March 26, 2026
By Mennatalla Ibrahim
Addition makes the bill’s future uncertain in Senate
The Maryland House of Delegates on Thursday rejected a Republican-led effort to remove redistricting language from an elections bill, following a sharp partisan debate that raised new doubts about the measure’s future in the Senate.
In a 39-94 vote, delegates defeated an amendment from House Minority Leader Jason Buckel that would have stripped language tying the bill to congressional redistricting standards.
The legislation, Senate Bill 5, originally focused on requiring special elections in most cases to fill vacancies in the General Assembly. But a House committee on Tuesday added an amendment from Del. Kris Fair, a Frederick County Democrat, that would allow the General Assembly to authorize the Supreme Court of Maryland to review congressional district maps first — a change House Republicans and some legal experts insist waters down the bill’s purpose.
Under current law, vacancies in the General Assembly are filled by the governor from a list provided by the departing lawmaker’s political party.
“Amending a bill on special elections to include redistricting not only likely kills the bill, but it is probably in violation of the single-subject rule,” Montgomery County Sen. Cheryl Kagan told The Baltimore Sun in a Wednesday phone interview, referring to a Maryland state rule that indicates every legislative act passed by the General Assembly must embrace only one topic that clearly reflects its title. Kagan, the bill’s sponsor, added that she was not given advance notice of the amendment.
Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute who previously served on a Maryland redistricting commission, described the move as more strategic than policy-driven.
“The word for me is tactical,” Olson said of House Democrats. “That rather screams tactics rather than conviction.”
Clash over scope and intent
Republicans said Thursday that Fair’s amendment fundamentally altered the bill and risked dooming a bipartisan-supported measure.
“That bill has nothing to do with congressional districts or congressional redistricting or legal standards. Nothing, absolutely nothing,” Buckel said.
Buckel’s amendment sought to impose stricter standards on congressional redistricting, including requirements for compactness, respect for political boundaries and limits on the use of partisan data.
Democrats countered, maintaining that the added language is a necessary clarification following a 2022 court ruling that raised questions about how Maryland’s constitution defines “legislative districts.” A revised 2022 map gave Democrats a 7-1 advantage and was not reviewed by a court. However, a subsequent decision by the Supreme Court of Maryland in a case involving state legislative maps reached a different conclusion about how constitutional standards apply.
“Our job is to make sure that when something is ambiguous, we come back and clarify it,” Fair said.