
MultiState
Bipartisan state-affairs firm cited on Florida redistricting special session timing.
Last refreshed: 12 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
What is MultiState tracking about the 2026 redistricting wave?
Latest on MultiState
- What is MultiState and what does it do?
- MultiState is a bipartisan consulting firm tracking legislation and political developments across all 50 US states. It provides early-warning intelligence on state-level policy changes for corporate and advocacy clients.Source: MultiState
- Why is DeSantis waiting for the Supreme Court before redrawing Florida's map?
- DeSantis is deliberately timing Florida's redistricting to await the SCOTUS ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, which tests whether the VRA still requires majority-minority districts. A ruling narrowing Section 2 could allow a more aggressively Republican map.Source: MultiState analysis, April 2026
Background
MultiState is a bipartisan state government affairs consulting firm that tracks legislation and political developments across all 50 US states. It is frequently cited as a source for analysis of redistricting timelines, regulatory developments, and state election law changes. In the 2026 cycle its analysts have been quoted on Florida's redistricting special session, noting that DeSantis is timing his map to await the Supreme Court's ruling in Louisiana v. Callais before finalising the Florida congressional district boundaries.
MultiState tracks legislative calendars, committee hearings, and bill movements for corporate and advocacy clients who need early-warning intelligence on state-level policy changes. Its client base spans Fortune 500 companies, trade associations, and non-profit organisations. Unlike Washington-focused lobbying firms, MultiState's core product is state legislative intelligence rather than federal influence operations.
The firm's 50-state tracking capability makes it a useful source for journalists and analysts covering the redistricting wave, where the pace of map drawing, legal challenges, and filing deadline interactions across eight states simultaneously requires monitoring that goes beyond what any single-state watcher can provide.