Alabama gets new congressional map that could yield Democrats a second seat in the state

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A federal court on Thursday approved a new congressional map in Alabama that significantly boosts the Black population of a second district and could represent a pickup opportunity for Democrats in next yearโ€™s elections.

The action by the three-judge panel โ€“ along with the outcomes of several other closely watched redistricting cases around the country โ€“ could help determine which party controls the US House of Representatives after 2024. Republicans currently have a narrow majority in the chamber.

The courtโ€™s decision to pick a map that creates a district in a southeastern swath of Alabama with a 48.7% Black voting-age population also concludes a legal saga that saw the US Supreme Court affirm a key part of the Voting Rights Act, a landmark civil rights law that has been chipped away by conservative justices in recent years.

At issue in the case: whether the map drawn by the Republican-controlled legislature improperly diluted the political power of Black Alabamians, who make up 27% of the stateโ€™s population but have represented the majority of voters in just one of the stateโ€™s seven congressional districts. The redistricting fight has drawn national attention โ€“ as a test of the potency of the nearly 60-year-old Voting Rights Act and how judges would respond to what critics called open defiance of federal court orders by state officials in Alabama.

Back in June, in a case concerning an earlier map, a divided Supreme Court affirmed a lower-court opinion ordering Alabama to include a second majority-Black district or โ€œsomething quite close to itโ€ to its seven-seat congressional map.

The 5-4 opinion was penned by Chief Justice John Roberts, who drew the votes of fellow conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh as well as the courtโ€™s three liberal justices.

But when Alabama produced its new map in July, it came under immediate…

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