What’s Happening

Mid-Decade Redistricting Keeps Maryland Busy

Maryland is currently facing redistricting questions at both the statewide and local levels. During the 2026 legislative session, lawmakers considered changes to Maryland’s congressional districts outside of the normal post‑census cycle. At the same time, litigation has challenged the legality of Prince George’s County’s council district map. SCRIM monitors both developments as part of its commitment to structural reform, transparency, and constitutional compliance in the redistricting process.

New Congressional Districts?

During the 2026 legislative session, members of the Maryland General Assembly advanced legislation to redraw the state’s eight congressional districts mid‑decade. The proposal moved through the House of Delegates but stalled in the Senate, where it has not advanced further. As a result, Maryland’s existing congressional map remains in place.

Although the bill has not been enacted, the episode raises important institutional questions. Mid‑cycle redistricting is unusual. Redrawing congressional boundaries outside the regular census cycle can blur the lines between legitimate policy revision and reactive political maneuvering. When maps are reconsidered in response to developments in other states or short‑term partisan dynamics, public confidence in the stability and neutrality of the process can erode.

Why This Raises Structural Questions

Maryland’s redistricting framework already vests significant authority in the legislative branch. Any mid‑decade effort to revise congressional districts should be subject to heightened transparency, robust public input, and clear standards. Guardrails matter. Without them, redistricting risks becoming a recurring political tool rather than a once‑per‑decade exercise grounded in population equality, community integrity, and Voting Rights Act compliance.

SCRIM’s Approach

SCRIM evaluates redistricting proposals based on process integrity and constitutional principle. It does not take positions based on partisan outcome. Any proposal to alter congressional districts should be transparent, independently informed, consistent with equal population requirements, and fully compliant with federal voting rights protections.