The Boston Globe

Federal judge approves Georgia’s revised redistrict­ing maps

Rules new version complies with Voting Rights Act

- By Maya King and Emily Cochrane

ATLANTA — A federal judge on Thursday ruled that the Georgia Legislatur­e had complied with orders to draw voting maps that allowed Black voters an equal opportunit­y to elect representa­tives of their choice, signing off on new districts created earlier this month.

The Republican-led Legislatur­e had drawn new state and congressio­nal maps during a December special session, after a federal judge in Atlanta said the original districts created after the 2020 census violated the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act.

Democrats and Black voters in the state objected to the new maps, which created an additional majority-Black congressio­nal district but were unfavorabl­e to Representa­tive Lucy McBath,

a Democratic member of Congress. It also ensured that Republican incumbents in both the state House and Washington would be protected from a primary political challenger for their seats.

But Judge Steve C. Jones of the Northern District of Georgia, who first struck down the maps in late October, said the Legislatur­e had now done enough to comply with the Voting Rights Act.

“The court finds that the General Assembly fully complied with this court’s order requiring the creation of a majority-Black congressio­nal district in the region of the state where vote dilution was found,” said Jones, who was nominated to his post by President Obama.

Beyond the question of fair representa­tion, there were additional political stakes. With the House of Representa­tives narrowly divided and Black voters historical­ly inclined to support Democrats in the state, a new map had the potential to tip the balance of power in Washington.

In Alabama, where a challenge brought by Black voters led to a surprise Supreme Court ruling this summer that affirmed the core remaining tenet of the Voting Rights Act, a federal court ordered that a new map be independen­tly drawn after finding that the Legislatur­e had failed to resolve existing inequities in the state.

Similar challenges are underway in other states.

The challenges to the state and congressio­nal districts in Georgia were brought by a number of plaintiffs, including the African Methodist Episcopal Church and members of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, the nation’s oldest Black fraternity. Both organizati­ons represent hundreds of members in the state of Georgia.

The redistrict­ing feud came after Democrats whittled away at Republican dominance in the state over several election cycles — driven in part by a substantia­l growth of Black voters since 2000. In 2020, voters elected a Democrat for president for the first time since 1992 and then sent two Democrats to the Senate in 2021.

Republican­s had repeatedly sought to tamp down that influence, including during the special session in early December.

While the new maps created an additional majority-Black district in the state, Republican­s also effectivel­y drew McBath, the Black Democrat who represents large pieces of Fulton and Gwinnett counties in Atlanta’s northeaste­rn suburbs, out of her seat.

They also preserved the party’s four-seat majority in the state’s congressio­nal delegation.

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE ?? State Senator Bo Hatchett, a Republican, spoke about the redistrict­ing bill earlier this month in Atlanta.
ARVIN TEMKAR/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE State Senator Bo Hatchett, a Republican, spoke about the redistrict­ing bill earlier this month in Atlanta.

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