Ghazala Hashmi/ Suhas Subramanyam / File Photo
Virginia Democrats on May 8 criticized the Supreme Court of Virginia’s decision invalidating the results of the state’s redistricting referendum, calling the ruling a setback for voting rights and democratic representation.
Lieutenant Governor Ghazala Hashmi condemned the court’s 4-3 ruling, arguing that it overturned the will of Virginia voters who had backed the referendum.
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In a statement, Hashmi said millions of Virginians participated in the democratic process “in good faith” and warned that the decision came at a time when voting rights were under pressure nationally.
“At a moment when voting rights are under sustained attack across the country, the Supreme Court’s decision sends a deeply troubling message,” Hashmi said. “Across the nation, we are witnessing a systematic dismantling of electoral integrity, all for the sake of partisan advantage.”
Hashmi linked the ruling to broader national debates over voting access and congressional redistricting, criticizing what she described as partisan efforts to redraw maps without voter input.
“Now, in a 4-3 decision, the Supreme Court of Virginia has told voters in the Commonwealth that their voices can simply be discarded,” she said. “These actions disenfranchise voters and weaken the very principles of our country.”
She also said Virginia “must remain committed to an electoral system that puts people before politics” and protects the right of citizens to participate fully in the democratic process.
Rep. Suhas Subramanyam, who represents Virginia’s 10th Congressional District, also criticized the ruling in a statement released from Washington.
“Millions of Virginians and two General Assemblies made their voice heard and voted for redistricting in Virginia to even the playing field this November,” Subramanyam said. “But a partisan Virginia Supreme Court decided it knew better and, in a deeply flawed decision with tortured logic, decided to overturn the direct voice of millions of Virginians.”
He contrasted the ruling with Republican-led redistricting efforts in other states and accused conservative judges of attempting to “rig the system to evade accountability.”
“Disenfranchised Virginians and Americans will remember this when they make their voice heard this November,” he said.
The reactions came after the Supreme Court of Virginia, in a 4-3 ruling issued on May 8, invalidated the results of the redistricting referendum approved by voters earlier this year.
The referendum would have allowed Virginia Democrats to redraw congressional districts ahead of the 2026 midterm elections by temporarily shifting redistricting authority back to the Virginia General Assembly. Proposed maps were projected to favor Democrats in 10 of Virginia’s 11 congressional districts.
The court ruled that lawmakers failed to follow constitutional procedures because the amendment process moved forward after early voting had already begun during the 2025 election cycle, leaving the current congressional map in place for the 2026 elections.
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