Alabama activists press voting rights in U.S. Supreme Court showdown
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[September 26, 2022]
By Andrew Chung
(Reuters) - When Evan Milligan, a voting
rights activist and organizer, scans his hometown of Montgomery, the
capital of the state of Alabama, he sees a tale of two cities.
On one side of Montgomery, Black voters like him have been placed in the
only one of Alabama's seven U.S. House of Representatives districts
where they represent the majority. On the other side, the city's
remaining Black voters reside in a different House district where they
are vastly outnumbered by white voters.
Given Alabama's racially polarized voting patterns, Milligan said this
new congressional map devised by the Republican-controlled state
legislature realistically lets Black voters elect their preferred
candidate in just one district. He believes Alabama's Black population
is surely large enough to allow for two.
Milligan sued alongside other plaintiffs to challenge the map in a case
now headed for arguments at the U.S. Supreme Court on Oct. 4.
"We have worked very hard over the course of this country's history,
specifically in terms of the Black people who live here, to expand
access to democracy and to expand voting to all of the people who make
up our communities," Milligan told Reuters. "Why are we choosing this
moment to step back from our traditions that have expanded access to the
ballot?"
The plaintiffs accused the legislature of designing the map to dilute
the clout of Black voters by confining their power to a single district
even though Alabama's population is 27% Black, in violation of the
Voting Rights Act. That landmark 1965 federal law prohibiting racial
discrimination in voting was enacted at a time when Southern states
including Alabama enforced policies blocking Black people from casting
ballots.
A lower court agreed with the plaintiffs.
The state of Alabama's appeal defending the map is set to be argued on
the second day of a new nine-month term for the Supreme Court, which has
a 6-3 conservative majority. U.S. conservatives have long expressed
skepticism toward racial preferences in American society designed to
counter past or ongoing discrimination.
The eventual ruling could cripple the Voting Rights Act, whose passage
was fueled by historic marches for Black voting rights and the violent
response by local authorities in Alabama from Selma to Montgomery. The
Supreme Court already undermined the law in a 2013 ruling in another
case from Alabama.
EQUAL PROTECTION
Alabama has said that drawing a map that would satisfy the plaintiffs
would require it to deliberately maximize the clout of Black voters,
which it argues would amount to racial discrimination in violation of
the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment guarantee of equal protection
under the law.
Democratic President Joe Biden's administration and a number of voting
rights groups are supporting the plaintiffs. Administration lawyers and
some scholars who have studied the issue have said a ruling favoring
Alabama also would threaten certain electoral districts in other states
- for the U.S. House and state legislatures - drawn to give minorities
an equal opportunity to elect their preferred candidates.
The case centers on a Voting Rights Act provision, called Section 2,
aimed at countering voting laws that result in racial bias even absent
racist intent.
Alabama, represented by Republican Attorney General Steve Marshall,
contends it paid no attention to race in drawing its map, adding that if
Section 2 requires consideration of race, it would be unconstitutional.
Alabama is not required to "confer maximum political advantage to
particular voters based on race," the state said in a legal filing.
American Civil Liberties Union lawyer Davin Rosborough, who is helping
represent plaintiffs including Milligan, said the practical impact of
Alabama's position "would be potentially very drastic" as it would
"remove race from a statute that was crafted to consider race and how
states are using all sorts of practices that can dilute minority voting
power."
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Evan Milligan, executive director of
Alabama Forward, a voting rights coalition, and who is the lead
plaintiff in a major case set for oral argument at the U.S. Supreme
Court on Oct. 4, 2022 that could curtail the power of the federal
Voting Rights Act to remedy racial discrimination in voting, is
pictured in this undated handout image. Evan Milligan/Handout via
REUTERS
Conservative states and groups already have successfully prodded the
Supreme Court to limit the Voting Rights Act's scope. Its 2013
ruling struck down a key part that determined which states with
histories of racial discrimination needed federal approval to change
voting laws. In a 2021 ruling endorsing Republican-backed Arizona
voting restrictions, the justices made it harder to prove violations
under Section 2.
The justices this term will also decide a separate voting-related
case involving North Carolina electoral maps and a bid by
Republicans there to bar state courts from scrutinizing laws passed
by state legislatures governing federal elections.
A SETBACK FOR ALABAMA
In Alabama, several lawsuits, including Milligan's, challenged its
congressional map as artificially diluting the electoral power of
Black voters by packing them into one district far beyond a majority
and spreading the rest across other districts in numbers too small
to elect a representative of their choice.
A panel of three federal judges in January sided with Milligan and
other plaintiffs, deciding that the Republican-drawn map unlawfully
disadvantaged Black voters and ordering the legislature to redraw it
with a second House district where Black voters could form a
majority or close to it.
The judges wrote that they considered numerous factors including the
close association between race and voting patterns, Alabama's
history of discrimination and how politics sometimes involves
"racial appeals" such as how Alabama Republican U.S. congressman Mo
Brooks "has repeatedly claimed that Democrats are waging a 'war on
whites.'"
At Alabama's request, the Supreme Court froze that ruling, letting
the contested map be used in elections while litigation proceeds.
Conservative Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court's three
liberal justices in dissent, but previously has voted to limit the
Voting Rights Act's reach.
Some of Alabama's supporters have told the Supreme Court that the
challenges to the map are merely attempts to help the Democratic
Party win elections, as Black voters overwhelmingly favor Democratic
candidates.
"This is party politics, and they're looking for two Democrat
districts, not minority districts," Alabama Republican Party
Chairman John Wahl said in an interview. "We don't want to look at
people based on race or the color of their skin. We want to look at
Alabama as one people, one voice, and draw the lines based on
communities rather than any individual race."
Electoral districts are redrawn each decade to reflect population
changes as measured by a national census, last taken in 2020. In
most states, such redistricting is done by the party in power, which
can lead to map manipulation for partisan gain. In a major 2019
ruling, the Supreme Court barred federal judges from curbing the
practice, known as partisan gerrymandering. That ruling did not
preclude court scrutiny of racially discriminatory gerrymandering.
A decision in the Alabama case is due by next June.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York; Editing by Will Dunham and
Scott Malone)
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