Current:Home > InvestSupreme Court denies Alabama's bid to use GOP-drawn congressional map in redistricting case -ThriveEdge Finance
Supreme Court denies Alabama's bid to use GOP-drawn congressional map in redistricting case
View
Date:2025-04-19 01:29:21
Washington — The Supreme Court on Tuesday declined requests by Alabama officials to use a congressional map drawn by GOP state lawmakers in July for upcoming elections, leaving in force a lower court decision that blocked the district lines because they likely ran afoul of federal law.
The court denied a pair of requests for emergency relief that were sought by the state. There were no noted dissents. The orders from the high court means that work on a new congressional map by a special master appointed by a federal district court will continue.
"Alabama's open defiance of the Voting Rights Act stops today," said Abha Khanna, a lawyer who represented a group of Alabamians challenging the redrawn plan, in a statement.
The filings from Alabama Republicans again sought the Supreme Court's intervention in the long-running dispute over the state's congressional map. State officials asked the justices last year for emergency relief in the fight that arose from the redistricting process. In its last term, the court heard arguments over whether the GOP-drawn congressional bounds violated the Voting Rights Act.
The fight over Alabama's congressional map
In June, a divided high court unexpectedly upheld a lower court ruling that invalidated the voting lines for the state's seven congressional districts that were crafted by Republicans lawmakers after the 2020 Census because it likely violated Section 2 of the landmark voting law. In that lower court decision, state lawmakers were ordered to redraw the congressional map to include a second district that gave Black voters equal opportunity to elect their favored candidate, as required by the Voting Rights Act.
Following the Supreme Court's decision, Alabama lawmakers reconvened in July to enact a new congressional redistricting plan, which again included a single majority-Black district. Black Alabamians make up 27% of the state's voting age population. State officials said the map was drawn to minimize county splits, including in the so-called Black Belt, a rural region named for its fertile soil, and adhere to traditional principles of redistricting.
But the voting bounds were again swiftly challenged by voting rights groups, and a three-judge district court panel blocked the 2023 map from being used in next year's elections. That court found it likely violated Section 2 because it did not include a second congressional district where Black voters would have the opportunity to elect a representative of their choice.
The district court appointed a special master to draft a remedial map. In its decision, the judges wrote they were "deeply troubled" that the state enacted a map that it admitted didn't provide a remedy for the likely Voting Rights Act violation.
Noting that the map drawn by Alabama Republicans in July increased the portion of Black voters in a second district from about 30% to nearly 40%, the district court said that was "insufficient to give Black voters a fair and reasonable opportunity to elect a representative of their choice: it will either never happen, or it will happen so very rarely that it cannot fairly be described as realistic, let alone reasonable."
Alabama officials turned to the Supreme Court again in mid-September and asked the high court to halt the district court's order, which would keep in place the lines drawn by GOP state lawmakers. They asked the justices to issue a stay by early October so state officials and candidates will know whether the map crafted by the state legislature will govern the 2024 elections. Alabama's primary elections are set for March 5.
An order pausing the district court's ruling "serves the public interest by preserving the opportunity for the legislatively enacted 2023 Plan to be used in the upcoming election, rather than a court-drawn, race-segregated plan," Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall wrote in the request for emergency relief. He said that without a stay from the Supreme Court, "the state will have no meaningful opportunity to appeal before the 2023 Plan is replaced by a court-drawn map that no state could constitutionally enact."
But a group of voters and civil rights groups, who brought the challenges to the original map crafted in 2021 and district lines redrawn in July, accused state officials of "unabashedly" trying to defy the district court and Supreme Court by deeming the new congressional voting lines sufficient.
Alabama's secretary of state and lawmakers "are free to make whatever arguments they wish to the special master about their preferred redistricting criteria for formulating the final remedial map," the challengers to the district lines told the Supreme Court. "What the secretary cannot do is pretend this motion is something other than what it is: a request to defy this court's decision by implementing a 'remedy' that cures nothing and prevents Black voters from having an opportunity to elect candidates of their choice in a second congressional district."
The outcome of the redistricting fight playing out in Alabama, when coupled with others ongoing in the South, could be critical in the 2024 midterm elections, when Democrats will be fighting to wrest control of the chamber from Republicans. The GOP currently holds a slim majority of seats in the House.
Former Attorney General Eric Holder, chairman of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, cheered the Supreme Court's decision as a victory for all Americans, and especially voters of color.
"Even with this court's landmark decision to uphold Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, Alabama Republicans have defied court orders at every turn by refusing to enact a map that gives Black Alabamians the opportunity to elect a candidate of their choice in two districts," he said in a statement. "These shameful, odious efforts to diminish the rightful voting power of Black Alabamians have finally been defeated. As a result, we will see more representative maps in places that were once thought to be unreachable in the fight for fairness: Alabama, Louisiana, and Georgia. Justice has prevailed."
veryGood! (549)
Related
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Get 35% Off the Eyelash Serum Recommended by Luann de Lesseps, Lala Kent, Paige DeSorbo & More Celebs
- King Charles III and Queen Camilla Pulled Away From Public Appearance After Security Scare
- Hawaii ag agency won’t get all the money slated for pest management after all
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Spain clinches record 4th European Championship title, beating England 2-1
- Olympic flame arrives in Paris ahead of 2024 Summer Games
- Texas judge orders Uvalde school district, sheriff's office to release shooting records
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Shannen Doherty remembered by 90210 and Charmed co-stars
Ranking
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- After Donald Trump shot at rally, Russia, China and other foreign powers weigh in on assassination attempt
- Photographer Doug Mills on capturing bullet during Trump's rally assassination attempt
- Why Ingrid Andress' National Anthem Performance Is Sparking Debate
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Detroit-area county to pay $7 million to family of man killed while jailed for drunken driving
- RHONJ’s Danielle Cabral Confirms the Season 14 Finale Is Just as Shocking as You'd Expect
- Krispy Kreme unveils new Paris-inspired doughnut collection ahead of 2024 Olympics
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Hall of Fame RB Terrell Davis says he was placed in handcuffs on United Airlines flight
JD Vance is a relative political unknown. He’s been asked to help Donald Trump avenge his loss
Man charged with murdering 2 roommates after body parts found in suitcases on iconic U.K. bridge
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
How to watch 'Hillbilly Elegy,' the movie based on Trump VP pick JD Vance's 2016 memoir
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Crack Open
Inside Richard Simmons' Final Days Before Death