The Supreme Court's Alabama Redistricting Ruling Looks Like a Holding Pattern, Not a Power Grab
Contrary to some of the more breathless reactions, it doesn't suggest a conspiracy to help Republicans win elections by disenfranchising black voters.

The Supreme Court on Monday waded once more into the high-stakes battle over congressional redistricting—but the decision doesn't seem to be the partisan power grab that it is being portrayed as.
In a 5–4 ruling, the justices issued a temporary stay that blocked a lower federal court from ordering Alabama to redraw its new congressional districts on the grounds that the map disadvantaged minority voters. Though the Supreme Court indicated it is willing to consider the case on the merits at a later time, the immediate outcome of Monday's order is that Alabama's districts are likely to be used, as drawn by state legislators, in this year's midterm elections.
With five of the high court's six Republican-appointed justices in the majority (Chief Justice John Roberts was the lone exception), the ruling immediately set off a firestorm of criticism from court watchers who believe the conservative jurists are trying to stack the deck for Republicans. "This is another major blow to the Voting Rights Act that will likely preserve Alabama's current racist gerrymander," wrote a breathless Mark Joseph Stern, staff writer for Slate, on Twitter. Later, he called the ruling "catastrophic" and claimed that "it is hard to overstate how lawless the Supreme Court's order is." "Black Alabama voters just got screwed by the Supreme Court," is how CNN framed a segment on the decision. And there's nothing subtle about how most media outlets covered the story as a political win for Republicans.
Maybe that's all true, but it's hard to see how the text of the actual decision supports some of those overheated takes. There are at least two good reasons to not overreact to this decision.
First, this is likely not the Supreme Court's final say in the matter. In fact, justices on both sides of Monday's ruling indicated they'd like to take a closer look at Alabama's districts and the competing claims about whether the state should have two majority-minority districts, as the lower federal court had determined.
As is usual with simple orders like this, there was no majority opinion released by the court. But Justice Brett Kavanaugh authored a concurring opinion to explain why the majority voted to issue the stay on the lower court ruling. Importantly, he leaves the door very much open to a full review. "The stay order does not make or signal any change to voting rights law," he wrote. "The stay order is not a ruling on the merits, but instead simply stays the District Court's injunction pending a ruling on the merits." (Emphasis in the original.)
The issue, from Kavanaugh's perspective, is all about timing. There is an established precedent that federal courts ought not to intervene in state election disputes immediately before an election, he notes. Alabama's congressional primary elections are scheduled for May 24, but candidates are due to begin filing petitions to get on the ballot next month. That means there's not enough time for the Supreme Court to have a hearing on the merits and for new district maps to be drawn (if they are deemed necessary) afterward.
Without adequate time for a full review, the high court is effectively left to balance two competing sets of harms. On one hand, there is the potential harm that comes from holding an election with district lines that unfairly disadvantage black voters in Alabama. On the other, there's the potential harm of leaving candidates, voters, and state officials with an unclear idea of what the district lines actually are in the months leading up to the election.
Certainly, neither is an ideal situation. And allegations of racial gerrymandering ought to be taken seriously—a key part of the Voting Rights Act is specifically meant to prevent states from drawing districts to disenfranchise black voters, as voting rights advocates say Alabama has done.
But the case against Alabama's new districts is hardly clear-cut. On the map approved by state lawmakers, there would be six likely Republican districts and one majority-black, likely Democratic district. What you think about that split probably depends on your own political leanings, but the operative question in the federal lawsuit is whether state lawmakers in Alabama (a state where about 27 percent of the population is black) should be required by federal courts to draw a second majority-minority district.
Advocates for that outcome have a good point about how the 7th district is "packed" with black voters—it includes Birmingham and much of the state's rural "Black Belt"—in such a way that might dilute the black vote in other districts. But the best argument against a forced redrawing of districts is that Alabama's new map looks almost identical to the one that was in place from 2011 through last year. And, for that matter, it's nearly identical to the one used for the decade before that too.
Certainly, it's possible that the longstanding status quo of a single majority-minority district is a racist gerrymander—or that it violates the Voting Rights Act. But that's not obvious.
"The Voting Rights Act claim against Alabama was not that strong," Andy Craig, a staff writer who covers voting rights and election issues for the libertarian Cato Institute, tells Reason. "It's theoretically possible to draw a second majority-black district, but just barely and only at the extreme expense of other traditional criteria like compactness."
