an end to gerrymandering across the nation. How do we
get there? The way we get there is either by electing a majority in Congress and in
the Senate with a president to do it nationally.
I support that. Donald Trump is opposed to that. Or two, the other plan is we have to get those
states that have commissions to actually make sure that there's a cost to people like Greg Abbott
for not having a commission. We can no longer keep on playing this game where people in
righteous states do the right thing and therefore reward those governors that
want to gerrymander their states. So I think it's really important for blue
state governors to take a very hard look at what's happening in Texas and for
Republicans to know that they will reap what they sow. And if they keep on going forward
with these radical and extreme gerrymandering plans,
other people could do the same thing.
Have you talked with anyone from the New York delegation
or like the Colorado delegation about putting pressure
on their governors to do something?
Well, you know, if you, I know that there's,
I myself also prefer Hulu and Netflix over watching C-SPAN.
But if you turn on C-SPAN, you'll see that we are all packed into that room day after day, night after night on the house floor.
We were there up until one in the morning yesterday.
And all the Democrats in Congress are talking about this,
but so are the Republicans because I've heard just yesterday that Republican congressmen and
congresswomen from California are having emergency meetings and are starting to feel the heat and
feel the consequences. And so that's why it's so important for everybody watching at home to call their members of Congress, call their state representatives, call their governors offices,
and tell them that we want voting rights for everyone across the country and we aren't going
to let Donald Trump just get away with escaping accountability in the midterm elections. Look,
when people ask me all the time, how do you have hope in this moment?
You know, there's all this terrible stuff happening in Congress. I mean, just last night,
$9 billion cut from basic things like public radio stations in rural America, making sure
that we provide food in war-torn countries, basic stuff like that. When I tell folks, you know,
we recently voted on this bill to kick 17 million stuff like that. When I tell folks, you know, we recently voted on this
bill to kick 17 million Americans off their health care. I tell folks, we have a chance in these
midterm elections to start to stop this horrible stuff. I think I was naive in saying that because
we can't just wait until those midterm elections because what if Trump is able to rig those
midterm elections right now as we speak?
So we need everybody to speak up about this. We're talking to people, like I said,
I'm talking to members of Congress in each and every one of those states,
but they aren't just accountable to their colleagues in Congress. They've got to hear
from their voters. And so it's an important time for you to support your members of Congress in
doing the right thing on this.
You mentioned the independent commission in California and a lot of blue states do have
something similar. New York has one, Colorado has one. Do you think in hindsight that that
was short-sighted? Because I get the instinct, you know, Democrats want to be the ones that
are fair. They want to play by the rules. Gerrymandering, you all believe, is anti-democratic.
And so therefore, the commission makes sense
to get politics out of it.
But that assumes that Republicans
are going to play by the same set of rules, which they do not.
So do you feel like Democrats need
to be a bit more ruthless about wielding power
and not worry so much about playing by the rules
and potentially just ditch the independent commissions going forward where
they can.
This is what I would have advocated for in California and New York.
I would have said California passes an independent commission, but it goes into effect the day
that Texas passes an independent commission.
New York should have passed a law saying New York Texas passes an independent commission. New York should have passed a law
saying New York will have an independent commission, but it will go into effect the day that Florida
gets an independent commission. That's the way that this should work so that the entire country
gets rid of gerrymandering. We shouldn't have a situation where, say, a Colorado gets an independent commission and therefore disincentivizes an
Alabama from ever having one.
We need to recognize that if we show up with a butter knife to a gunfight, we are not representing
our constituents well.
Congressman, thanks for being here.
Appreciate it.
Thanks a lot.
