Doggett to retire after Supreme Court hands GOP redistricting win
Rep. lloyd Doggett, a longtime Texas congressman serving as 1995, has announced his retirement after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld Texas GOP-led redistricting plans that altered his district’s boundaries. Doggett had initially planned to retire unless the courts struck down the new maps, but when a federal court blocked them, he considered reversing his decision. However, the supreme Court ruling finalizing the redistricting led him to confirm that he will not seek reelection in 2026.Doggett expressed his commitment to serving out his final term with urgency and said he plans to continue contributing to his community after leaving public office.
Lloyd Doggett announces retirement after Supreme Court hands Texas GOP redistricting win
Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-TX) on Friday revealed that he will forgo a bid for reelection, putting to rest questions about his future that were triggered after Texas’s political maps were redrawn this year.
“I will continue working with the same urgency and determination as if next year were my last, which in public office it will be,” Doggett said in a press release announcing his retirement. “After that, I will seek new ways to join my neighbors in making a difference in the only town I have ever called home.”
— Lloyd Doggett (@RepLloydDoggett) December 5, 2025
Doggett has served in Congress since 1995. But the longtime Texas lawmaker suggested he would retire after state Republicans led redistricting efforts to boost the GOP’s power in the House.
Gov. Greg Abbott (R-TX) signed the new maps into law in September, a move that changed the boundaries of Doggett’s district and led him to announce that his current term would be his last unless courts ruled the new map unlawful.
When a federal court blocked the maps in November, Doggett’s political future appeared to have been resurrected.
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“To borrow from Mark Twain, the reports of my death, politically, are greatly exaggerated,” the Democrat said, suggesting he’d pull his retirement plans.
But that changed when Texas appealed the decision to the Supreme Court, which issued a ruling this week upholding the state’s redistricting plans for use in the 2026 elections.
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