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LaMalfa

Prop 50 Redistricting Battle Puts Doug LaMalfa and California’s First Congressional District in the Spotlight

Inside a crowded banquet hall in northern California in early August, a rare event unfolded: Rep. Doug LaMalfa appeared at his first Chico town hall in eight years. The Republican, a rice farmer and seven-term member of Congress, found himself confronting a room full of constituents angry over immigration raids, tariffs, Medicaid and Medicare cuts, and the impending closure of rural hospitals.

As he spoke about “waste and fraud” in government programs, shouts grew louder. One person called for his resignation. Another yelled, “No fascism in America.” The tense scene reflected not only local frustrations but also the national stakes hanging over California’s First Congressional District.

Days later, Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled a plan to put Proposition 50 before voters in a November special election. The proposal would redraw California’s congressional map to add five Democratic seats to the U.S. House. For LaMalfa, who has reliably won reelection since 2013, Prop 50 could reshape his district and potentially end his tenure.

Story Highlights

  • Proposition 50: November special election to redraw California’s congressional map and create five Democratic seats.

  • Doug LaMalfa at Risk: Republican representative of California’s First Congressional District could lose his seat under the new map.

  • Town Hall Uproar: Constituents voice anger over immigration raids, tariffs, health care cuts, and rural hospital closures.

  • National Impact: Prop 50 seen as a key battle in the fight for control of the U.S. House.

  • Redistricting Debate: Democrats say Prop 50 counters Texas gerrymandering; Republicans call it unfair mid-decade redistricting.

Rural District Under Strain

California’s First Congressional District stretches from the almond and rice fields of the Sacramento Valley to the fire-scarred Sierra Nevada and Cascade foothills. Once a Democratic stronghold, it has voted Republican since the 1980s. Former President Donald Trump carried the district in 2016 and 2024 with 61% of the vote.

Butte County, where LaMalfa lives, straddles two political cultures. Chico, a university town, leans liberal, while surrounding agricultural areas are solidly conservative. Wildfires have deepened local crises: the 2018 Camp Fire destroyed Paradise, the 2020 North Complex Fire wiped out Berry Creek, and last year’s Park Fire ranked among the largest in state history.

A High-Stakes Redistricting Battle

Democrats and Republicans are scrambling to mobilize before the November vote on Prop 50. Audrey Denney, a Democrat who came within 9.5% of unseating LaMalfa in 2018, said she will run again if the proposition passes.

“I love the new district,” Denney said. “It combines the two college towns on each end, Santa Rosa and Chico. Both have been historically devastated by wildfires, both surrounded by agriculture.”

She argued Prop 50 is necessary “in this moment of time that we’re living in, with the scope and the scale of the threat that we’re up against.”

Republicans frame Prop 50 as an existential threat.

“We already only have nine seats throughout the entire state of California on the Republican side and we could go down to four seats if 50 passes,” said Teri DuBose, chair of the Butte County Republican Party and a LaMalfa staffer. “The voters should be picking their representatives, not the representatives picking their constituents.”

LaMalfa’s Record and Response

LaMalfa has represented California’s First Congressional District since 2013. In a recent interview with the Chico Enterprise-Record, he cited his staff’s work helping constituents with Social Security, Medicaid and Veterans Affairs as his proudest accomplishments.

“It’s defending these folks and giving them a level of hope that somebody is actually listening to them,” he said.

Critics argue he mirrors Trump “line by line” on policy. Denney accused him of introducing “anti-LGBTQ, anti-public health” legislation that “harms our communities.”

LaMalfa did not agree to a new interview, but his communications director Paige Boogaard issued a statement:

“Congressman LaMalfa purposefully chose highly contentious areas of his district so that they feel heard. Their reactions were completely expected,” she said. “Raucous town halls in Chico do not change the fact that District 1 and Northern California remain overwhelmingly conservative and overwhelmingly supportive of both Congressman LaMalfa’s and the President’s policies.”

Health Care and Rural Concerns

The district’s rural identity shapes its politics. Water rights, wildfires, housing and homelessness are dominant issues. Glenn Medical Center will soon close its emergency room, leaving Glenn County without a hospital after the federal government revoked its “critical access” designation. LaMalfa’s office says he continues to work on rural health care.

The National Stakes

The special election could cost up to $282 million. Under the proposed map, Butte County would merge with counties farther west and south, including Sonoma. Democrats nationwide see Prop 50 as a path to retake the House and block Trump’s agenda.

Bob Mulholland, a veteran Democratic strategist in Butte County, said: “Governor Newsom doing Prop 50 has got Democrats all across America saying to themselves: ‘Hey, we got a chance to retake the House to defeat Trump.’”

Republican activists counter that Prop 50 is a costly power grab. DuBose noted frustration that the state is spending heavily on the special election while other voter-approved measures remain underfunded.

Grassroots Mobilization on Both Sides

Local chapters of both parties are racing to rally voters. In Denney’s Chico home, thousands of pro-Prop 50 flyers sit ready for distribution. South in Yuba County, Republican chair Johanna Lassaga has purchased 10,000 yard signs to oppose the measure.

Even in the farmlands of Glenn County, Lee McCorkle, the local Republican chair, has been posting signs. “Doug, he’s a conservative guy, he’s a rice farmer, he spends a lot of time to be a congressman,” McCorkle said. “It’s a heck of a job. I wouldn’t want it.”

Denney, who chairs the Democratic Action Club of Chico, has been traveling across the district to speak with voters. “Even up to a month ago, I had zero belief that anything would ever change,” she said. “It’s gonna have a different ending this time.”

Whether Prop 50 passes or fails, California’s First Congressional District has become a frontline in the fight over redistricting, representation, and the balance of power in the U.S. House.

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