U.S. Supreme Court leans toward Alabama in voting rights fight
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[October 05, 2022]
By Andrew Chung and Nate Raymond
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Conservative U.S.
Supreme Court justices on Tuesday signaled sympathy toward Alabama in
the state's defense of a Republican-drawn electoral map in a case that
could further erode a landmark voting rights law, drawing a skeptical
response from its newest member, Ketanji Brown Jackson.
The court on the second day of its new nine-month term heard about two
hours of arguments in Alabama's appeal of a ruling by a panel of three
federal judges that the map setting the boundaries of the state's seven
U.S. House of Representatives districts unlawfully diluted the clout of
Black voters.
The case illustrated the ideological divide on a court with a 6-3
conservative majority.
Jackson, the first Black woman on the court, and the two other liberal
justices, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, vigorously questioned Alabama
Solicitor General Edmund LaCour as he defended the map drawn by his
fellow Republicans who control the state legislature. The conservative
justices appeared sympathetic to some of LaCour's arguments.
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Black voters challenged the legality of the Republican-drawn map. The
lower court found that the map concentrated Black voters into a single
House district even though Alabama's population is 27% Black, while
spreading the rest of the Black population in other districts at levels
too small to form a majority in violation of a 1965 law called the
Voting Rights Act that bars racial discrimination in voting.
LaCour argued that the map was "race neutral," that using a key Voting
Rights Act provision to boost the power of minority voters may violate
the guarantee of equal protection under the law enshrined in the U.S.
Constitution's 14th Amendment and that states should ignore the question
of race when devising electoral maps.
Conservative Justice Samuel Alito expressed support for raising the
burden on plaintiffs to show that an electoral map is unlawfully biased.
In "every place in the South ... will not the plaintiffs always run the
table?" Alito asked U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar,
representing President Joe Biden's administration in backing the
plaintiffs.
The Voting Rights Act was enacted at a time when Southern states
including Alabama enforced policies blocking Black people from casting
ballots. The case centers on a provision aimed at countering voting laws
resulting in racial bias even absent racist intent.
A ruling is due by the end of June. A decision siding with Alabama could
make it harder to prove state voting laws harm minorities.
Jackson, a Biden appointee, emphasized the historical intent of the 14th
Amendment, ratified in 1868 after the U.S. Civil War to help protect the
rights of newly freed Black enslaved people. It was to ensure equality
of all citizens and was not a "race-neutral or race-blind idea," Jackson
said on her second day of arguments as a justice.
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Voters cast ballots for 2020 Democratic
Primary Election inside of a polling station at the Selma Fire
Station on Super Tuesday in Selma, Alabama , U.S., March 3, 2020.
REUTERS/Michael A. McCoy
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The Voting Rights Act, Jackson added, "is saying you need to
identify people in this community who have less opportunity and less
ability to participate and ensure that that's remedied, right? It's
a race-conscious effort."
'GREAT ACHIEVEMENTS'
LaCour said drawing Alabama's map of House districts "in favor of
one racial group" would itself be racially discriminatory, violating
the 14th Amendment, because it would be "harming some other group on
account of race."
Kagan said endorsing Alabama's arguments could lead states to draw
maps in which minorities "could essentially be foreclosed from
electing a candidate of their choice anywhere." Kagan noted that
Supreme Court rulings in 2013 and 2021 already undermined other
Voting Rights Act protections.
"It's one of the great achievements of American democracy to achieve
equal political opportunities regardless of race, to ensure that
African Americans could have as much political power as white
Americans could," Kagan said of the landmark law.
Sotomayor questioned LaCour about why the Republican-drawn map split
up certain Black communities among House districts but not certain
white communities.
The lower court ordered Alabama to configure a second House district
where Black voters could hold a majority or close to it. But the
Supreme Court, in a 5-4 decision in February powered by its
conservatives, let Alabama use the map for the Nov. 8 elections in
which Republicans are trying to regain control of Congress.
Electoral districts are redrawn each decade to reflect population
changes. In most states, such redistricting is done by the party in
power, which can lead to map manipulation for partisan gain.
Alito said racially polarized voting patterns in Alabama and some
other states "may be due to ideology and not have anything to do
with race."
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"It may be that Black voters and white voters prefer different
candidates now because they have different ideas about what the
government should do," Alito said.
Other conservative justices seemed skeptical about a second
Black-majority district, but signaled there might not be appetite
for a sweeping ruling upending the court's Voting Rights Act
precedents.
Conservative Justice Brett Kavanaugh focused on whether the proposed
districts complied with traditional redistricting principles
including that they are geographically compact.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)
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