BREAKING: Capitol Police ARREST Top Democrat - Drag Her Out in Handcuffs

Tennessee Republicans advanced a proposed congressional redistricting map Tuesday that could result in a 9-0 Republican delegation to the U.S. House by redrawing the Nashville-area district currently held by Democrats. The plan, released by legislative leaders, cleared multiple committees after overnight delays caused by protests at the state Capitol.
The proposal splits Shelby County into three congressional districts and Nashville into three districts as well. The Democratic alternative, which would have preserved the current boundaries of Memphis and Nashville, failed in committee. The Republican-backed map cleared the House Congressional Redistricting Committee and the House Finance, Ways and Means Committee, and later advanced through the Senate Judiciary Committee and Senate Finance Committee.
Companion measures also moved forward, including a bill to modify the filing deadline for candidacy and another to repeal an earlier statute barring redistricting between federal censuses.
Law enforcement at the Tennessee State Capitol was forced to physically remove protesters who refused to leave the chamber and maintain order. Video footage of officers dragging individuals from the building went viral. The man arrested was KeShaun Pearson, brother of Democratic state Representative Justin J. Pearson, who has previously been involved in protests at the Capitol. Pearson was removed during the chaos surrounding the redistricting debate.
Republican leaders argued the overhaul complies with recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings limiting the use of race as a predominant factor in redistricting while allowing states broad authority to draw maps based on partisan considerations. Tennessee House Speaker Cameron Sexton said in a statement, “Tennessee joins other red and blue states in redrawing their congressional maps. The Supreme Court has opined that redistricting, like the judicial system, should be color-blind. The decision indicated states can redistrict based off partisan politics.”
Democrats and voting-rights advocates immediately criticized the proposal, accusing Republicans of aggressively targeting minority-heavy urban areas in Nashville to eliminate Democratic representation. The current map includes one Democratic district anchored in Nashville; the new proposal would redistribute those voters across multiple Republican-leaning districts.
The Tennessee action is part of a broader national redistricting fight. Completed maps in other states have already produced a net gain of roughly eight House seats for Republicans, including four in Florida, five in Texas, two in Ohio, one in North Carolina, and one in Missouri. Democrats have secured gains of five seats in California and one in Utah. Pending maps in states such as Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and now Tennessee could expand the Republican advantage further, with some analysts projecting up to 18 total gains for the GOP compared with roughly six for Democrats.
The developments follow the Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which narrowed the application of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and restricted the creation of majority-minority districts when race is the predominant consideration. Republican-led legislatures in several Southern states have interpreted the ruling as providing greater flexibility to draw maps based primarily on partisan data.
Democrats are simultaneously attempting to preserve favorable maps in states such as Virginia, where court challenges could reverse recently approved boundaries that currently benefit them. The narrow Republican majority in the U.S. House makes every potential seat highly consequential for the 2026 cycle.
Mid-decade redistricting, historically rare outside the post-census period, has become more common due to narrow congressional margins, favorable court precedents, and intense partisan competition. According to Ballotpedia, multiple states are now actively considering or litigating map changes, an unusually aggressive pace.
The Tennessee legislature is expected to move quickly on the proposal in the coming weeks. If enacted, the new map would apply to the 2026 elections. The developments illustrate how redistricting has emerged as one of the most consequential structural battlegrounds in modern American politics, with both sides treating map-drawing as a critical tool for shaping future House majorities. Legal challenges to the Tennessee map are considered likely, and their outcomes could further influence the national landscape.
Election Landslide — Hakeem Jeffries CRUSHED

Washington, D.C. - June 3, 2026
Virginia Supreme Court Strikes Down Democratic Congressional Map; Jeffries and Party Leaders Discuss Dramatic Responses
Washington, D.C. — The Virginia Supreme Court has overturned a voter-approved congressional redistricting plan backed by Democrats, dealing a significant setback to the party’s efforts to gain seats ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
In a 4-3 ruling issued Friday, the court concluded that the Democratic-controlled legislature failed to follow required procedures when placing a constitutional amendment on the ballot authorizing mid-decade redistricting. Although voters narrowly approved the amendment on April 21, the decision effectively invalidated the result.
Writing for the majority, Justice D. Arthur Kelsey said lawmakers presented the constitutional amendment to voters “in an unprecedented manner.” He added, “This violation irreparably undermines the integrity of the resulting referendum vote and renders it null and void.”
The rejected map had been expected to give Democrats an advantage in 10 of the state’s 11 congressional districts. Democratic leaders, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, held a private meeting Saturday to discuss responses to the ruling. According to The New York Times, participants expressed frustration and considered several options, including what journalist Reid J. Epstein described as an “audacious and possibly far-fetched idea” to replace the entire state Supreme Court in order to reinstate the map.
“The most dramatic idea they discussed — which would involve an unusual gambit to replace the entire state Supreme Court, with a goal of reinstating their gerrymandered map — drew mixed reactions on the call,” Epstein reported.
Other ideas discussed included ways to flip two or three Republican-held seats under the current map and a “bank-shot proposal to redraw the congressional lines anyway.” Jeffries vowed that the ruling “will not stand,” and Democratic leaders in Virginia filed a motion late Friday seeking to pause the decision while pursuing an emergency appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The call reflected what Epstein described as the “desperation and fury” currently gripping the party. It was not clear that the proposal to replace the court would be viable or palatable to Gov. Abigail Spanberger or Democrats in the Virginia General Assembly. A number of Virginia House Democrats participated in the discussion.
The ruling comes amid a broader national redistricting battle. A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v. Callais significantly narrowed key provisions of the Voting Rights Act by ruling that racially drawn districts are unconstitutional, opening opportunities for Republicans in several Southern states. Combined with aggressive GOP-led redistricting in states such as Florida, the Virginia decision is expected to strengthen Republican advantages heading into the midterms.
Democratic leaders had hoped the Virginia map would help counter Republican gains elsewhere, but the court’s decision has reshaped the battle for House control. While some maps remain subject to legal challenges, the overall trajectory has shifted against Democrats in several key states.
JUST IN: Democrats Suffer CRUSHING BLOW Ruling Is A Disaster for the Party Supreme Court

