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The 6-3 ruling by the Supreme Court is expected to result in Republicans in Alabama gaining one seat in the House of Representatives in November’s midterm elections because of the dilution of Black voters in the district.
Republicans hold a razor-thin majority in the House of Representatives. Since last year that have forced redistrictings in a number of states in an effort to retain that majority in the upcoming elections, which in turn led to identical efforts by Democrats in other states.
Tuesday’s decision by the Supreme Court overturns a ruling issued May 26 by a panel of three judges in U.S. District Court in Birmingham, Ala., which found that the state’s map proposed in 2023 “intentionally discriminated based on race.”
That panel had been compelled to revisit a prior decision barring the map from being used in state elections in light of a recent Supreme Court ruling in the case known as Louisiana v. Callais.
The Supreme Court in that case found that Louisiana’s drawing of its own congressional maps was a racial gerrymander.
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