Skip to main content

LIVE RESULTS: Virginia’s redistricting referendum

Follow WTOP’s team coverage of the 2026 Virginia redistricting referendum online, on air at 103.5 FM or on the WTOP News app.

Voters have voted ‘yes’ on proposed amendment to Virginia’s constitution that clears a path for a Democratic-led redistricting effort, aimed at gaining the party seats in the U.S. House amid a nationwide gerrymandering showdown.

The proposed amendment to the state constitution authorizes the General Assembly to move forward with a plan spearheaded by Virginia Democrats.

Outside of the special election, Republicans have challenged the redistricting effort’s legality. The Virginia State Supreme Court is expected to hear arguments after the results are in.

Polls opened at 6 a.m. and closed at 7 p.m. for in-person voting.

See live results as they come in.

How Voodoo overcame suppression and became a democratic force in the West African nation of Benin

OUIDAH, Benin (AP) — Democracy came to the cradle of Voodoo religion in 1991, when Benin’s military dictator of many years surprisingly lost an election that he had organized. Mathieu Kérékou had amassed power partly by banning the practice of so-called sorcerers, whose authority he deemed subversive to his own. Voodooists would have the last laugh. The opposition figure who defeated Kérékou, Nicéphore Soglo, rehabilitated Voodoo, or Vodún as it is known in Benin, as part of national heritage and emphasized the kind of tolerance that Kérékou would try to emulate when he successfully sought reelection in 1996. Two decades and three presidents later, this West African nation is a bastion of democracy in a region dubbed “the coup belt” for the trend since 2020 of military takeovers. President Romuald Wadagni was inaugurated on May 24 to replace Patrice Talon, who stepped down after serving two terms.
Read Next Story