While primary voters in Indiana and Ohio cast their ballots today, May 5, 2026, a seismic shift in the American electoral landscape is unfolding further south. As the 2026 midterm cycle officially moves into high gear, Alabama and Tennessee have initiated high-stakes, mid-decade redistricting battles that could fundamentally alter the balance of power in Washington.
At The Modern Memo, we analyze the “GOP Sweep” strategy in the South, the Supreme Court’s role in reshaping the Voting Rights Act, and why today’s primary results in the Midwest are only half the story for the battle for Congress.
The Southern Special Sessions: Chasing the 7-0 and 9-0 Sweeps
Following recent Supreme Court action—specifically the Louisiana v. Callais ruling—Republican governors in Alabama and Tennessee have summoned lawmakers back to their respective capitals to redraw congressional lines.
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Alabama’s 7-0 Ambition: Governor Kay Ivey called a special session starting yesterday, Monday, May 4. The goal? To replace a court-ordered map that created a second majority-Black district with a new GOP-drawn map. Republican leaders aim to transform the current delegation—which includes two Democrats—into a 7-0 Republican sweep.
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Tennessee’s Memphis Maneuver: Governor Bill Lee has convened a special session beginning today, Tuesday, May 5. The objective is to break up the state’s lone remaining Democratic-held seat in Memphis. If successful, Tennessee would likely send a 9-0 Republican delegation to D.C.
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The “Louisiana” Precedent: These moves follow a SCOTUS decision striking down a majority-Black district in Louisiana for relying “too heavily on race,” a ruling that has effectively green-lit a “Southern Surge” of Republican redistricting efforts.
Primary Day: Indiana and Ohio Voters Speak
As Southern legislatures move lines on paper, Midwestern voters are moving into the booths. Today’s primaries in Indiana and Ohio serve as the first major test of the GOP’s “America First” momentum in the 2026 cycle.
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Indiana Spotlight: Voters are selecting nominees for all nine U.S. House seats. Key races include District 5, where Victoria Spartz faces a crowded primary field, and District 7, where Destiny Wells and George Hornedo are vying for the Democratic nomination to challenge the status quo.
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Ohio’s Battleground: In Ohio, the primary is seen as a bellwether for the President’s influence over the party. High-profile contests for state legislative seats and congressional nods are being scrutinized as indicators of whether the “Red Wave” predicted for November is already cresting.
The National Implications: A 20-Seat Swing?
The timing of these events is not coincidental. With the 2026 midterms looming, the combination of mid-decade redistricting and primary outcomes could hand Republicans a massive advantage.
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Trump’s Call to Action: On Sunday, the President urged state legislatures to follow the Supreme Court’s lead, suggesting that mid-decade redistricting could net the GOP an additional 20 House seats.
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The Democratic Defense: National Democrats and civil rights groups have slammed the special sessions as “blatant power grabs” designed to disenfranchise minority voters. They are expected to seek immediate judicial intervention to stay any new maps before the general election.
Final Word
The simultaneous action in the State Houses of the South and the polling places of the Midwest represents a pincer movement on the current electoral map. When you look past the noise of “voter suppression” rhetoric and focus on the data—the Supreme Court’s pivot on race-based maps and the strategic timing of the special sessions—you gain a clearer picture of a party that is not waiting for November to win.
Quality information replaces the narrative of “bureaucratic routine” with the reality of a surgical, aggressive restructuring of American political power. It allows you to see that while voters in Ohio and Indiana are making their voices heard today, the maps being drawn in Alabama and Tennessee may determine whose voices carry the most weight in the next Congress.
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