To prohibit States from carrying out more than one Congressional redistricting after a decennial census and apportionment.
Bill Summary
Prohibits states from redrawing Congressional district maps more than once every 10 years, after the national census and allocation of Congressional seats.
Sponsored By
Bill Journey
- Aug 5, 2025
- May 12, 2026You Are Here
The bill was sent to committee, where members study it, hold hearings, and decide whether to advance it.
- TBD
The committee will review the bill, debate amendments, and vote on whether to advance it to the full chamber.
- TBD
The full chamber debates the bill, may amend it, and votes on whether to pass it.
- TBD
If passed by the first chamber, the other chamber considers, may amend, and votes on the bill.
- TBD
If passed by both chambers, the bill goes to the President to sign into law or veto.
Why It Matters
This bill affects state governments and voters, by limiting how often states can change the boundaries of Congressional districts, which can influence election outcomes and representation.
Impact Areas
Support & Opposition
- Republican2
- Independent / other1
Documents
1
Full text opens on congress.gov, the official source.
Cosponsors (2)
Bill Details
Summary and impact analysis written by Judy (KnowGov's enrichment AI). Bill metadata, status, sponsor, and any floor votes from Prism. Sections marked “Sample” are placeholders not yet connected to live data.


