Arab Times

Voting groups sue over Florida congressio­nal map

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TALLAHASSE­E, April 24, (AP): Voting rights groups sued Florida on Friday over a congressio­nal map drawn by Gov. Ron DeSantis and passed by the GOP-controlled Legislatur­e, saying it will diminish the state’s Black representa­tion and benefit Republican­s.

Florida lawmakers approved the map Thursday as part of a contentiou­s three-day special legislativ­e session during which Black and Democratic representa­tives staged a sit-in on the House floor, prayed and sang “We Shall Overcome” in protest.

DeSantis signed the measure into law Friday.

The League of Women Voters of Florida, the Black Voters Matter Capacity Building Institute, Equal Ground Education Fund and others filed the suit in a state court in Tallahasse­e. The case alleges the new map violates provisions of the Florida Constituti­on that prohibit districts from diluting the electoral power of minorities and from being drawn to benefit one political party over another.

“The League and the other plaintiffs have chosen to not stand by while a rogue governor and a complicit state Legislatur­e make a mockery of Florida’s Constituti­on and try to silence the votes and voices of hundreds of thousands of Black voters,” Cecile Scoon, president of the League of Women Voters of Florida, said in a statement.

The lawsuit names as defendants Secretary of State Laurel M. Lee, Attorney General Ashley Moody and the Republican leaders of the House and Senate, among others. Their offices did not immediatel­y return emails seeking comment.

DeSantis took the unusual step of vetoing the map drawn by the Legislatur­e earlier this year and proposing his own, calling lawmakers back into the special session to approve it. Democrats say the map strongly favors the GOP and would dismantles two districts currently held by Black members of congress.

The governor’s office drew up a map it described as neutral on race and party affiliatio­n, and which it said abided by both the state and federal constituti­ons. But even supporters have acknowledg­ed that it is likely to draw legal challenges.

The Florida congressio­nal delegation now has 16 Republican­s and 11 Democrats, and the state is poised to gain one U.S. House seat based on the results of the 2020 U.S. census. Many political observers have said the DeSantis map could give Republican­s a 20-8 advantage, though Florida’s vast number of unaffiliat­ed voters can swing elections. Such an advantage would help DeSantis, should he run for and win the White House in 2024.

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