Chattanooga Times Free Press

House approves redistrict­ing bill after 2-day delay

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. — The Alabama House of Representa­tives on Thursday approved new legislativ­e districts, but only after Democrats were able to delay a vote by having the bill read aloud for 16 hours.

Representa­tives in the GOP-controlled House approved the districts in a 70-30 vote that fell along party lines. Republican­s argued the bill fairly corrects problems identified by a federal court with current boundaries. Democrats contended Republican­s rammed through a plan aimed at entrenchin­g GOP dominance in the state and minimizing the influence of black voters.

Before the vote, Democrats requested for the 539-page bill to be read aloud. The process took 16 hours as the sound of the computeriz­ed bill reader filled the chamber for two days. Black lawmakers in the House said they requested the reading to make their objections known because Republican­s tried to limit floor debate on the plan that is headed back for court review

“Some people are upset that we used the rules. We have to use the rules because that is all we have. We represent constituen­cies that have been left behind,” Rep. John Knight, D-Montgomery, said.

Federal judges in January ordered the Legislatur­e to redraw lines before the 2018 elections after ruling GOP lawmakers improperly made race a predominan­t factor when drawing 12 districts. The ruling came after the Legislativ­e Black Caucus and the Alabama Democratic Conference challenged the districts, arguing African-American voters were “stacked and packed” into designated minority districts to make neighborin­g districts whiter and more Republican.

Republican House Speaker Mac McCutcheon has said the map is designed to comply with the court’s ruling and have some “ripple effect” but not make unneeded changes.

“We tried to get input from everybody. We also have looked at everything the court has ordered, and we feel like we have complied with that. From that perspectiv­e I feel like we’ve got the best piece of legislatio­n that we can come up with,” McCutcheon said.

Major points of contention included the allowed difference in population size between districts and that some districts stretched across county lines.

The GOP-drawn map allows a 2 percent difference in district population size, a much lower variance than allowed in other states. Democrats argued the variance helps to justify lines favorable to the GOP. Republican­s said the closer district size is fairer to both lawmakers and voters.

Another disagreeme­nt was the splitting of counties. Democrats argued the districts of GOP lawmakers were stretched into urban counties to maintain GOP dominance on local issues.

“They can come in there and vote down everything that would benefit where I live, but they don’t live there,” Rep. Mary Moore, D-Birmingham, said of lawmakers who reside outside Jefferson County but whose districts stretch into the county.

McCutcheon said counties were split to keep population size even between districts.

The bill now moves to the Alabama Senate.

The January ruling striking down the districts came after the U.S. Supreme Court ordered a review of the plan for racial gerrymande­ring.

Before the vote, Democrats requested the 539-page bill be read aloud, a process that took 16 hours.

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