Washington, D.C. - June 3, 2026
Alabama Asks Supreme Court to Restore 2023 Congressional Map; Redistricting Wars Shift Further Toward Republicans
Washington, D.C. — Alabama has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to allow the state to use a 2023 congressional map with one majority-Black district rather than a court-ordered map containing two such districts ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
Alabama Solicitor General A. Barrett Bowdre told the justices that the state should not be forced to “hold elections under a map that was erroneously ordered at best and unconstitutional at worst.” He argued that Americans deserve “a republic free of racial sorting now,” and that state officials should have the opportunity to provide it.
The request comes after the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which significantly narrowed the parameters of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and declared that districts drawn specifically to favor race or an ethnic group are unconstitutional. Republicans have used the ruling to advance maps in several Southern states.
At the latest count, Republicans could add as many as 14 additional congressional seats in the fall midterms through redistricting, while Democrats could add six, with fewer than 16 seats considered toss-ups or close. Specific projected gains include Ohio (R+2), Missouri (R+1), Tennessee (R+1), North Carolina (R+1), Florida (R+4), and Texas (R+5). Democrats project gains in California (D+5) and Utah (D+1).
Republicans could also pick up additional seats in South Carolina, Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi following the Court’s narrowing of the Voting Rights Act. In Tennessee, the Republican-led legislature recently approved a new map that removes the state’s only Democrat-held, majority-Black district, resulting in an all-Republican delegation.
In a separate development, the Virginia Supreme Court struck down a Democratic-inspired gerrymandered congressional map on Friday in a 4-3 ruling. The court concluded that the Democratic-controlled legislature failed to follow required procedures when placing a constitutional amendment on the ballot. The rejected map would have given Democrats nine of the state’s 11 House seats despite receiving only about 47 percent of the vote in the last congressional election.
Democratic leaders, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, are assessing the potential impact on the party’s chances of regaining control of Congress. The combined effect of court rulings and Republican-led redistricting has substantially altered the landscape heading into the midterms, with Republicans appearing to hold a clear advantage in the ongoing redistricting battles.
It Finally PASSED 390-9... OVERWHELMINGLY - Americans Cheering

Washington, D.C. - June 3, 2026
House Passes Housing for the 21st Century Act by 390-9 Vote, Advancing Bipartisan Supply-Side Reforms
Washington, D.C. — The U.S. House of Representatives passed the Housing for the 21st Century Act on Tuesday by a vote of 390-9, sending a bipartisan measure aimed at reducing regulatory barriers, modernizing federal housing programs, and expanding the nation’s housing supply to the Senate.
The legislation was co-sponsored by House Financial Services Committee Chairman French Hill (R-AR) and Ranking Member Maxine Waters (D-CA). It cleared the committee in December before receiving near-unanimous support on the House floor.
The bill directs the Government Accountability Office to identify gaps and inefficiencies in existing federal housing programs, updates the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s HOME Investment Partnerships Program, reduces regulatory obstacles that have slowed housing development, and provides banks with greater flexibility to deploy capital toward expanding housing supply.
House Speaker Mike Johnson described the measure as a necessary response to affordability challenges.
“Housing costs have soared beyond the reach of millions of American families thanks to Bidenflation, while outdated and burdensome red tape has constrained our nation’s affordable housing supply and limited our ability to expand it,” Johnson said.
“Today’s House passage of the Housing for the 21st Century Act is a critical step toward addressing this shortage by reducing unnecessary regulatory barriers, modernizing HUD programs, and giving banks flexibility to deploy capital to increase our housing supply,” he added.
Reps. Hill and Mike Flood (R-NE) outlined a similar argument in a recent opinion piece, writing that when there are not enough homes, prices rise. They described the bill as including real, bipartisan solutions to boost development by clearing out red tape and letting communities and local banks do their jobs.
Supporters argue that housing scarcity has been worsened by regulatory complexity, permitting delays, and compliance costs that increase development expenses and timelines. The legislation focuses on supply-side reforms rather than new subsidies, addressing structural issues within federal housing policy.
The overwhelming 390-9 vote margin reflects rare bipartisan agreement in a closely divided Congress. Nearly all members of both parties supported the bill, signaling broad recognition that housing affordability has become a pressing national concern.
The co-sponsorship by Hill and Waters — lawmakers who often diverge on financial policy — underscores the breadth of support. While their broader philosophies differ, both have emphasized the need to increase housing availability and streamline federal programs.
The bill now heads to the Senate, where housing reform has drawn interest from lawmakers on both sides. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott (R-SC) has previously co-sponsored housing legislation with Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and has signaled openness to measures addressing supply constraints.
Whether the Senate takes up the measure in its current form or seeks modifications remains to be seen. The decisive House vote could increase pressure for action as housing affordability continues to feature prominently in economic debates.
If enacted, the legislation would mark one of the most sweeping bipartisan housing reform efforts in recent years, targeting regulatory structures rather than expanding federal spending.