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Most incumbent members of Congress on the ballot in Virginia this year received more than 60% support from voters in their new districts.
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The court ruled that longtime Democratic Party activist Paul Goldman lacks standing to pursue his lawsuit.
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Former Democratic Party of Virginia chair Paul Goldman is arguing that House members elected last fall must run again this year under newly-redrawn legislative maps.
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The US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit heard arguments in a lawsuit that result in delegates running for their seats one year early.
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The next election for the General Assembly will feature new maps. And that will mean many incumbents will have to face each other.
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In the first of two live sessions for public comment on a redistricting proposal before the Virginia Supreme Court, speakers focused on experts’ choices to move a congressional district across the state and how to split up Richmond's suburbs.
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The office of Attorney General Mark Herring filed a brief last week seeking to throw out a lawsuit arguing the Commonwealth should conduct elections for the House of Delegates again, since the districts vary greatly in population.
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The commission canceled future meetings, but left open the possibility of meeting again if perhaps commissioners on their own can develop a compromise map.
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After failing to agree on new maps for state legislative districts, Virginia's Redistricting Commission is moving on to federal Congressional districts.
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The new political boundaries for the General Assembly and Congress will have an important change because of how incarcerated people are counted.