These are the same tricky questions—what matters more, the race of voters or the compactness of a district—that are poorly suited to courtrooms even when there is time for a full hearing of the issues.
Regardless, it was not, as some coverage of the case has suggested, Republican state lawmakers who took radical action here. It was the federal district court, which on the eve of an election overturned a map that is not materially different from the maps that have been used in every congressional election for the past few cycles. Were those maps racially discriminatory too? If so, why weren't they challenged?
Again, it's definitely possible that the federal district court is correct. And it's definitely possible that a full hearing by the Supreme Court on the merits of the case will confirm that.
But, for now, the Supreme Court was in a difficult spot. By not issuing a stay of the lower court ruling on Monday, the justices would have been signaling that federal courts everywhere were free to substitute their own judgment for that of the legitimate redistricting authorities in the states before this year's midterms. That's the second reason why the Supreme Court likely voted the way it did in this case.
And that skepticism of substituting federal judicial authority for state authority in redistricting cases is well established in Supreme Court precedent. In its most recent major ruling on gerrymandering, the court ultimately decided that there was limited scope for federal courts in these disputes. "Excessive partisanship in districting leads to results that reasonably seem unjust," Roberts wrote in 2019. But that, he added, "does not mean that the solution lies with the federal judiciary." Even though the Voting Rights Act does give federal judges greater jurisdiction over claims of racial gerrymandering, Monday's stay is not a radical departure from the court's history of deferring to state lawmakers as the legitimate (if often self-serving) authority in drawing districts.
Indeed, this is exactly what Stern and others who decried Monday's ruling should want. Imagine what would happen if supposedly partisan, Republican-favoring federal judges were empowered to substitute their own judgment about what congressional districts should look like.
I suppose it's possible that all of this is a smoke screen. If you want to believe that the Supreme Court is chiefly concerned with throwing elections to Republicans, then maybe you can convince yourself that Kavanaugh's concern about the timing of the Alabama primary election is a convenient excuse and that the Supreme Court's decadeslong skepticism about wading into gerrymandering issues was a clever ploy meant to provide cover to the GOP in exactly this situation—just so Republicans can win six congressional seats in Alabama this year instead of five. Yeah, maybe that's the grand plan.
Or maybe we should take the justices at their word and wait to see what happens when the Supreme Court revisits this topic in more detail—something that both Kavanaugh and Roberts, in his dissenting opinion, said it likely would—before hyperventilating about the "lawless" court.
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I wonder what their comments on NY's recent redistricting map is.
The Democrat's absolute hypocrisy on gerrymandering is truly something to behold. Their situational ethics is gross, but they will not be called out on it.
Well duh. Both teams like it when they can use it to benefit their team.
This could be an opportunity for a third party - say, I don't know, maybe Libertarians - to advocate for a popular idea - redistricting reform - that neither major party is willing to touch in earnest.
Hey dummy, I know ignorance is your forte, but reform is often championed by the left as a means to actually advantage them.
It's not hypocrisy. It's playing by the rules. We offered to change the rules. We tried it in federal court and Congress but the pieces of shit who represent you went out of their way to keep gerrymandering. The rightwing judges had to make shit up to save gerrymandering. I'm sure they'll make some more shit up to shut it down should it ever advantage Democrats.
Now you're defending hypocrisy and blaming it on Republicans. Do you have no shame?
You must let people walk all over you.
That doesn't even fucking make any sense. Did that sound smart when you posted it? LOL
And the Republicans have been playing by the rules the Democrats had followed for decades. The only point reforming gerrymandering became Democrat issue was when they lost control of a majority of state legislatures. I have been paying attention to this issue for decades. The Democrats are not standing on any principles and are demanding the court gerrymander in their favor.
NY passed a bill to require non partisan districting.
They then decided to not go along with it.
So, spare me if we do not trust you to do something you're made to when you won't do what you CHOSE to pass.
But he rose to the occasion.
Should there be a law that presumes voters should vote along racial lines, and that any race should have districts set aside for them? Is that really a law that should exist?
>>(Chief Justice John Roberts was the lone exception)
this part isn't necessary anymore it has become 'n'.
