A federal court has cleared the way for North Carolina to move forward with its newly revised congressional map, rejecting efforts by civil rights groups to block the updated district lines ahead of the 2026 election. The ruling marks a win for state Republican lawmakers and means the map, passed last month as Senate Bill 249, will be in place for at least one full election cycle.
The decision came from a three-judge panel, which issued a 57-page opinion denying requests from two sets of plaintiffs. The plaintiffs—Black and Hispanic voters in one lawsuit, and the North Carolina NAACP and Common Cause in the other—alleged that the new lines would reduce minority voting strength and violate multiple federal laws, including the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. They asked the court to issue a preliminary injunction to stop the map from being used in 2026.
The court disagreed. In its opinion, the panel said the plaintiffs had not shown enough direct evidence that the map was intentionally drawn to harm Black voters. Instead, the court noted that evidence pointed to political motivations behind the map’s design, not racial ones.
“Though not fatal to their claim…Williams Plaintiffs have presented no direct evidence that the General Assembly enacted S.B. 249 to discriminate against black North Carolinians,” the panel wrote. “Instead, the direct evidence shows that the 2025 redistricting was motivated by partisan purposes.”
Senate Bill 249 adjusted two districts in eastern North Carolina—Districts 1 and 3—by swapping several counties between the two. The rest of the state’s congressional districts remained the same. The court said these changes were not enough to meet the high legal standard needed to block a duly passed law before a full trial could be held.
BREAKING – MASSIVE VICTORY: Supreme Court UPHOLDS Texas’ 2026 Congressional redistricting map in a 6-3 ruling
HUGE WIN.
This means +5 RED SEATS! pic.twitter.com/NBOK8sxIva
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) December 4, 2025
This is the latest turn in North Carolina’s long-running redistricting battles. After the 2020 census, the state legislature drew new maps in 2023, prompting legal challenges from groups that claimed the lines were unfair to minority voters. Those maps were the subject of a multi-week trial during the summer of 2024, but before the court issued a final decision, lawmakers revised the maps again, passing S.B. 249 and effectively making the 2023 maps obsolete.
Because of the changes, the court ruled that the original claims against the 2023 version of the congressional map were no longer valid. The plaintiffs were allowed to file new complaints focused on the 2025 map, but their attempt to stop it before a final trial did not succeed.
Republican leaders in the General Assembly said the ruling confirms their right to adjust district boundaries mid-decade, as long as they follow legal guidelines. Rep. Destin Hall, who chairs the House Redistricting Committee, and Senate President Pro Tempore Phil Berger both said the court’s decision reflects that the legislature followed the Constitution.
Civil rights groups, however, remain concerned. The NAACP and Common Cause argue the map is part of a broader pattern of weakening minority voting power and protecting Republican control in a state that remains politically competitive. They said shifting Black voters from one district to another may reduce their ability to influence elections.
SCOTUS siding with Texas on redistricting may very well be what saved the future of humanity.
This was a big one. Celebrate!pic.twitter.com/4zP6XYXNXZ
— Paul A. Szypula
(@Bubblebathgirl) December 5, 2025
Although the court did not decide the final outcome of the legal challenges, the rejection of the preliminary injunction means that the 2025 map will be used in the upcoming 2026 elections. The court made it clear that the case is not over and that the plaintiffs may still pursue their legal claims during a full trial.
For now, though, the ruling gives candidates and voters certainty as the next election cycle approaches. Filing deadlines are coming soon, and having clear district lines in place will help campaigns plan ahead. Still, the broader debate over redistricting in North Carolina is far from settled, and more legal battles could be on the horizon.














BREAKING – MASSIVE VICTORY: Supreme Court UPHOLDS Texas’ 2026 Congressional redistricting map in a 6-3 ruling
(@Bubblebathgirl)
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