Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

State’s 2nd Black district rejected

Critics say Alabama lawmakers’ plan defies Supreme Court

- KIM CHANDLER AND JEFF AMY

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama lawmakers on Friday refused to create a second majority-Black congressio­nal district, a move that could defy a recent order from the U.S. Supreme Court to give minority voters a greater voice in elections and trigger a renewed battle over the state’s political map.

GOP Gov. Kay Ivey quickly signed it.

Lawmakers in the Republican-dominated House and Senate instead passed a plan that would increase the percentage of Black voters from about 31% to 40% in the state’s 2nd District. A conference committee proposed the map as a compromise between plans that had percentage­s of 42% and 38%, respective­ly, for the southeast Alabama district.

State lawmakers faced a deadline to adopt new lines after the Supreme Court in June upheld a three-judge panel’s finding that the current state map — with one majority-Black district out of seven in a state that is 27% Black — likely violates the federal Voting Rights Act.

Voting rights advocates and Black lawmakers said the plan invoked the state’s Jim Crow history of treating Black voters unfairly.

Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, chairman of the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee, said the map “and the Republican politician­s who supported it, would make George Wallace proud,” referring to the segregatio­nist former Alabama governor.

“It arrogantly defies a very conservati­ve United States Supreme Court decision … from just weeks ago,” Holder said in a statement.

Republican­s argued that their proposal complies with the directive to create a second district where Black voters could influence the outcome of congressio­nal elections.

Opponents said it flouted a directive from the panel to create a second majority-Black district or “something quite close to it” so that Black voters “have an opportunit­y to elect a representa­tive of their choice.”

“There’s no opportunit­y there for anybody other than a white Republican to win that district. It will never, ever elect a Democrat. They won’t elect a Black [person]. They won’t elect a minority,” said Sen. Rodger Smitherman, a Democrat from Birmingham.

Republican­s have been reluctant to create a Democratic-leaning district and are engaging in a high-stakes wager that the panel will accept their proposal or that the state will prevail in a second round of appeals. Republican­s argued that the map meets the court’s directive and draws compact districts that comply with redistrict­ing guidelines.

“If you think about where we were, the Supreme Court ruling was 5-4, so there’s just one judge that needed to see something different. And I think the movement that we have and what we’ve come to compromise on today gives us a good shot,” House Speaker Nathaniel Ledbetter said.

Republican Senate President Pro Tempore Greg Reed said he believed the changes to the district make it a socalled opportunit­y district.

“I’m confident that we’ve done a good job. It will be up to the courts to decide whether they agree,” Reed said.

OTHER STATES

The debate in Alabama is being closely watched across the nation, and could be mirrored in fights in Louisiana, Georgia, Texas and other states.

The three-judge panel ruled in 2022 that the current legislativ­e map likely violates the federal Voting Rights Act and said any map should include two districts where “Black voters either comprise a voting-age majority” or something close. The Supreme Court upheld that decision.

Now that the plan has passed, the fight will shift quickly back to the federal court to debate whether Alabama’s congressio­nal districts comply with federal law and offer a fair opportunit­y to Black voters and candidates in a political landscape dominated by white Republican­s.

Black Alabama lawmakers say it’s crucial that their constituen­ts have a better chance of electing their choices.

“I have people in my district saying their vote doesn’t count, and I understand why they say that,” Rep. Thomas Jackson, a Thomasvill­e Democrat, said Friday during debate. “The person they want to elect can never get elected because they are in the minority all the time.”

Black lawmakers disputed that the changes to the 2nd District, an area with deep ties to agricultur­e and home to military bases, would easily become a swing district. They speculated that state Republican­s were seeking to mount another challenge to federal voting law.

“This is designed to protect a few people and ultimately to finish off the Voting Rights Act,” said Rep. Chris England, a Democratic lawmaker from Tuscaloosa.

An analysis by The Associated Press, using redistrict­ing software, shows that the 2nd District proposed Friday has mostly voted for Republican­s in recent statewide elections. Donald Trump won the district by nearly 10 percentage points in his 2020 reelection bid.

Experts have said the GOP proposals fall short of what the Supreme Court said last month is required.

“They have pretended as though the court didn’t say what it said,” said Kareem Crayton, senior director for voting and representa­tion at New York University’s Brennan Center for Justice.

The Brennan Center filed a brief supporting the plaintiffs before the Supreme Court.

 ?? (AP/Jeff Amy) ?? Alabama state Rep. Chris England, D-Tuscaloosa, discusses his objections to a redistrict­ing plan for the state’s seven congressio­nal districts on Friday at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Ala.
(AP/Jeff Amy) Alabama state Rep. Chris England, D-Tuscaloosa, discusses his objections to a redistrict­ing plan for the state’s seven congressio­nal districts on Friday at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Ala.

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