It's really no-lose situation for left wingers. If they win the court is effectively ruling that federal law mandates districts be drawn in whatever way is most advantageous to Democrats. If they "lose" the court case they get years of news cycles about racist Republicans keeping blacks from voting. Idiots like Stern don't care what the underlying facts are, they only care whether the outcome can be used to drive hatred which increases partisan rancor.
It's almost like the suit(s) were
Heads I win (more majority minority [and presumably (D)] districts).
Tails you lose (PR campaign fodder for fund raising and outrage peddling)."
So the Left wingers are arguing that Alabama's districts should be gerrymandered to create two majority Democrat districts. If the only way to create that second district is to violate the rules of compactness is by definition a gerrymander.
If there is a requirement to create one majority-minority district, then you have to bring most black dominated areas under one district since blacks only make a bit over a quarter of the state's population.
What's so special about space? Nothing. You dismiss concerns about ensuring partisan proportionality or making sure black Americans are represented (per federal law) but you think "compactedness" is some scared cow. It's ridiculous.
*compactness
There is no rule that each ethnic group be equally represented. We don't divide up Irish Catholic districts and Lutheran Norwegian districts.
My state district contains large portions of the reservation. So are you saying my state should make each reservation its own district and the rest of the county that doesn't contain reservation land should be somehow absorbed into another white majority district, one that we have little geographic relationship to? Just to meet some racial quotas? Your argument completely disregards the concept of geographic compactness.
Actually there is a plethora of research that shows majority-minority districts actually results in less representation for minorities, as they tend to be such a minority of elected representatives, that their is no need for the rest of the representatives to take their needs into account. The research is fairly clear that the policy you are pushing actually results in less representation for minorities, but hey that tends to be the case for all progressive policies, they sound good but actually harm the very people you claim to want to help.
It's simple human nature, if my district has a large minority group within it, even if they don't make up a majority, I can't afford to ignore them. If my district has little to no minorities in it, because all the minorities were gerrymandered into a single district, I have no reason to consider their needs. So you actually support disenfranchising minority voices, which shouldn't surprise anyone, as that tends to be the progressive MO. Claim to be for minorities while you are actually hurting them with your policies.
You don't know what you're talking about. Here's a suumary of federal voting rights law:
"Before the Civil War the United States Constitution did not provide specific protections for voting. Qualifications for voting were matters which neither the Constitution nor federal laws governed. At that time, although a few northern states permitted a small number of free black men to register and vote, slavery and restrictive state laws and practices led the franchise to be exercised almost exclusively by white males.
Shortly after the end of the Civil War Congress enacted the Military Reconstruction Act of 1867, which allowed former Confederate States to be readmitted to the Union if they adopted new state constitutions that permitted universal male suffrage. The 14th Amendment, which conferred citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States, was ratified in 1868.
In 1870 the 15th Amendment was ratified, which provided specifically that the right to vote shall not be denied or abridged on the basis of race, color or previous condition of servitude. This superseded state laws that had directly prohibited black voting. Congress then enacted the Enforcement Act of 1870, which contained criminal penalties for interference with the right to vote, and the Force Act of 1871, which provided for federal election oversight.
As a result, in the former Confederate States, where new black citizens in some cases comprised outright or near majorities of the eligible voting population, hundreds of thousands -- perhaps one million -- recently-freed slaves registered to vote. Black candidates began for the first time to be elected to state, local and federal offices and to play a meaningful role in their governments.
Disfranchisement
The extension of the franchise to black citizens was strongly resisted. Among others, the Ku Klux Klan, the Knights of the White Camellia, and other terrorist organizations attempted to prevent the 15th Amendment from being enforced by violence and intimidation. Two decisions in 1876 by the Supreme Court narrowed the scope of enforcement under the Enforcement Act and the Force Act, and, together with the end of Reconstruction marked by the removal of federal troops after the Hayes-Tilden Compromise of 1877, resulted in a climate in which violence could be used to depress black voter turnout and fraud could be used to undo the effect of lawfully cast votes.
Once whites regained control of the state legislatures using these tactics, a process known as "Redemption," they used gerrymandering of election districts to further reduce black voting strength and minimize the number of black elected officials. In the 1890s, these states began to amend their constitutions and to enact a series of laws intended to re-establish and entrench white political supremacy.
