disenfranchising Black voters

~~~~~~~

Rigging voting to minimize minority influence in an election by voting.

“The New Jim Crow”

The initial decision striking down the maps was authored by District Judge Anna Manasco, a Trump appointee. She was joined by another Trump appointee from Alabama, District Judge Terry Moorer, as well as Judge Stanley Marcus, a Reagan appointee to the Eleventh Circuit. You get the point:

the maps were bad. They went beyond politics. They were about race.

You can see it in the map itself: a little starfish with skinny arms reaching out to pull Black voters from Birmingham, Montgomery, and just north of Mobile into a single “packed” district, while the rest of Alabama’s Black population was “cracked” across the remaining six districts, leaving them with no meaningful opportunity to elect candidates of their choice. It was classic illegal gerrymandering. The Supreme Court agreed in an opinion authored by Chief Justice Roberts, who was joined by Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson, and, on the key portion of the ruling that secured the victory for Black voters, by Justice Kavanaugh. The discriminatory map was struck down.

When the legislature finally began drawing new maps, it disregarded the Supreme Court’s order. Lawmakers produced a map that largely preserved the status quo, maintaining only a single Black opportunity district. The three-judge panel in Birmingham was not amused. “We are deeply troubled that the State enacted a map that the State readily admits does not provide the remedy we said federal law requires,” they wrote. The court removed the legislature from the mapmaking process and, after appointing a special master, assumed responsibility for drawing new maps that complied with the Voting Rights Act.

Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall explained, “Defendants respectfully request a ruling quickly. Alabama is set to hold primary elections on May 19, and Governor Ivey has called the Alabama Legislature into a special session this week ‘to consider legislation to provide for a special primary election for electing members of the United States House of Representatives.’” Yet neither Purcell nor the principle underlying it—that courts should not change election rules too close to an election—was mentioned even once in Alabama’s 10-page motion. Not once.

The MAGA hivemind got to work quickly. They too ignored the history that necessitated the Voting Rights Act, equating Alabama’s current maps, the ones the Supreme Court said were required by law, with discrimination against the white, Republican Voters, who currently hold five of Alabama’s seven seats in the House of Representatives.

HomeSchoolMom on X explained that “democrats forced a racist district onto the state in 2023.”

Damnocracy argued against the existence of the two Black opportunity districts the Supreme Court required Alabama to create, calling them “special racially gerrymandered black district’s [sic].”

The Alabama House wasted no time passing a bill designed to roll back Black representation. HB1 requires the governor to call a special primary this summer if the courts lift the injunction barring the state from using the discriminatory maps that had previously been struck down. Alabama’s regular primaries are currently scheduled for May 19. HB1 would require the state to hold a second set of primaries instead.

Jim Crow was the system of state and local segregation laws, customs, and social norms that governed much of the South from roughly 1877 through the mid-1960s. Black Americans were segregated into to inferior facilities, while their voting rights and other civil rights were systematically denied. Now, the Supreme Court has made a sudden about-face, permitting conduct it only recently described as unlawful.

In Milligan, Chief Justice Roberts wrote about that period of time and the mere “parchment promise” that the Fifteenth Amendment, which provides that “[t]he right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged . . . on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude,” was reduced to. He wrote that things changed in 1965, with passage of the Voting Rights Act.

As we know all too well, progress in this country is not linear. Gains that are won can also be reversed. That is what the Court set in motion last week in Callais. It will now fall to the Court to tell Alabama and other states no, unless it intends to continue eroding the hard-won progress this country has made on race and civil rights.

The Court could invoke the Purcell principle to do so for this election cycle, and failing to do so would be plainly hypocritical. But it must also take the longer view. While Callais revised the test used to determine whether maps are lawful by rejecting evidence of racially discriminatory effects in how they are drawn, what we are now seeing from legislatures across the South goes beyond mere partisanship and toward intentional discrimination.

The panel concluded: “Accordingly, we find that…the Legislature acted with discriminatory intent when it passed the 2023 Plan. We see no factor, or even material part of a factor, that tilts in favor of the State.”

It’s a ringing condemnation and certainly gives the courts every reason to refuse Attorney General Marshall’s motion to permit the state to restore its old, discriminatory maps. The courts might even choose to make an example of Alabama to draw some of the sting out of Callais, an acknowledgment that even in its wake, some conduct by state actors still goes too far.

But the problem is that it is not just Alabama. The last decade has shown how easy it is to lose progress. It is far too easy to go backward.

If you live in a more enlightened part of the country, in a state where lawmakers are not rushing back into session to make sure politicians get to pick their voters instead of allowing voters to choose their representatives, please do not ignore what is happening in the South. The threat to the entire country is real. It may be more obvious down here right now, but in the hands of a wannabe dictator, a president once again openly floating an unconstitutional third term, it could spread very quickly.

The issue, as with gerrymandering, is what Republicans will try to do, and what courts will allow.

So, as you look at Alabama and other Southern states reintroducing racist gerrymanders, don’t think it can’t happen anywhere else. The Supreme Court has changed course. States can too. Trump isn’t building a ballroom for the next guy. It’s up to us to hold the line.

Thanks for being here with me at Civil Discourse. Your support makes it possible to invest the time and resources it takes to research and write the newsletter.

We’re in this together,

Joyce