Alabama asks US Supreme Court to allow pro-Republican congressional map
Alabama says the map could add a Republican House seat and argues the Supreme Court’s recent Voting Rights Act ruling allows the change.
- On Wednesday, Alabama Solicitor General A. Barrett Bowdre filed emergency petitions asking the U.S. Supreme Court to lift a lower court's injunction blocking the 2023 Republican-backed map, which would reduce majority-Black congressional districts from two to one.
- The Supreme Court's April 29 decision in Louisiana v. Callais raised the evidentiary bar for proving intentional discrimination, prompting Republican-led states including Alabama to redraw voting maps in hopes of retaining control of the House.
- Despite the new standard, the three-judge panel—U.S. District Judges Anna Manasco and Terry Moorer and U.S. Circuit Judge Stanley Marcus —reaffirmed that Alabama's 2023 map likely violated the Voting Rights Act and 14th Amendment equal protection clause.
- Election officials warned that switching maps would require only seven days to complete work ordinarily taking weeks or months, leaving special primaries set for August 11 in four districts contingent on the justices' decision.
- The justices must decide whether to allow a map federal judges found intentionally designed to dilute Black voting strength or preserve the court-ordered map already embedded in election systems, with Republicans seeking to flip Democratic Rep. Shomari Figures' seat.
52 Articles
52 Articles
Alabama Asks Supreme Court to Allow Use of New Republican-Friendly Congressional Map
Alabama asked the U.S. Supreme Court on May 27 to allow the state to use a congressional map that removed one of two black-majority districts. The request came after a three-judge federal district court panel ordered Alabama the day before to continue using court-ordered districts from a 2024 map for elections to the U.S. House of Representatives. Of the state’s seven congressional districts, five are currently held by Republicans, while two are…
Alabama Asks SCOTUS to Allow New Congressional Voting Map That Lower Court Blocked
After a lower court in Alabama rejected the opportunity to follow the Supreme Court’s lead and reverse its decision blocking the state’s new congressional map favoring Republicans, Alabama appealed directly to the High Court, asking it to intervene. On April 29, a Supreme Court decision struck down Louisiana’s racially-gerrymandered map and limited the ability of plaintiffs to use the Voting Rights Act to prove a map is unconstitutional, revivin…
JUST IN: Alabama Appeals To SCOTUS Over Controversial Redistricting Map
Alabama’s Appeal to the Supreme Court: A Legal Showdown over Redistricting Alabama’s quest for a congressional map that favors six Republican districts and one Democratic district has reached the nation’s highest court. Following a federal court’s ruling to block the state’s map due to allegations of racial gerrymandering, Alabama is pushing back with an urgent appeal. This legal battle delves into complex issues surrounding representation and t…
Alabama Asks Supreme Court to Allow Use of New Republican-Friendly Congressional Map - The Thinking Conservative News
Alabama asked the U.S. Supreme Court on May 27 to allow the state to use a congressional map that removed one of two black-majority districts. The post Alabama Asks Supreme Court to Allow Use of New Republican-Friendly Congressional Map appeared first on The Thinking Conservative News.
2026 Midterms Take EPIC Turn After the Supreme Court ...
Alabama Republicans are taking their congressional redistricting fight back to the Supreme Court after a federal court blocked the state’s GOP-backed map. The federal court ruled this week that Republicans intentionally discriminated against Black voters despite the Supreme Court’s recent decision weakening the Voting Rights Act. On Wednesday, Alabama officials filed an emergency appeal asking the nation’s highest court to allow the state to use…
Alabama asks Supreme court to allow use of different map in midterms
Alabama on Wednesday asked the Supreme Court to allow it to use an old slate of congressional district maps after a federal court ordered that the state maintain its current slate. The Supreme Court recently eliminated race-based congressional districts in its Louisiana v. Callais decision that saw the justices narrow Section 2 of the Voting...
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