Such disfranchising laws included poll taxes, literacy tests, vouchers of "good character," and disqualification for "crimes of moral turpitude." These laws were "color-blind" on their face, but were designed to exclude black citizens disproportionately by allowing white election officials to apply the procedures selectively. Other laws and practices, such as the "white primary,", attempted to evade the 15th Amendment by allowing "private" political parties to conduct elections and establish qualifications for their members.
As a result of these efforts, in the former Confederate states nearly all black citizens were disenfranchised and removed from by 1910. The process of restoring the rights taken stolen by these tactics would take many decades.
Attacks on Disfranchisement Before the Voting Rights Act
In Guinn v. United States, 238 U.S. 347 (1915), the Supreme Court held that voter registration requirements containing "grandfather clauses,", which made voter registration in part dependent upon whether the applicant was descended from men enfranchised before enactment of the 15th Amendment violated that amendment. The Supreme Court found the Oklahoma law was adopted in order to give whites, who might otherwise have been disfranchised by the state's literacy test, a way of qualifying to vote that was not available to blacks. In 1944, the Supreme Court held that the Texas "white primary" violated the 15th Amendment. Smith v. Allwright, 321 U.S. 649 (1944). The Southern states experimented with numerous additional restrictions to limit black participation in politics, many of which were struck down by federal courts over the next decade.
Congress passed legislation in 1957, 1960, and 1964 that contained voting-related provisions. The 1957 Act created the Civil Rights Division within the Department of Justice and the Commission on Civil Rights; the Attorney General was given authority to intervene in and institute lawsuits seeking injunctive relief against violations of the 15th Amendment. The 1960 Act permitted federal courts to appoint voting referees to conduct voter registration following a judicial finding of voting discrimination. The 1964 Act also contained several relatively minor voting-related provisions. Although court decisions and these laws made it more difficult, at least in theory, for states to keep all of their black citizens disenfranchised, the strategy of litigation on a case-by-case basis proved to be of very limited success in the jurisdictions were sued and it did not prompt voluntary compliance among jurisdictions that had not been sued. Literacy tests, poll taxes, and other formal and informal practices combined to keep black registration rates minimal in Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi, and well below white registration rates in the others.
Faced with the prospect that black voter registration could not be suppressed forever, however, some states began to change political boundaries and election structures so as to minimize the impact of black re-enfranchisement. In 1960, the Supreme Court struck down one such effort, in which the state legislature had gerrymandered the city boundaries of Tuskegee, Alabama, so as to remove all but a handful of the city's black registered voters. The Supreme Court ruled that by doing so Alabama had violated the 15th Amendment. Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U.S. 339 (1960).
The "Reapportionment Revolution"
In the early 1960s, the Supreme Court also overcame its reluctance to apply the Constitution to unfair redistricting practices. Prior to 1962, the United States Supreme Court had declined to decide constitutional challenges to legislative apportionment schemes, on the grounds that such "political questions" were not within the federal courts' jurisdiction. In Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186 (1962), however, the Supreme Court recognized that grossly malapportioned state legislative districts could seriously undervalue -- or dilute -- the voting strength of the residents of overpopulated districts while overvaluing the voting strength of residents of underpopulated districts. The Supreme Court found that such malapportionment could be challenged in federal court under the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.
In later cases including Gray v. Sanders, 372 U.S. 368 (1963), Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. 533 (1964), and Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U.S. 1 (1964), the Supreme Court established the one-person, one-vote principle. Because in many states malapportioned legislative districts had resulted in sparsely-populated rural counties having a much greater share of their state's political power than their state's population, correcting this imbalance led to dramatic realignments of political power in several states. In Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U.S. 433 (1965), the Supreme Court suggested, but did not hold, that certain types of apportionment might unconstitutionally dilute the voting strength of racial minorities."
https://www.justice.gov/crt/introduction-federal-voting-rights-laws
None of that has anything to do with majority-minority districts. That has to do with Democrats making sure black votes don't count. Which is the same thing majority-minority districts do now. So actually, I stand corrected, you just proved my point that you are doing the same thing Democrats have always done, disenfranchise blacks by making sure their vote only counts in one or two districts because of segregation.
oh the TLDR was "Democrats fuck blacks over".
Glad I skipped it, have seen that story a million times already.
