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Federal appeals court upholds decision allowing Tarrant County鈥檚 redrawn map to go into effect

People look at a Tarrant County map during a rally with Beto O'Rourke on Aug. 9, 2025 at Ridglea Theatre in Fort Worth.
Yfat Yossifor
/
四虎影院
People look at a Tarrant County map during a rally with Beto O'Rourke on Aug. 9, 2025 at Ridglea Theatre in Fort Worth.

A group of Tarrant County residents who sued over the county鈥檚 redistricting process did not prove the new map is racially discriminatory, a federal appeals court ruled Wednesday.

Tarrant County鈥檚 Republican commissioners pushed through an unusual mid-decade redistricting process earlier this year. They argued their plan was to grow their majority on the court, and race had nothing to do with it. Critics said the new map illegally diluted the power of Black and brown voters, packing them into a single precinct.

The county has been sued twice over the new map, and judges have declined to block the maps in both cases. The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld that decision in the first lawsuit, , in a ruling Wednesday.

The judges acknowledged that Black and Latino voters were disproportionately affected by redistricting, but that doesn't prove commissioners had racially discriminatory intent, they decided.

鈥淎n obvious explanation for the disparity exists: race and partisanship are highly correlated in Tarrant County, and districting decisions driven by partisanship will often have disparate racial effects,鈥 the ruling reads.

The judges also dismissed the argument that Republican County Judge Tim O鈥橦are鈥檚 remarks in an interview with NBC 5 about redistricting proved any racial intent.

鈥淭he policies of Democrats continue to fail Black people over and over and over, but many of them keep voting them in,鈥 O鈥橦are said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 time for people of all races to understand the Democrats are a lost party, they are a radical party, it鈥檚 time for them to get on board with us and we鈥檒l welcome them with open arms.鈥

That statement seems to be an expression of ordinary partisan politics, the court ruled.

Opponents of redistricting criticized the law firm the county hired to run the redistricting process, , for refusing to answer questions about its maps at public meetings.

It makes sense that a government entity trying out some likely-unpopular partisan gerrymandering would want to 鈥渁void an extensive, public process,鈥 the court wrote.

鈥淲hile that may not be consistent with the best practices of good government, it is hardly suggestive of racial motivation,鈥 the ruling reads.

The lawsuit also argued some voters would be disenfranchised by being forced to wait to vote in their next county commissioner race. Commissioners serve for four years, but their terms are staggered 鈥 meaning some people who would have voted for their commissioner in 2026 have to wait until 2028 under the new maps.

That鈥檚 a natural consequence of redistricting, the Fifth Circuit decided.

The ruling is "disappointing but not at all surprising," said Matt Angle with the Lone Star Project, a Texas Democratic group.

"Anybody with eyes that see knows that the intentionally discriminatory map forced upon voters by O鈥橦are rips neighborhoods apart and ruthlessly undermines the voting rights of Tarrant County citizens," Angle said in an emailed statement. "The job to uphold justice now turns to Tarrant County voters. Tim O鈥橦are clearly holds them in contempt and will be held accountable next fall."

O'Hare is up for reelection next year.

Mid-decade redistricting went from unusual to common this year. The state of Texas kicked off a nationwide gerrymandering war by to benefit Republicans, another effort .

This story has been updated with comment from Matt Angle.

Got a tip? Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org.

四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider today. Thank you.

Miranda Suarez is 四虎影院鈥檚 Tarrant County accountability reporter. Before coming to North Texas, she was the Lee Ester News Fellow at Wisconsin Public Radio, where she covered statewide news from the capital city of Madison. Miranda is originally from Massachusetts and started her public radio career at WBUR in Boston.