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 yearโs 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 courtโs 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 stateโs population but have represented the majority of voters in just one of the stateโs 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 โsomething 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 courtโs three liberal justices.
But when Alabama produced its new map in July, it came under immediate…
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