Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Suit filed over redistrict­ing

State House map dilutes Black voter strength, it says

- RYAN TARINELLI

The ACLU of Arkansas sued state officials Wednesday over a redistrict­ing map for the state House of Representa­tives, arguing that the plan dilutes the voting strength of Black residents.

At issue in the federal lawsuit are the new House district boundaries approved by the GOP-controlled Arkansas Board of Apportionm­ent, a three-member board tasked with setting new legislativ­e maps based on informatio­n from the U.S. Census every 10 years.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas, which filed the litigation on behalf of the Arkansas State Conference NAACP and the Arkansas Public Policy Panel, says the plan thins Black voting influence and violates the Voting Rights Act.

Redistrict­ing maps have received national attention in recent months, and multiple states, including Texas, have been sued over their redistrict­ing plans. The U.S. Department of Justice, arguing that Texas’ plans discrimina­te against minority voters, filed a lawsuit against the state earlier this month over that state’s redistrict­ing maps.

In the Arkansas case, plaintiffs are asking the court to enjoin Arkansas from using the maps for state House elections, setting up a legal fight months before the boundaries are set to be put to use.

“There is a national movement to suppress the African American vote,” said Kymara Seals, policy director for the Arkansas Public Policy Panel.

The organizati­on submitted a map to the Arkansas Board of Apportionm­ent that would have accurately represente­d the Black population in Arkansas, she said.

“We were very disappoint­ed with the end results of these maps,” she said. The only way the group could be heard is to file a lawsuit, she said.

Arkansas has a long history of “official voting-related discrimina­tion,” and white people are overrepres­ented in the state Legislatur­e compared with the state’s white population, according to the lawsuit.

Holly Dickson, executive director of the ACLU of Ar

kansas, issued a statement saying the board’s maps “substantia­lly underrepre­sent Black Arkansans, and unnecessar­ily divide communitie­s of interest that merit legislativ­e representa­tion.”

“Arkansas has historical­ly diluted the political power of Arkansas’ minority population­s,” she said in the statement. “If newly drawn maps aren’t updated to fairly represent all Arkansans, these communitie­s will continue to face obstacles to meaningful participat­ion in the political process.”

Gov. Asa Hutchinson, state Attorney General Leslie Rutledge and Arkansas Secretary of State John Thurston are listed as defendants in the civil litigation.

Hutchinson spokespers­on Shealyn Sowers said in a statement that the governor is reviewing the litigation and did not comment further on the lawsuit.

Amanda Priest, a spokespers­on for Rutledge, said in an email that the Republican state attorney general “will review the lawsuit and respond as appropriat­e.”

Thurston’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

State Rep. Reginald Murdock said the House districts could have been drawn in a way to better reflect the racial demographi­cs of the state.

Communitie­s of interest should be kept together in any redistrict­ing process, and fair election violations should be challenged in court, said a statement from Keidra Burrell, executive director of Fight Forward Arkansas, a nonpartisa­n voting advocacy group.

“Everyone’s voice has the right to be heard, and it is our obligation to fight to ensure it,” she said in the statement.

Black voters are a majority in 11% of the districts in the new map, even though Arkansas’ Black population makes up 16.5% of the state and 15.5% of the citizen voting-age population, according to the lawsuit.

“Five additional districts in which Black voters constitute an effective majority would better achieve rough proportion­ality as contemplat­ed by the Voting Rights Act,” the lawsuit reads.

Majority-Black House districts can be drawn in Central Arkansas, Southwest Arkansas, and in the upper and lower Delta, according to the lawsuit.

The redrawn maps from the apportionm­ent board have run into sharp criticism from Democratic Party of Arkansas Chairman Grant Tennille.

“The House maps, as approved, are illegal because they were designed to dilute the voting power of minority communitie­s,” he said in a statement Wednesday. “We hope the court orders the use of a map that fairly represents all Arkansans.”

Informatio­n for this article was provided by Rachel Herzog of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette; and The Associated Press.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States