Loudoun County Republican Committee, a local political organization in Virginia, posted a series of tweets on April 4, 2026, discussing the state’s congressional representation and districting. The posts highlighted the current political split among Virginia’s congressional delegation and commented on the distribution of voters across districts.
In its first tweet from the thread, Loudoun County Republican Committee stated: “Virginia sends 11 people to Congress. One per district. Right now it’s 6 Democrats, 5 Republicans. A split that roughly mirrors how Virginians actually vote.” (April 4, 2026).
The committee continued by drawing attention to the visual layout of Virginia’s congressional map: “Look at this map. See that big red border? That’s a massive chunk of Virginia — millions of people, dozens of communities. Urban. Suburban. Rural. All of them supposedly represented equally.” (April 4, 2026).
A subsequent tweet focused on two specific areas within the state: “Now find the two small blue circles. One in Fairfax County. One near Richmond. Tiny. Specific. Carefully chosen. Those two circles are the whole game.” (April 4, 2026).
Virginia’s current congressional district map was adopted following redistricting efforts after the 2020 Census, which aimed to ensure equal population distribution among districts and compliance with federal law.
