Is Trump Acting Like A Dictator Like Pelosi Says?

Democrats Pull Off Major Win To Defeat Red State

Texas is the new battleground — and Democrats are pouring in millions to stop conservatives from securing fair representation.

In a desperate attempt to block Republican-led redistricting in Texas, the largest Democrat super PAC has launched a $20 million war chest to interfere in the Lone Star State’s electoral map.

The House Majority PAC, backed by powerful liberal donors and aligned with House Democrat leadership, has unveiled the “Lone Star Fund”—a massive spending campaign aimed at tilting the political scales in Texas. According to the Washington Examiner, the fund will be used for voter registration drives, targeted digital ads, and outreach to Hispanic voters, a group that has increasingly moved toward President Donald Trump and the GOP in recent years.

But it doesn’t stop there.

The Democratic National Committee says it will deploy 30,000 volunteers to aggressively phone bank Republican-leaning districts—an unprecedented attempt to flip conservative strongholds by swaying what they call “persuadable Republican voters.”

A DNC spokesperson made their intentions crystal clear, accusing Republicans of “rigging the system” and vowing to “hold the GOP accountable” on healthcare and food access—talking points that play well with radical progressives but fall flat in the heart of conservative America.

Meanwhile, President Trump and Texas Governor Greg Abbott are working to secure fair congressional maps that reflect population growth and preserve America First values. Abbott has called a special legislative session to address redistricting and other urgent priorities, including disaster relief in flood-impacted Kerr County.

The Texas GOP praised Abbott’s action, calling redistricting “an essential step to preserving GOP control of Congress and advancing President Trump’s America First agenda.” With 25 of Texas’s 38 congressional seats already in Republican hands, the effort could help solidify a conservative firewall ahead of the 2026 midterms.

Currently, Democrats control just 12 seats, with one now vacant following the death of Rep. Sylvester Turner. Republicans hold a narrow 219-212 majority in the House, and special elections later this year will play a key role in determining control of Congress.

Democrats, however, aren’t just fighting in Texas. Liberal governors like California’s Gavin Newsom have threatened to redraw their own districts mid-decade in retaliation—despite previously opposing such tactics. It’s a sign that Democrats will bend the rules when it suits their political agenda.

Texas has not redrawn its maps between census counts since 2003. Back then, Democrats staged a dramatic walkout in protest—but Republicans won that fight, and they’ve been leading the state ever since.

Now, with Democrat donors pouring millions into the state, Texas conservatives face another high-stakes showdown—one that could decide the direction of Congress, and the future of President Trump’s America First movement.