What's special about compactness is impartiality. In a system wherein elected officials are ostensibly representative of all of their constituents, drawing geographically compact districts shows you're drawing maps irrespective of who lives where.
Drawing districts based on any other metric opens avenues for corruption, as the criteria for who lives in what district no longer has any bearing on anything except the inclinations of the person drawing the maps.
You're welcome, idiot.
Partisan proportionality is not a legitimate concern. Guaranteeing a racial outcome is a perverse goal. Compactness is actually considered a just guideline for determining a fair districting map.
During recent decades, Democrats (the vast majority of whom live in or near cities) have engaged in far more egregious gerrymandering of State Legislative and US House districts than have Republicans (the vast majority of whom live in rural areas, exurbs and suburbs).
Just look at the Democrat drawn district maps in NY, CA, IL, MD, and other Democrat controlled states.
Here in PA, the GOP controlled General Assembly created (per our state Constitution) PA's US House (and state legislative) districts in 2011, which were used in 2012, 2014 and 2016).
But in 2017, in response to lawsuits by Democrats, the partisan PA Supreme Court struck down the General Assembly's districts and unconstitutionally gerrymandered there own district map, which gave Democrats three new US Reps in the 2018 election.
Looks like the Democrats are playing the same litigation strategy again to encourage the partisan Democrat PA Supreme Court to once again unconstitutionally gerrymander PA's US House district map to give Democrats even more seats.
Pennsylvania's governor vetoed that trash Republican rigged map. That garbage was never law. The courts will have to settle it and these judges were elected by the good people of Pennsylvania.
My bad, the state court did overturn an enacted map in 2017. This time there was a veto of the map so the courts are unquestionably the place to resolve the dispute.
You only want the courts to decide because it benefits your side. You are such a partisan piece of shit it isn't even funny.
The PA congressional delegation ratio closely marches the vote ratio. So the maps are what they should be, giving neither side an advantage.
You cant have a "X happened" event without the media making it about blacks being disproportionately affected. Its a law of media
I thought it was ok to make it hard and confusing to vote? It was just part of the game of politics. No big deal. That's how these same trash hack rightwing corrupt to bone judges tell it when they're excusing gerrymandering, closing polling stations, purging voter rolls, throwing up obstacles designed to suppress turnout, and restricting voting rights generally. But now they're clutching their pearls because the fucking candidates will have to take a second look at what numbered district they wind up in and protecting that crap is more important than protecting the civil rights of a million black Americans and upholding a federal law, a civil rights law no less. It's so obviously a lawless powergrab by these fucking pieces of shit. They don't give a rat's ass about "about the timing of the Alabama primary election".
Fuck off with your stale, hyperpartisan talking points.
LOL, add that ridiculous screed to your application for work at MSDNC, dullard.
A three judge panel with two Trump judges ruled the map violated the VRA based on existing law. The Legislature passed the map in a week so they could make new maps quickly. This is absolutely a SCOTUS attack on voting rights. This is in no way keeping the status quo since the ruling was based on existing law.
Another progressive wanting to disenfranchise blacks by segregating them into majority-minority districts do they have no influence in other districts. It's is so self evident. All you care about is appearing to help minorities to keep them on your side while insuring that they have no actual power.
Here's a simple solution that the Race Industry® would approve. At the polls have separate voting booths labeled White and Colored. Voters designated white by the government vote for candidates in the districts reserved for them. Candidates of all races allowed. Voters designated POC vote for the candidates in the two majority-minority districts reserved in perpetuity for them. White candidates need not apply. Voter segregation today . . . voter segregation tomorrow . . . voter segregation forever!
I'm confused. Are you "disenfranchised" by living in a district where most people aren't the same race as you?
From the decision which issued the preliminary injunction:
Clearly, *not* analyzing race is an indication that you're improperly considering race!
See, when the court orders you to make a majority-Black district, you have to be careful not to get that district all the way up to 55.3% Black. That's clearly just excessive. You must toe an exact line of just barely majority Black.
See, one of the factors we use in determining whether the courts need to draw a second majority-Black district for you is whether you draw a second majority-Black district.
And finally, of course we need to do this because Trump won.
If democrats were actually willing to enfranchise black voters they would be demanding the number of US reps be increased by at least an order of magnitude. That would significantly dilute their power however and so it won't be done.