2026-05-13 10:05:31 UTC / 路透社
作者:约瑟夫·阿克斯与蒂姆·里德
2026年5月13日 美国东部时间上午10:05 更新于1小时前
2025年10月18日,美国华盛顿特区国会山,美国政府持续停摆数周,国会大厦矗立于此。路透社/亚伦·施瓦茨/资料图 购买授权链接,将在新标签页打开
- 11月中期选举将决定国会控制权归属
- 共和党或通过重划选区拿下多达12个民主党掌控的众议院席位
- 但总统所在政党通常会在中期选举中丢失席位
- 特朗普公众支持率低迷可能拖累共和党
5月13日(路透社)——共和党赢得了2026年的重大重划选区之战,但对于唐纳德·特朗普总统所在政党而言,这或许不足以让他们在11月的中期选举中保住美国众议院的多数席位。
通过重划选举区边界,共和党有望拿下当前由民主党掌控的多达12个众议院席位。但独立分析师表示,特朗普低迷的公众支持率,以及总统所在政党通常会在中期选举中丢失席位的历史趋势,可能抵消这一优势。
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核心结论:许多分析师仍认为民主党在众议院选举中占据上风,目前共和党仅以微弱优势掌控众议院。
「核心政治格局未变」
“毋庸置疑,共和党在众议院的竞选机会有所增加,”为选举预测机构《内部选举》分析众议院竞选情况的雅各布·鲁巴金说道,“但核心政治格局并未发生任何改变。”
特朗普去年启动的共和党重划选区行动,在最近几周迎来助力:美国最高法院和弗吉尼亚州最高法院的两项司法裁决,为争取有利于特朗普所在政党候选人的众议院选区创造了新机会。
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共和党在2024年美国选举中仅以3个席位的优势,拿下了435个席位的众议院多数席位。但如今他们已在6个州重新划分了14个对其有利的选区,州共和党议员还在路易斯安那州、阿拉巴马州和南卡罗来纳州争取再调整3至4个选区。而根据一项法院裁决,民主党已在加利福尼亚州拿下5个席位,并在犹他州新增了一个民主党选区。
每个众议院席位都代表一场独立竞选。但弗吉尼亚大学政治中心分析师凯尔·康迪克表示,结合各州重新划分的选举地图,民主党可能需要在众议院选举的全国普选中领先3至4个百分点,才能拿下众议院多数席位,具体取决于这三个南方州的重划选区结果。
目前多数已公布的民意调查显示,民主党至少在当下已经领先这一幅度。
周一结束的路透社/益普索民调显示,如果今天举行选举,41%的登记选民表示会投票给所在选区的民主党候选人,而35%的选民表示会投票给共和党候选人。
这6个百分点的“通用选票”差距,看起来足以让民主党在11月抵消共和党通过重划选区获得的优势。
在特朗普首任总统任期两年后的2018年中期选举中,民主党凭借民众对特朗普执政表现的不满浪潮,拿下了41个众议院席位,轻松赢得多数控制权。
在民主党人乔·拜登总统任期两年后的2022年中期选举中,由于保守派占多数的最高法院作出了推翻堕胎权的裁决,共和党仅在众议院拿下9个席位。
“当前民主党在通用选票中的领先优势,或许足以拿下众议院——但如果出现2022年那样的情况,结果就更难预料了,”康迪克说道。
目前共和党正面临诸多逆风因素,包括特朗普发动的不受欢迎的伊朗战争,以及随之而来的通胀和能源成本上涨。最新公布的路透社/益普索民调显示,仅有36%的美国人认可特朗普的执政表现,63%的人表示不认可。
「制胜信息」
共和党驳斥了民主党有望拿下众议院的说法。
“众议院共和党人正处于攻势,因为我们拥有强劲的候选人阵容、历史性的筹款优势、制胜的竞选信息,以及有利的选区地图,能够打破历史规律,扩大多数席位优势,”共和党全国众议院竞选团队发言人迈克·马里内拉说道。
就在两周前,民主党人还自信地认为,他们已经基本挫败了特朗普推动共和党州绘制更有利于本党国会选区地图的企图。加利福尼亚州和弗吉尼亚州的选民批准了民主党支持的新地图,回应了得克萨斯州、北卡罗来纳州和密苏里州等共和党领导州的行动。
随后佛罗里达州加入战局,州议会共和党人于4月29日批准了一份旨在翻转4个民主党掌控席位的选区地图。同一天,美国最高法院的投票权裁决为各州取消历史上有利于民主党占多数的黑人选区打开了大门。南方州的共和党议员迅速抓住了这一机会。
5月8日,弗吉尼亚州最高法院推翻了一份由民主党绘制并经选民批准的新地图,该地图原本旨在拿下该州4个共和党掌控的众议院席位。
弗吉尼亚州民主党人已向美国最高法院提出紧急请求,要求推翻弗吉尼亚州法院的裁决。佛罗里达州、田纳西州、路易斯安那州及其他地区仍有诉讼在进行,旨在阻止共和党人的重划选区行动。
众议院民主党领袖哈基姆·杰弗里斯周一在致同僚的一封信中誓言,民主党仍将在11月赢得选举,随后宣布将在2028年选举前发起“大规模重划选区反攻行动”。
一些民主党人士表示,不利的法院裁决可能会动员其选民在11月投票。
「明显的不满情绪」
弗吉尼亚州民主党州众议员罗德尼·威尔利特曾在上个月的公投中,协助推动经选民通过的现已无效的选举地图获得通过。他表示,自州最高法院作出裁决以来,他不断收到愤怒选民的短信、电话和Facebook消息。
