Supreme Court rules Alabama may redraw congressional maps to oust a Black Democrat
WASHINGTON Β βΒ The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday night that Alabama Republican leaders may redraw their congressional voting districts to oust a Black Democrat and elect a white Republican.
The courtβs conservatives, who ruled for Louisiana Republicans in a redistricting dispute, extended that decision to Alabama. The three liberals dissented.
The decision clears the way for the governor and state lawmakers to redraw their congressional voting map with six districts that favor Republicans and one that favors a Democrat.
βWeeks ago, I warned that vacating the District Courtβs injunction in these cases would βunleash chaos and … confuse voters,β β Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in dissent. βYet just as Alabama doubled down on racial discrimination, the Court today doubles down on chaos. Because I choose to defend the rule of law and the right of all Alabamians to participate equally in democracy, I respectfully dissent.β
The justices granted an emergency appeal that was backed by the Trump administration and set aside the decision of a three-judge panel in Alabama.
The court in a brief opinion said the three judges should not have blocked Alabamaβs new map.
βWhile federal courts should not impose changes close to an election, states are free to decide for themselves whether last-minute changes to an election are in their best interests,β the court said.
Alabamaβs emergency appeal went to Justice Clarence Thomas, who referred it to the full court.
Those three judges, two of them Trump appointees, ruled that Alabamaβs state lawmakers discriminated against Black voters, who made up a near majority in the center of the state.
Three years ago, the Supreme Court agreed.
In a 5-4 decision written by Chief Justice John Roberts, the justices upheld the creation of a second district in the center of the state where Black voters had a near majority.
The result then was an Alabama state voting map that favored five Republicans and two Democrats for the House of Representatives.
But last month, in the wake of the Louisiana decision, Alabamaβs lawmakers went back to court, arguing that the state may return to the voting map with only a single Black majority district.
In his appeal to the Supreme Court, Alabamaβs Atty. Gen. Steven Marshall argued that the high courtβs decision in favor of Louisiana βvindicates Alabama position on the lawfulnessβ of its earlier voting map. He said the state should not be penalized for βrefusing to intentionally discriminateβ to favor Black voters.
The courtβs decision has cleared the way for Republican-led states in the South to flip congressional districts in Louisiana, Tennessee, Florida and now Alabama.