Baltimore Sun

States play waiting game on voting

Black voters await their redrawn maps despite court ruling

- By Gary Fields and Adriana Gomez Licon

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court’s decision siding with Black voters in an Alabama redistrict­ing case gave Democrats and voting rights activists a surprising opportunit­y before the 2024 elections.

New congressio­nal maps would have to include more districts in Alabama and potentiall­y other states where Black voters would have a better chance of electing someone of their choice, a decision widely seen as benefiting Democrats.

It has been more than three months since the justice’s 5-4 ruling, and maps that could produce more districts represente­d by Black lawmakers still do not exist.

Alabama Republican­s are hoping to get a fresh hearing on the issue before the Supreme Court. Republican lawmakers in Louisiana never even bothered to draw a new map.

Khadidah Stone, a plaintiff in the Alabama case, said the continuing opposition was “appalling” but “not surprising.” She noted that Alabama is where then-Gov. George Wallace blocked Black students from integratin­g the University of Alabama in 1963.

“There is a long history there of disobeying court orders to deny Black people our rights,” she said.

A similar dynamic is playing out in Florida, where Republican­s are appealing a ruling favorable to Black voters to the Republican-majority state Supreme Court.

Lawsuits over racially gerrymande­red congressio­nal maps in several other states, including Georgia, South Carolina and

Texas, quickly followed the Supreme Court’s landmark Voting Rights Act decision in June. But the continued pushback from Republican legislatur­es in control of redistrict­ing means there is great uncertaint­y about whether — or how soon — new maps offering equal representa­tion for Black voters will be drawn.

Whether the Republican strategy proves to be a defiance of court orders that the Supreme Court will shoot down or a deft political move will be become clearer over the next month.

Shawn Donahue of the State University of New York at Buffalo, an expert on voting rights and redistrict­ing, said the Supreme Court could put a quick end to the delays and “summarily affirm” the decision of a lower court

panel that rejected the latest Alabama congressio­nal map. That map continued to provide just one majority Black district out of seven in a state where Black residents comprise 27% of the population.

“You could have some of (the justices) just kind of say — ‘You know what, I didn’t agree, but that’s what the ruling was,’ ” Donahue said.

The Supreme Court also could agree to hear Alabama’s challenge, bringing the state’s redistrict­ing plans back to the court less than a year after it rendered its opinion in the previous case.

Republican­s want to keep their map in place as the state continues to fight the lower court ruling ordering them to create a second district where Black voters constitute a majority or close

to it. The state contends the Supreme Court set no such remedy and that the new map complies with the court’s decision by fixing the problems it identified — such as how the state’s Black Belt region was split into multiple districts.

“A stay is warranted before voters are sorted into racially gerrymande­red districts that are by their very nature odious,” the state attorney general’s office wrote in the stay request.

The stakes are high. With Republican­s holding a slim majority in the U.S. House, the redistrict­ing cases have the potential to switch control of the chamber next year.

Shortly after its decision in the Alabama case, the Supreme Court lifted its hold on a similar case from

Louisiana, raising hopes among Democrats that the state would be forced to draw another Black majority congressio­nal district.

But even if the court rejects Alabama’s latest plan, it would not necessaril­y bring an instant end to the case in Louisiana, where U.S. District Court Judge Shelly Dick has ruled that a second majority-Black district must be drawn.

Dick has three days of hearings scheduled to begin Oct. 3. But her initial order blocking the 2022 congressio­nal map drawn by Louisiana’s GOP-controlled Legislatur­e — which maintains white majorities in five of six districts in a state where about one-third of voters are Black — remains on appeal.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is to hear

arguments Oct. 6.

Louisiana’s lawyers argue that the Black communitie­s the plaintiffs and the district court seek to include in a second majority Black district are too far-flung, even under the Alabama precedent.

The high court’s decision in the Alabama case “did not present a free pass to future plaintiffs to establish (Voting Rights Act) liability without proving that the relevant minority population is itself compact,” Louisiana said in its argument.

The voting rights advocates suing the state argue that the plans they have suggested so far are “on average more compact” than the plan the state is trying to preserve.

A similar case is playing out in Florida, though not in federal court.

 ?? VASHA HUNT/AP 2022 ?? Khadidah Stone stands between her old congressio­nal District 7, to her right, and her new district, District 2, to her left, in Montgomery, Ala.
VASHA HUNT/AP 2022 Khadidah Stone stands between her old congressio­nal District 7, to her right, and her new district, District 2, to her left, in Montgomery, Ala.

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