“民众极度失望,不满情绪明显,”威尔利特在与本县民主党人会面时说道,“我今晚要传达的信息是,告诉人们将这份精力转化为选票,选举我们知道能更好履职的官员。”
美国众议员莎丽丝·戴维斯是堪萨斯州民主党人,即便2022年共和党将其所在选区重新划分为更有利于共和党的格局,她仍保住了席位。她表示,带有政治目的的重划选区有助于调动支持者的积极性。
戴维斯告诉路透社,民主党应向选民辩称,特朗普和他的共和党同僚正试图“操纵体制以维持政治权力”。
约瑟夫·阿克斯在纽约、蒂姆·里德在华盛顿报道;保罗·托马施与威尔·邓汉姆编辑
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Why Republicans won the redistricting war but may still lose the US House
2026-05-13 10:05:31 UTC / Reuters
By Joseph Ax and Tim Reid
May 13, 2026 10:05 AM UTC Updated 1 hour ago
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- Control of Congress at stake in November midterm elections
- Republicans may gain up to 12 House seat via redistricting
- But a president’s party typically loses seats in midterms
- Trump’s low public approval ratings could hurt Republicans
May 13 (Reuters) – Republicans have won the Great Redistricting War of 2026, but that may not be enough for President Donald Trump’s party to maintain its hold on the U.S. House of Representatives in November’s midterm elections.
Republicans are positioned to gain up to a dozen House seats currently held by Democrats through redistricting, the redrawing of the boundaries of electoral districts. But that advantage may be offset by Trump’s low public approval ratings and the historical trend that a president’s party typically loses seats in midterms, according to independent analysts.
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The upshot: Many analysts still believe Democrats have the upper hand in the elections for the House, where Republicans currently hold a slim majority.
‘THE UNDERLYING POLITICS’
“It is incontrovertible that Republican chances in the House have increased,” said Jacob Rubashkin, who analyzes House races for the electoral forecaster Inside Elections. “But none of the underlying politics has changed.”
Republican redistricting efforts, set in motion by Trump last year, were given a boost in recent weeks, after a pair of judicial decisions – one from the U.S. Supreme Court and another from Virginia’s top court – created new opportunities to secure House districts favorable to candidates from Trump’s party.
