Whoopi Goldberg used Wednesday’s episode of The View to call for a halt to redistricting efforts altogether, arguing that both political parties have taken the practice too far. Her comments came a day after Virginia voters approved a ballot measure that could significantly reshape the state’s congressional map and, in turn, influence the balance of power in the U.S. House.
Goldberg’s frustration centered on what she sees as a cycle of retaliation between Democrats and Republicans. As states redraw district lines to gain an advantage, the opposing party often responds with similar moves elsewhere. To her, the result is a system that feels less about voters choosing their representatives and more about politicians choosing their voters.
She pointed to the uncertainty it creates for candidates as well. People may decide to run for office, she said, only to find their district boundaries shifted or eliminated altogether.
That kind of instability, in her view, discourages participation and undermines trust in the process. Her message was straightforward: leave the maps alone and let elections play out without constant adjustments.
The broader conversation on the show reflected how widespread the issue has become. Redistricting battles are no longer confined to once-a-decade updates tied to the census. Instead, some states are revisiting maps mid-cycle, often after shifts in political power. Texas, California, North Carolina, and now Virginia have all been drawn into the back-and-forth, each move prompting another.
Goldberg questioned where it ends, noting how one state’s decision tends to trigger a response somewhere else. She suggested that neither party can convincingly claim the moral high ground when both are engaging in similar tactics. Her conclusion was that the system would work better if candidates succeeded or failed based on voter support, not on how district lines were drawn.
Co-host Sunny Hostin took a different angle, defending recent Democratic-backed efforts in Virginia as a response to earlier Republican actions in states like Texas.
She argued that Republicans set the tone by redrawing maps through legislative processes rather than public votes, and that Democrats are now responding in kind. Still, even she acknowledged that the escalation has continued to spread, with more states getting involved over time.
The Virginia measure at the center of the discussion gives the state’s Democratic-controlled legislature temporary authority over redistricting, replacing a nonpartisan commission through the 2030 election. If implemented as expected, it could shift the state’s congressional delegation from a narrow 6-5 Democratic edge to a much wider margin.
That potential shift matters beyond Virginia. With Republicans currently holding a slim majority in the House, even a handful of seats could influence control of the chamber after the next election.














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