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    You are at:Home»Crime & Justice»States rush to redraw congressional districts to gut Black voting power | US voting rights
    Crime & Justice

    States rush to redraw congressional districts to gut Black voting power | US voting rights

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtApril 30, 2026004 Mins Read
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    States rush to redraw congressional districts to gut Black voting power | US voting rights
    A rally outside the US Capitol on 18 March 2026 in Washington DC. Photograph: Heather Diehl/Getty Images
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    Before the supreme court’s decision severely weakening the Voting Rights Act came on Wednesday, some states had already begun initiating processes to redraw districts and gut Black voting power. Following the decision, more states followed, with governors calling for special sessions to redraw congressional districts, potentially before the midterms.

    Voting districts are typically redrawn once a decade, after the census. Last year, Donald Trump triggered a round of mid-decade redistricting after he urged Texas Republicans to give a boost to the Republican party during the midterm elections. California Democrats responded in turn. From there, multiple other states began pushing redistricting, along with those whose maps were already tied up in state and federal courts.

    Now, state legislatures have a new opportunity, and several southern states have already acted or indicated they will do so soon.

    While it’s unclear how many states will be able to redraw their maps before the November midterm elections given that filing deadlines and in some cases primaries have passed in many states, Republicans are expected to take extreme measures to move quickly.

    A demonstration outside the US supreme court in Washington DC on 15 October 2025. Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images

    Before the ink on the justices’ decision had dried, Florida’s Republican-controlled legislature, called back into a special session by governor Ron DeSantis, quickly passed new congressional maps to deliver four more seats to the Republican party. The map gives Republicans the advantage for 24 of the state’s 28 House seats.

    “DeSantis’s extreme new gerrymander was drawn behind closed doors because he knows the voters overwhelmingly oppose this partisan power grab,” John Bisognano, president of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, said in a statement. “Instead of standing up for their constituents, Florida Republicans have just voted to silence millions of Floridians in service of Donald Trump’s plot to steal the 2026 midterm elections.”

    While Florida advanced the issue of redistricting further than any other state since the supreme court’s ruling, other Republican-controlled states seemed poised to follow.

    Mississippi governor Tate Reeves announced that 21 days after the supreme court decision, the state legislature would return for a special session to address redistricting, which had been put on hold pending the decision.

    Charles Taylor, executive director of the Mississippi chapter of the NAACP, said that the organization was already working to address both the decision and the special session.

    The demonstration outside the US supreme court on 15 October 2025. Photograph: Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call Inc/Getty Images

    “Too often in this country, Black voters bear the brunt of the political theater and I want to be clear: the Republican party and power is completely linked to the dilutions of Black voting power,” he said. “Mississippi is the Blackest state in the country and we have a governor and a legislature that is chomping at the bits, not to create equality, but to continue to suppress the Black voices and Black folks in our state. It is a sad day, but we stand ready to fight.”

    Reeves celebrated the supreme court’s decision in a post on X.

    “First Dobbs. Now Callais,” he wrote. “Just Mississippi and Louisiana down here saving our country!”

    Louisiana, the state that triggered the supreme court decision, was thought to be too late in the electoral process to adopt new maps, as early voting for the state’s 16 May congressional party primaries begins Sunday. But on Wednesday, the Louisiana attorney general, Liz Murrill, told reporters that “it’s still possible to do something”.

    Like Louisiana, Alabama was sued after the 2020 redistricting cycle for violating section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The Alabama attorney general, Steve Marshall, said the state “will act as quickly as possible to apply this ruling to Alabama’s redistricting efforts”. The state has two majority Black districts, including one that voted for the first time only two years ago.

    In Tennessee, shortly after the supreme court decision, Republican senator and gubernatorial candidate Marsha Blackburn wrote a post on X targeting the state’s lone majority-Black district.

    “I urge our state legislature to reconvene to redistrict another Republican seat in Memphis,” she wrote alongside a photo of Tennessee redrawn to be entirely red. “It’s essential to cement @realDonaldTrump’s agenda and the Golden Age of America.”

    Black Congressional Districts Gut Power Redraw Rights rush states voting
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