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redraw
/ riːˈdrɔː /
verb
to draw or draw up (something) again or differently
Example Sentences
In response, Newsom proposed California temporarily depose of its independent redistricting commission, led by 14 citizens, to redraw the state’s maps and add five Democratic seats, effectively canceling out Texas’s move.
In truth, a broad ruling in Callais could leave blue states with no other option than to redraw their majority-minority districts.
In fact, they might have to redraw them: If Callais comes out as expected, these districts may now constitute an unlawful racial gerrymander, and voters could sue to invalidate them in court.
If the court’s conservatives hand down such a ruling in the months ahead, it would permit Republican-led states across the South to redraw the congressional districts of a dozen or more Black Democrats.
States are required to redraw districts each decade based on new population data.
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