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Republicans won a House majority in the 2024 U.S. elections by only three seats in the 435-seat chamber. But they now have reshaped 14 districts across six states in their favor, and Republican state legislators are pursuing three or four more in Louisiana, Alabama and South Carolina. Democrats have managed to gain five seats in California, as well as a new Democratic district in Utah, thanks to a court ruling.
Each House seat represents an individual contest. But with the various redrawn state electoral maps, Democrats likely must win the national popular vote in House races by 3 to 4 percentage points to capture a majority in the chamber, depending on how redistricting plays out in those three Southern states, according to Kyle Kondik, an analyst at the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics.
Most published opinion polls show Democrats exceeding that margin, at least as of right now.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll that closed on Monday showed 41% of registered voters said they would vote for the Democratic candidate in their House district if the election were held today, compared to 35% who said they would vote Republican.
That gap of 6 percentage points on the “generic ballot” would appear to be enough in November to overcome the advantage that Republican redistricting has built.
In the 2018 midterm elections – two years into Trump’s first term as president – Democrats rode a wave of dissatisfaction with his job performance to gain 41 House seats, comfortably winning a majority.
In the 2022 midterms – two years into Democrat Joe Biden’s presidency – Republicans managed only a nine-seat gain in the House in the aftermath of a ruling by the conservative-majority Supreme Court rolling back abortion rights.
“The current Democratic lead in the generic ballot, that would probably do it – but if they have a situation like 2022, it’s more of a tossup,” Kondik said.
For now, Republicans are facing headwinds, including the unpopular Iran war that Trump launched and the attendant rise in inflation and energy costs. Only 36% of Americans approve of Trump’s job performance, compared with 63% who disapprove, according to the latest Reuters/Ipsos poll published.
‘A WINNING MESSAGE’
Republicans dismissed the idea that Democrats are favored to win the House.
“House Republicans are on offense because we have the strong candidates, an historic fundraising advantage, a winning message and favorable map to defy history and grow the majority,” said Mike Marinella, a spokesperson for the Republican national House campaign arm.
Just two weeks ago, Democrats seemed confident that they had largely blunted Trump’s push for Republican states to draw more favorable congressional voting maps. Voters in California and Virginia had approved new Democratic-backed maps, answering Republican-led states such as Texas, North Carolina and Missouri.
Then Florida joined the mix, with statehouse Republicans approving a map on April 29 aimed at flipping four Democratic seats. On the same day, the U.S. Supreme Court’s voting rights decision opened the door for states to eliminate majority-Black districts that historically favor Democrats. Republican lawmakers in Southern states rushed to take advantage.
The Virginia Supreme Court on May 8 threw out a new map drawn by Democrats and approved by voters that had targeted four Republican-held House seats in the state.
Virginia Democrats have filed an emergency request to the U.S. Supreme Court to overrule the Virginia court’s decision. Lawsuits are pending in Florida, Tennessee, Louisiana and elsewhere seeking to block Republican efforts.
Hakeem Jeffries, the House Democratic leader, vowed on Monday in a letter to colleagues that his party would still win in November before launching a “massive redistricting counteroffensive” ahead of the 2028 elections.
Some Democrats said the adverse court rulings could mobilize their voters to turn out in November.
‘PALPABLE FRUSTRATION’
Rodney Willett, a Democratic state delegate in Virginia who played a central role in getting the now-invalidated electoral map passed by voters in a referendum last month, said he has been receiving constant texts, phone calls and Facebook messages from angry constituents since the state Supreme Court’s ruling.
“There has been huge disappointment and palpable frustration,” Willett said before meeting with Democrats in his county. “My message this evening will be to tell people to channel that energy and elect folks we know can do a better job.”
U.S. Representative Sharice Davids, a Kansas Democrat who has kept her seat even after Republicans redrew her district in 2022 to be more Republican-friendly, said that politically motivated redistricting helped turn out supporters.
Davids told Reuters that Democrats should argue to voters that Trump and his fellow Republicans are trying to “rig the system to maintain political power.”
Reporting by Joseph Ax in New York and Tim Reid in Washington; Editing by Paul Thomasch and Will Dunham
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