On Wednesday, the Florida Supreme Court signed off on a new congressional map, and the state's mid-decade game of musical chairs could leave at least three incumbents without a seat. The new map greatly imperils Democratic Rep. Gwen Graham (FL-02) and GOP Reps. Dan Webster (FL-10) and Carlos Curbelo (FL-26). All told, the likeliest outcome is a Democratic net gain of one or two seats. In pursuing "fair maps" and a reversal of a GOP "gerrymander," Democrats may have unintentionally hurt one of their own. The biggest shift is the reconfiguration of Democratic Rep. Corrine Brown's African-American majority 5th CD from Jacksonville to Tallahassee. This newly east-west seat creates a safe Democratic 10th CD in Orlando, but it's left Graham with virtually zero chance of winning reelection in the Tallahassee 2nd CD. Brown is suing in federal court to preserve her current 5th CD, and Graham has said she will wait to announce her plans until that suit is settled. But most legal experts expect that this new map will remain in place for the 2016 elections. While many districts

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