Legislation California State Assembly minority leader
James Gallagher, along with a few other Republican cosponsors, introduced a joint resolution to
split California into two states.
Counter-propositions Various attempts were made to put propositions on the
2026 general election ballot for amendments to the
state's constitution in response to Proposition 50. To put a proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot requires gathering signatures of voters, with the minimum number set at 8% of the number of valid votes cast in
the previous gubernatorial election (874,641 signatures). The signatures must be collected within 180 days, but turned in no later than 131 days before election day (June 25, 2026). • On October 22, 2025, the Secretary of State authorized Republican Assemblyman
Carl DeMaio to begin gathering signatures for a proposed proposition of a constitutional amendment to target state lawmakers who supported the proposition. Titled "Penalize Politicians Who Manipulate Their Own Districts Initiative," DeMaio's proposal would bar any state lawmaker who voted in favor of Proposition 50 from running for office for ten years. DeMaio's deadline to gather the 874,641 signatures needed to place the proposition on the ballot is April 20, 2026.
Litigation Pre-election Four California state legislators (state senators
Tony Strickland and
Suzette Martinez Valladares and assemblymembers
Tri Ta and
Kate Sanchez) filed a lawsuit with the
California Supreme Court asking the court to block the vote in the State Legislature on the ground that state law required a 30-day waiting period before voting on the bill. On August 20, the California Supreme Court rejected the motion by the four legislators, paving the way for a vote the following day. On August 25, after the bill became law, the same four legislators sued again in the state Supreme Court. In their emergency lawsuit, the legislators claim that the proposition is a violation of citizens' rights to have the
California redistricting commission draw congressional districts. The
California Republican Party announced that it was backing the plaintiffs, who were represented by a law firm founded by U.S. Assistant Attorney General
Harmeet Dhillon. The California Supreme Court also rejected the second lawsuit. On September 4, political advisor
Steve Hilton, a Republican candidate in the
2026 California gubernatorial election, filed a lawsuit in the
U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, asking them to stop Proposition 50, arguing that the proposition did not account for changes in the state's population since the 2020 Census and would hence violate the "
one-person, one vote". On September 25, Hilton asked for an injunction with the court, after Governor Newsom and Secretary of State
Shirley Weber failed to respond to the suit within 21 days, as typically required by federal law. An official within the office of Governor Newsom told the Fresno ABC affiliate
KFSN-TV that they did not respond because they were not
properly served. On October 3, Hilton's preliminary injunction was filed with the district court. On October 24, Judge
Kenly Kato denied the petition to
enjoin the proposition, stating that the lawsuit could continue after the election if the proposition passes. On September 5, U.S. Representative
Ronny Jackson (R-TX) sued both Newsom and Weber in the
U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, arguing that the legislation risked "diluting Plaintiff's legislative power and the voice of Texas voters". A petition for a temporary injunction was denied, and the case was dismissed on October 23 by Judge
Matthew Kacsmaryk for inability to demonstrate a cognizable injury. A second lawsuit filed by Jackson, which only differed from the prior suit with the addition of California U.S. Representative
Darrell Issa (R) as a co-plaintiff, was dismissed by Kacsmaryk on October 31 on the same grounds. On August 25, the day that the four Republican state legislators filed their second lawsuit, President Trump announced that he will ask the
United States Justice Department to sue in federal court to block Proposition 50. Newsom responded in a tweet, "BRING IT".
Post-election California Republican Party The day after Proposition 50 passed, the
California Republican Party, represented by
Harmeet Dhillon, filed a lawsuit to block implementation of the new map, alleging that it favored Hispanic voters, in violation of the U.S. Constitution's
Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Amendments. Eighteen individuals joined the California Republican Party as plaintiffs in the case including Assemblymember
David Tangipa,
Walnut city councilmember
Eric Ching, former
San Benito County supervisor Peter Hernandez, and
McFarland mayor Saul Ayon. On November 13 the
United States Department of Justice intervened as a plaintiff, with
United States Attorney General Pam Bondi characterizing Proposition 50 as "a brazen power grab that tramples on civil rights and mocks the democratic process". The lawsuit was heard by a three judge panel in the
United States District Court for the Central District of California. The members of the panel included
Josephine Staton, an
Obama appointee,
Wesley Hsu, a
Biden appointee, and
Kenneth K. Lee, a
Trump appointee. Deliberations began December 15 and on January 14, 2026, two of the three judges on the panel, Staton and Hsu, voted to uphold the passed map, and Lee dissenting. Lee based his decision on statements made by Paul Mitchell, a redistricting expert who drew up the maps, who said that
District #13 was drawn up with race being a predominant factor. Staton and Hsu called the focus on District #13 (out of
52 districts) a
strawman argument. Immediately after the ruling was announced, the California Republican Party announced that it will seek an emergency
injunction from the
Supreme Court of the United States to block implementation of the new maps. On February 4, the Supreme Court denied the appeal without comment or dissent.
Public Interest Legal Foundation On December 4, 2025, the Virginia-based conservative legal group called
Public Interest Legal Foundation filed a lawsuit in Federal Court seeking to block the implementation of Proposition 50. In their lawsuit, the group alleges that Proposition 50 violates the
15th Amendment to the United States Constitution as well as the
Voting Rights Act. The Public Interest Legal Foundation also filed an
amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in the case against Proposition 50 in which the California Republican Party was the plaintiff (see
subsection above). ==Election logistics==