Alabama pushes to reinstate old congressional maps after Callais ruling

In response to the Supreme Court's Callais v. Louisiana decision curtailing Voting Rights Act protections (as covered in this series), Alabama lawmakers have begun a special session to reinstate 2023 congressional maps if courts lift a prior ban. Critics say the move would undermine Black representation.

Alabama's Republican-controlled legislature convened the special session after the April 29, 2026, Callais ruling limited race-based considerations in redistricting. Federal courts had struck down the 2023 maps for diluting Black votes—Alabama's population is over 25% Black—leading to new maps that created a second Black Democrat-held seat. The courts banned redistricting until after 2030, but the state attorney general has asked the Supreme Court to lift that injunction.

Republican Rep. Chris Pringle's bill would revert to the old maps only if courts approve, potentially triggering a special election. The May 5 primary proceeds as scheduled. With a GOP supermajority, passage is likely, though civil rights groups promise challenges.

In House hearings, Democrat Napoleon Bracy Jr. grilled Pringle: 'Back then, that map was deemed not in the best interests of Black people... now all of a sudden... the same racist map... will come back to life and not be racist anymore?' Pringle responded: 'All this bill does is provide an opportunity for the citizens... to cast their vote for the candidate that they're choosing.' Leaders frame it as honoring voters, not race.

Public testimony opposed unanimously, calling it a civil rights setback. Outside, Rep. Terri Sewell led 'We won't go back' chants: 'This is about whether communities like ours can elect leaders who understand their lived experience.'

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Illustration of the Supreme Court with maps of redrawn districts in Louisiana and Alabama for a news article.
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Supreme Court speeds up redistricting changes for southern states

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The U.S. Supreme Court has issued a series of recent orders allowing Louisiana and Alabama to redraw congressional maps that eliminate Black opportunity districts. The rulings came in the Louisiana v. Callais case and related Alabama litigation. They mark a sharp shift in the court's approach to voting rights enforcement under the Voting Rights Act.

In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's April 29 ruling in Callais v. Louisiana—which struck down a second majority-Black congressional district as racial gerrymandering—civil rights advocates in the Deep South have condemned the decision as a threat to Black representation. States including Alabama, Tennessee, and Louisiana are redrawing maps, prompting vows of lawsuits and midterm mobilization.

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Following the U.S. Supreme Court's April 29, 2026, Callais v. Louisiana decision striking down Louisiana's congressional map as a racial gerrymander (as covered in this series), experts warn the reinterpretation of Voting Rights Act protections could endanger minority representation nationwide. Louisiana has extended suspension of its U.S. House primaries until at least July 2026 amid expectations of a redraw.

The US Supreme Court issued a 6-3 decision in Callais v. Louisiana, significantly weakening Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act following October 2025 oral arguments. Critics argue the ruling, led by the Republican-appointed majority, invites states to redraw maps entrenching racial disenfranchisement. Republicans expressed satisfaction with the outcome.

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The U.S. Supreme Court has allowed its Louisiana v. Callais decision to take immediate effect, enabling states to redraw congressional maps in ways that could reduce minority representation.

Florida lawmakers approved a new congressional voting map that could help Republicans flip four House seats currently held by Democrats. The map supports President Trump's push for redistricting in Republican-led states. Democrats condemned it as partisan gerrymandering.

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In a follow-up to its April 29 ruling in Callais v. Louisiana, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an unsigned order on May 5 allowing the decision—striking down the state's congressional map as a racial gerrymander—to take effect immediately. Justice Samuel Alito, in a concurrence, sharply criticized Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson's lone dissent as 'baseless' and 'insulting,' highlighting tensions amid 2026 election battles.

 

 

 

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