MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) 鈥 Lawmakers in several southern states are meeting this week to consider plans that could upend their congressional primaries and redraw U.S. House districts ahead of the November elections, as Republicans move quickly to capitalize on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that weakened a key provision of the .
A special legislative session responding to the court ruling began Monday in Alabama and is to start Tuesday in Tennessee. Louisiana lawmakers, who already are in session, also are looking at how to redraw their congressional districts.
Civil rights activists have countered with rallies, protests and lawsuits challenging the new redistricting efforts. Several hundred protesters gathered outside the Alabama Statehouse on Monday, carrying signs declaring 鈥淣o new map鈥 and 鈥淲e fight back! Black Voters Matter.鈥
Last week鈥檚 striking down a majority-Black congressional district in Louisiana has unleashed 鈥渁 wave of nefarious actions鈥 across states that threatens to disenfranchise Black voters, Alanah Odoms, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana, said Monday.
Trump on Sunday encouraged more states to , saying in a social media post that Republicans could gain 20 House seats. But South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster鈥檚 office on Monday said the Republican would not call a special session to redraw the state鈥檚 only Democratic-occupied House seat.
The high court’s ruling said Louisiana relied too heavily on race when creating a second Black majority House district as it attempted to comply with the Voting Rights Act. The ruling significantly altered a decades-old understanding of the law and provided grounds for Republicans in various states to try to eliminate majority-Black districts that have elected Democrats to Congress.
As Republicans forge ahead, U.S. House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries touted a redistricting effort in his home state of New York. But that isn鈥檛 expected to result in a new map until 2028. To adopt new districts, New York lawmakers must pass a constitutional amendment twice in two years, and voters would also have to approve it.
A national redistricting battle is expanding
Legislative voting districts typically are redrawn only once a decade, after a census, to account for population changes. But Trump urged Texas Republicans last year to redraw U.S. House districts to give the party an advantage. Democrats in California responded by doing the same, and then other states joined in.
On Monday, Florida became the eighth state to enact ahead of midterm elections, as Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis announced he had signed a redrawn map passed by lawmakers last week that could help Republicans win as many as four additional House seats. The new map was immediately challenged in court as a partisan gerrymander that violates a state constitutional provision against drawing districts that favor one political party over another.
All told, Republicans think they could gain as many as 13 seats from new congressional districts in five states, while Democrats think they could pick up as many as 10 seats from new districts adopted in three states. The newly proposed redistricting in southern states could add to the Republicans’ tally.
After last week’s Supreme Court decision, Louisiana moved quickly to delay its May 16 congressional primary to allow time for lawmakers to approve new U.S. House districts. But Republicans have yet to unveil their planned revisions to district lines.
Democrats and civil rights groups have filed several lawsuits challenging the election suspension, including another suit filed Monday in federal court. They are encouraging people in Louisiana 鈥 where early voting already is underway 鈥 to go ahead and cast votes in the congressional primaries in case courts later allow them to be counted.
Alabama plans for a potential primary change
Rather than canceling the state’s May 19 primaries, Republican Gov. Kay Ivey called legislators into a special session to consider contingency plans for special primary elections in hopes the U.S. Supreme Court will let Alabama switch congressional maps ahead of the November midterms.
Federal judges previously ordered Alabama to use a court-selected map 鈥 with a second district that has a substantial number of Black voters 鈥 until a new map is drafted after the 2030 Census. Alabama appealed that decision and has asked the court, in light of the Louisiana ruling, to let it revert to a 2023 map drawn by Republican state lawmakers. That map would substantially alter the district now represented by Rep. Shomari Figures, a Black Democrat.
Redistricting opponents rallied Monday across the street from the historic Alabama Capitol, where the Confederacy was formed in 1861 and where the Rev. Martin Luther King addressed a crowd of thousands after the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights march.
鈥淢uch blood, sweat and tears was shed in an effort for us to gain the right to vote,鈥 said Sheyann Webb-Christburg, who as a child participated in the 1965 Bloody Sunday voting rights march in Selma. 鈥淚n 2026, there are still people who are still not exercising that right to vote, and we are still fighting today, even in an effort to keep our right to vote.鈥
Tennessee pushes for a new House map
In Tennessee, Republican Gov. Bill Lee announced a special session starting Tuesday for the GOP-controlled Legislature to break up the state鈥檚 one Democratic-held House district, centered on the majority-Black city of Memphis.
The move comes after a pressure campaign by Trump and other Republicans to reconfigure the state鈥檚 9th Congressional District. Previous precedent in Voting Rights Act cases had prevented Republicans from spreading the district鈥檚 Democratic voters among neighboring conservative districts and making it winnable. But the law may no longer be an impediment.
鈥淲e owe it to Tennesseans to ensure our congressional districts accurately reflect the will of Tennessee voters,鈥 Lee said.
Clergy members concerned about plans to split Memphis鈥 congressional district came together Monday to denounce the move.
鈥淭his latest attempt at redistricting is not just about lines on a map, it is about misrepresentation,鈥 said the Rev. Earle Fisher, a pastor at the Abyssinian Missionary Baptist Church and the founder of Up the Vote 901, referring to the Memphis area code. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about whether the voices of Black people in this state will be heard or hidden.鈥
The candidate qualifying period in Tennessee ended in March, and the primary election is scheduled for Aug. 6.
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Loller reported from Nashville and Lieb from Jefferson City, Missouri. Associated Press writers Jack Brook in New Orleans, Anthony Izaguirre in New York and Nicholas Riccardi in Denver contributed to this report.
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