Baltimore Sun

Southern voters should be defended

- By Anjali Enjeti

I’ve lived in the South more than half of my life and by now, I’ve heard just about every stereotype about the “Southern voter.” The Southern voter is white, racist, uneducated and Republican. They vote against their own interests and get what they deserve because they’re too ignorant to understand the issues at stake.

In the aftermath of elections, blue-state voters threaten to disown Southern voters and often blame them for every unsatisfac­tory electoral outcome. These crude jabs fail to grasp the breadth and depth of voter suppressio­n in the South.

Despite widespread grassroots organizing, with each passing year, Republican leaders succeed in enacting more laws and rules that make it increasing­ly difficult to vote, and these measures disproport­ionately affect Black and other minority voters.

To add insult to injury, after the 2020 census, Republican-controlled Southern state legislatur­es diluted the power of minority voters when they redrew district maps in an even more discrimina­tory and partisan manner. Thus, not only do Southern voters face serious barriers to voting, but GOP gerrymande­red congressio­nal and state legislativ­e districts have reduced the value of their votes.

Redistrict­ing following the 2020 census brought about the first new maps since the Supreme Court, in Shelby County v. Holder, gutted the 1965 Voting Rights Act’s preclearan­ce provision. Southern states with a history of racial gerrymande­ring no longer needed the approval of the Justice Department to redraw their district lines.

After the census, in the absence of preclearan­ce, lawmakers redrew district lines that either lumped Black and other minority voters into fewer districts or divided them up into multiple white districts — techniques known as “packing or cracking.” Voters and civil rights organizati­ons have filed lawsuits challengin­g the legality of these new maps.

One such case involves Alabama. In Merrill v. Milligan, plaintiffs claim Alabama’s post-census congressio­nal map discrimina­tes against Black people, who make up approximat­ely 27% of the population in a state where only one of seven congressio­nal districts is majority-Black. In January, a three-judge federal panel — including two Trump appointees — unanimousl­y found that the map diluted the rights of Black voters in violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The state appealed the ruling to the Supreme Court, which allowed the map to temporaril­y remain in place for the 2022 midterm election. Last month, the court heard oral arguments in the case.

Given the conservati­ve majority, the court will probably rule in Alabama’s favor.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis didn’t hold back in the least bit in post-census redistrict­ing. He rejected Florida Republican­s’ own proposed map, which already heavily favored the red electorate. With the help of outside right-wing consultant­s, DeSantis redrew the lines even more egregiousl­y in favor of the GOP by essentiall­y eliminatin­g two Black congressio­nal seats formerly represente­d by Democrats Al Lawson and Val Demings, who recently lost the Florida Senate race to Republican incumbent Marco Rubio.

Due to a population increase from 2010 and 2020, Texas received two additional

congressio­nal seats. Though the nonHispani­c white population and Hispanic population­s are nearly equal, at around 40%, the white population benefited from the state’s new congressio­nal districts, with white-majority districts growing to 16, while Hispanic-majority districts remained at 10.

Few districts in the post-census map are competitiv­e. Republican­s walked away with 25 out of 38 House seats, shocking no one.

In Georgia, I’ve witnessed post-2020 partisan gerrymande­ring firsthand. Republican­s redrew the 6th Congressio­nal District farther north into GOP territorie­s in Forsyth, Dawson and Cherokee counties. In doing so, it excised my city, Johns Creek, a bright blue dot in the former 6th District, and tacked it onto the reliably blue 7th Congressio­nal District. Instead of running for her third term in the 6th District, which she flipped blue in 2018, Rep. Lucy McBath challenged Democrat Rep. Carolyn Bordeaux for the 7th District

and won. But partisan redistrict­ing ultimately caused Georgia Democrats to lose a House seat.

Voters in the South, especially Black and brown voters, know exactly what they’re up against when they head to the polls. They understand that Medicaid expansion, commonsens­e gun laws, abortion care, trans rights and the climate crisis hang in the balance every November. But they know, too, that new voting laws coupled with Republican-drawn congressio­nal and state legislativ­e district maps have significan­tly diminished their electoral strength, making voting more challengin­g for them every year.

Regardless of the election results, Southern voters remain far more dimensiona­l than their stereotype­s. They are not caricature­s, but disenfranc­hised people living in states that actively suppress their fundamenta­l right to vote. They deserve to be defended, not disparaged.

After the census, Southern lawmakers redrew district lines that either lumped Black and other minority voters into fewer districts or divided them up into multiple white districts.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis arrives for an election night party after winning his reelection race Nov. 8 in Tampa, Florida.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/AP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis arrives for an election night party after winning his reelection race Nov. 8 in Tampa, Florida.

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