Alabama and Tennessee move to draw new congressional districts in wake of Supreme Court ruling
Governors in Alabama and Tennessee have summoned lawmakers into special sessions seeking new congressional districts after the U.S. Supreme Court weakened a key provision of the Voting Rights Act.
Alabama and Tennessee move to draw new congressional districts in wake of Supreme Court ruling
Republican governors in Alabama and Tennessee have called lawmakers into special sessions seeking new congressional districts.
Supreme Court limits racial challenges under Voting Rights Act, hands GOP states new mapmaking power
The Supreme Court issued a seismic ruling Wednesday, preserving but tightening the use of the Voting Rights Act, saying the iconic law can't be used to force states to add more minority districts
Supreme Court limits use of race in drawing electoral maps
WASHINGTON - The US Supreme Court limited the ability of lawmakers to take the racial make-up of a state into account when drawing voting maps, in a ruling that could reshape politics across the American south. In a 6-3 decision, the conservative justices sided with a challenge to new districts in Louisiana that were created to comply with a landmark Civil Rights law meant to protect black Americans from racial discrimination. The way courts have previously interpreted Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the court's majority opinion, has sometimes forced states "to engage in the very race-based discrimination that the Constitution forbids". The group of mainly white voters challenging the law had argued that relying on race to create districts ran afoul of the US Constitution and suggested that the provision of the Voting Rights Act should be found unconstitutional in its entirety. The court majority did not take that position, but its decision will make it significantly more difficult…
last updated on 4 May 16:15