Why this Indiana Republican bucks Trump on redistricting

When Spencer Deary first decided to run for a state Senate seat in western Indiana four years ago, he knew he'd be in for some tough times. Senator Deery, however, admits that he never expected anything like this last week, which included attacks from leaders of his own party – such as the Governor of Indiana and the President of the United States – and attack on his family's home on Thursday morning.

But as difficult as the past week has been, Mr Deary says it was not his vote that triggered it all.

After President Donald Trump called for Texas redraw your congressional maps this summer, to create a more favorable map for the GOP ahead of next year's midterm elections, attention quickly turned to Indiana for more GOP seats. Republicans saw an opportunity here, in a state that President Trump won by double digits in the last three elections. With a Republican governor and Republican supermajorities in both state legislatures, the party could win two House seats and create a 9-0 GOP district map.

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Indiana Republican lawmakers have rejected pressure from the White House to redraw their congressional maps mid-cycle. One state senator describes why his conservative values ​​led him to oppose the effort.

The White House has spent significant political capital over the past few months to make this happen. Vice President J.D. Vance flew to Indiana twice to lobby legislative leaders, and Indiana lawmakers, including House leaders, met with Trump. in the Oval Office in August. But November 14Senate President pro tempore Rodrick Bray announced that his chamber does not have enough votes to move forward on redistricting. With 10 Democrats joined by 19 Republicans, senators voted 29-19 to adjourn and not hold a December special session on redistricting at the request of Gov. Mike Brown. unprecedented step in state history and a proxy vote for the Senate Republican position on redistricting.

Indiana Senate President pro tempore Rodrick Bray speaks at the Statehouse in Indianapolis on April 23, 2025. In November, Mr. Bray announced there were not enough votes in the state Senate to attempt mid-cycle redistricting.

“For me, it really comes down to this: What is the most basic principle of the Constitution? And that is the idea of ​​popular sovereignty, or the idea that the people choose their rulers. Anything that undermines, violates my oath of office,” says Mr. Deary, who was one of the first senators to oppose mid-cycle redistricting. He knows it fraud is already happening, but it is “especially egregious,” he says, to do it “whenever we want” for fear of the election results.

“I don't take this position because I'm against conservative values,” he says, pointing to his conservative voting record and his 100 percent approval rating among right-wing groups such as Indiana Family Institute And Americans for Prosperity-Indiana. “I accept this because of my conservative values.”

At a time when Republican opposition to Trump's wishes is rare and often futile, it was legislators in the ruby ​​red state who initiated some of the most visible intraparty opposition to a second term. This happened after the Congress vote for release The Justice Department is prosecuting the case against convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. And while many of these GOP lawmakers say they share the president's goals of winning a Republican majority in the U.S. House of Representatives after the 2026 midterm elections, they worry that redistricting could undermine those efforts and create division at a time when the party should be united.

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