The left is clutching their pearls again, this time over the Texas redistricting map — and former Congresswoman Mayra Flores is not having it.
You remember Flores, right? The millennial Republican who flipped a border district red in a special election, sending shockwaves through the DNC’s carefully crafted “Latinos belong to us” narrative. Yeah, her. And now she’s calling out the latest round of left-wing outrage for what it is: a political tantrum dressed up as a civil rights crusade.
Flores, who immigrated legally from cartel-infested Tamaulipas, Mexico, and went on to serve in Congress, isn’t buying the Democrats’ hand-wringing over so-called voter suppression. Why? Because the facts don’t lie — and they’re not on the left’s side this time. According to Flores, “Four of the five new districts are actually Hispanic-majority districts.” Yes, you read that right. Hispanic-majority. The very thing Democrats claimed they wanted… until those same Hispanics started voting Republican.
And here’s the kicker: these aren’t hypothetical voters. These are conservative, God-fearing, hard-working, law-abiding citizens who don’t like open borders, inflation, and woke politics being shoved down their throats. And they’re voting accordingly. In 2024, 12 of 14 Texas border counties went for Trump — including one that hadn’t gone red since the days of William Howard Taft. That’s not a fluke. That’s a tidal shift.
Mexican Immigrant-Turned-Congresswoman Mayra Flores Blasts Democrat Claims Texas Redistricting Hurts Hispanic Vote: “Four of the five new districts are actually Hispanic-majority districts”#DemocratsArePathologicalLiars https://t.co/uA5nn8qU7n #FoxNews pic.twitter.com/Ng2g6Xz0Bw
— The MAGA Mall (@MallMaga) August 26, 2025
But the left? Oh no. They can’t handle it. Suddenly, maps that produce Hispanic-majority districts are “racist” or “unfair” — because the voters aren’t voting the way Democrats expect them to. Flores nails it: “They’re upset because these Hispanics – they’re conservative Hispanics – have voted for President Trump.” Ding, ding, ding.
What the Democrats are really afraid of isn’t disenfranchisement — it’s disobedience. Their entire political strategy rests on the assumption that minority groups will vote blue no matter what. But when that assumption starts to crumble, so does their grip on power. Flores is right to point out that Hispanic and Latino voters are not a monolith. Just ask Florida, where Cuban-Americans and other Latino groups helped sweep Republicans into office. Or look at California and New York — states hemorrhaging residents to red states like Texas and Florida.
CHRIS’ COURT: Democratic strategist Lee Neves and former Congresswoman Mayra Flores debate whether Congresswoman Delia Ramirez betrayed the U.S. when she said, “I’m a proud Guatemalan before I’m an American.” @CSalcedoShow pic.twitter.com/Hr7j54pEqv
— NEWSMAX (@NEWSMAX) August 26, 2025
And while we’re talking about fairness, let’s zoom out. In New England, there isn’t a single Republican in Congress — not because there aren’t conservative voters there, but because the district lines are so gerrymandered that GOP candidates don’t stand a chance. Maryland, anyone? That “broken-winged pterodactyl” district a judge had to smack down? Where were the New York Times editorials then?
Meanwhile, back in Texas, the left is throwing a fit because Rep. Greg Casar — a millennial Squad member — may have to face an actual political challenge. Imagine that. Voters are choosing between two candidates. What a concept. And yet somehow, it’s being portrayed as a conspiracy to “silence” voters. Never mind that Casar’s new district still includes heavily liberal Austin. It’s just not the cakewalk he’s used to, so naturally, it must be “voter suppression.”
Flores is absolutely right: redistricting should reflect the current makeup of the state — politically and ethnically. And in Texas, that means a growing number of conservative Hispanics. If Democrats don’t like that reality, maybe they should try offering policies that appeal to those voters instead of trying to redraw them out of relevance.
This isn’t about maps. It’s about momentum. And Flores sees the writing on the wall — 2026 is coming. And if current trends hold, a lot more congressional seats might be flipped red by the very voters Democrats once took for granted.


