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High court’s Ala. ruling sparks alarm over voting rights

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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court’s decision to halt efforts to create a second mostly Black congressio­nal district in Alabama for the 2022 election sparked fresh warnings Tuesday that the court is becoming too politicize­d, eroding the Voting Rights Act and reviving the need for Congress to intervene.

The Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority put on hold a lower court ruling that Alabama must draw new congressio­nal districts to increase Black voting power. Civil rights groups had argued that the state, with its “sordid record” of racial discrimina­tion, drew new maps by “packing” Black voters into one single district and “cracking” Black voters from other districts in ways that dilute their electoral power. Black voters are 26 percent of Alabama’s electorate.

In its 5-4 decision Monday, the Supreme Court said it would review the case in full, a future legal showdown in the months to come that voting advocates fear could further gut the protection­s in the landmark Civil Rights-era law.

It’s “the latest example of the Supreme Court hacking away at the protection­s of the voting rights act of 1965,” said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., chairman of the Judiciary Committee. “Congress must act. We must restore the Voting Rights Act.”

The outcome all but ensures Alabama will continue to send mostly white Republican­s to Washington after this fall’s midterm elections and applies new pressure on Congress to shore up voter protection­s after a broader elections bill collapsed last month. And the decision shows the growing power of the high court’s conservati­ve majority as President Joe Biden is under his own pressures to name a liberal nominee to replace retiring Justice Stephen Breyer.

Rep. Terri Sewell, the only Black representa­tive from Alabama, said the court’s decision underscore­s the need for Congress to pass her bill, the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancemen­t Act, to update and ensure the law’s historic protection­s.

“Black Alabamians deserve nothing less,” Sewell said in a statement.

The case out of Alabama is one of the most important legal tests of the new congressio­nal maps stemming from the 2020 census count. It comes in the aftermath of court decisions that have widely been viewed as chiseling away at race-based protection­s of the Voting Rights Act.

Alabama and other states with a known history of voting rights violations were no longer under federal oversight, or “preclearan­ce,” from the Justice Department for changes to their election practices after the court, in its 2013 Shelby v. Holder decision, struck down the bill’s formula as outdated.

As states nationwide adjust their congressio­nal districts to fit population and demographi­c data, Alabama’s Republican-led Legislatur­e drew up new maps last fall that were immediatel­y challenged by civil rights groups on behalf of Black voters in the state.

Late last month, a threejudge lower court, which includes two judges appointed by former President Donald Trump, had ruled that the state had probably violated the federal Voting Rights Act by diluting the political power of Black voters. This finding was rooted, in part, in the fact that the state did not create a second district in which Black voters made up a majority, or close to it.

Given that more than one person in four in Alabama is Black, the plaintiffs had argued the single Black district is far less than one person, one vote.

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