U.S. judge blocks Louisiana voting map that creates just one Black
district
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[June 07, 2022]
By Daniel Trotta
(Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Monday blocked
a Louisiana Republican redistricting map that created only one
majority-Black congressional district in the state, ordering the state
legislature to redraw the map with a second such district within the
next two weeks.
District Judge Shelly Dick found the Republican map likely violated the
U.S. Voting Rights Act of 1965, a landmark piece of civil rights
legislation, and issued an injunction against it.
"The appropriate remedy in this context is a remedial congressional
redistricting plan that includes an additional majority-Black
congressional district," the judge wrote.
Louisiana Republicans immediately appealed the ruling.
Similar battles are taking place in other states as Republicans and
Democrats each attempt to draw maps favorable to their chances under the
redistricting that takes place every 10 years.
At stake is control of the U.S. House of Representatives in November's
midterm elections.
In Louisiana, where Democrats hold only one of the six congressional
seats and African Americans account for one-third of the population, a
second Black district could add another seat to the Democratic column.
Blacks overwhelmingly vote Democratic.
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Elsewhere, Republicans have achieved favorable maps
in states including Florida, Georgia and Texas.
In New York state, Democrats tried to draw a map that would tilt
even more in their favor, but were overruled by the state's top
court. Instead a more competitive plan was approved.
Should any state challenge reach the U.S. Supreme Court, the favor
could lean toward the Republicans.
In February, the increasingly assertive conservative majority on the
Supreme Court allowed Alabama to move forward with a contested map
that was favored by Republicans, granting an emergency request to
put on hold a lower court's injunctions ordering that the map be
redrawn because it likely discriminates against Black voters. The
top court said it would take up and decide the Alabama dispute on
the merits.
That decision signaled a potential further weakening of the Voting
Rights Act, which has been used to counter racially biased voting
and redistricting practices.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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