For nearly two decades, Representative Steve Cohen sat comfortably in his deep-blue Memphis district, using it as a launchpad for some of the nastiest attacks on President Trump that any House Democrat could muster. That comfortable ride is over.

Cohen, 76, announced on May 15 that he is ending his bid for reelection. The reason is straightforward: Tennessee Republicans redrew the congressional map, and Cohen’s old safe haven no longer exists.

Tennessee had been one of the reddest states in the country with a single blue holdout, the Memphis-based 9th District. Republicans in the state legislature fixed that problem, and now Cohen is heading for the door.

Just the News laid out the core reason Cohen is bailing:

Cohen dropped his reelection bid after Tennessee GOP lawmakers passed a new congressional map following the Supreme Court’s Louisiana versus Callais decision. The ruling changed the legal terrain around Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and race-based congressional districts, opening the door for Republican-led states to revisit maps that had long protected Democratic seats under the old legal assumptions.

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Tennessee Republicans moved fast, and Cohen’s safe Memphis lane was the obvious target. The new lines put the state’s last Democratic congressional seat on Republican-friendly ground.

Once that happened, the longtime Democrat no longer had the old political cushion that made his general elections easy. He sued, complained, and then quit the race.

That is the political sequence FedUp readers need to see clearly: the protected seat changed, the Republican advantage became obvious, and Cohen chose not to test himself with the voters under the new lines.

The Washington Examiner confirmed the announcement and the timing:

Cohen said Friday that he is ending his bid for reelection to Congress. He made the announcement in a Capitol Hill speech after more than two decades in office, calling it one of the most difficult political decisions he had made.

That is a long run in Washington, and it was made possible by a district that had been extremely friendly to Democrats for years.

The reason for the sudden exit was the new Tennessee congressional map. Republicans passed new lines that changed Cohen’s district and took away the old setup he had counted on.

Cohen joined a lawsuit challenging the map and has floated the idea of revisiting the race only if litigation restores the old district. Unless a court gives him his old political home back, he is out.

That caveat matters only because Cohen himself left it on the table. The live story is still simple: without the old map, he is not running.

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The election math is brutal for Democrats.

Inside Elections showed how badly the new map hits Cohen’s party:

Tennessee’s House delegation had been 8-1 Republican, with Cohen serving as the lone Democrat from the state. Under the new map, every Tennessee congressional district is rated Solid Republican.

That puts the state on track for a potential 9-0 Republican delegation after the 2026 midterms and wipes out the one blue seat Democrats had been able to count on.

The new 9th District is especially rough for Democrats. Inside Elections calculated it as an R+15 seat and said it would have voted for President Trump by 21 points in 2024.

Cohen’s old district was a Democratic stronghold. The replacement is Trump country.

For a 76-year-old Democrat who spent years coasting in a safe seat, that is not a small adjustment. It is the end of the road unless a court hands Democrats a rescue.

Republicans turned the map into a statewide wall, and Cohen is the first major Democrat casualty.

Cohen spent years on Capitol Hill railing against President Trump, pushing impeachment, and acting as one of the most reliably partisan voices in the House Democratic caucus. He never had to worry about a real general election fight because his district was drawn to be a lock.

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The moment the lines changed, he was done.

State Representative Justin Pearson had been challenging Cohen in the Democratic primary before the map fight reshaped the political terrain. Now it barely matters who wins the Democratic nomination.

The seat is Republican territory.

Tennessee is about to become a wall-to-wall red state in Congress, and one of President Trump’s loudest critics in the House just lost his platform. That is what happens when safe blue seats built on outdated maps finally get redrawn into territory Democrats can no longer control.

 

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