人兽性交

Alabama continues fight against court-ordered state Senate district voting map

Rhonda Sonnenberg

Outline of state of Alabama with lines of voting districts highlighted with pillars on a muted background.

Alabama continues fight against court-ordered state Senate district voting map

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Editor鈥檚 note: This is the second story in the 鈥淐rossing the Line鈥 series about conservative efforts in the Deep South to redraw voting districts in a way that disenfranchises Black and Brown voters.

In federal and state courts over the six decades since passage of the , Alabama and its supermajority of predominantly white conservative legislators and politicians have staunchly defended their right to redraw voting district maps. In legislative session after legislative session, lawmakers have adopted district maps that , effectively stealing political power from Black voters.

Closing our eyes to racial discrimination does not make it disappear.鈥

鈥 Jack聽Genberg, senior supervising attorney with the Southern Poverty Law Center鈥檚 Democracy: Voting Rights litigation team

These maps work in two basic ways. They can be used to pack Black voters into a handful of districts that are not consistent with their actual shared social, economic or political interests, population percentages, geographic distribution or that unexplainably separates them from others with similar voting patterns. Conversely, these maps can carve up Black population centers in ways that dilute residents鈥 voting strength. Both schemes effectively prevent Black voters from electing people they choose to represent them.

Under the of the U.S. Constitution and of the VRA, legislatures are required to create maps that give Black voters fair political representation. But what that means has been open to interpretation in the courts.

鈥淒iscriminatory district maps that deny Black voters a fair opportunity to elect candidates of choice prevent Black communities from having a say in the policies affecting their lives,鈥 said Jack Genberg, senior supervising attorney with the Southern Poverty Law Center鈥檚 Democracy: Voting Rights litigation team. 鈥淚t shouldn鈥檛 be this hard to get states to follow the law.鈥

In 2021, the 人兽性交 and co-counsel sued the Alabama secretary of state () and filed an amicus 鈥渇riend of the court鈥 brief in a similar case. That case challenged Alabama鈥檚 U.S. congressional map (, formerly Milligan v. Merrill and Milligan v. Allen). Last year, federal courts again that both maps denied Black voters representative political power, violating federal law.

鈥楾hey gave excuses鈥

Federal courts ordered Alabama Secretary of State Wes Allen to use new maps in the state鈥檚 congressional and state Senate elections after finding that the state-drawn maps diluted Black voting strength. But even after the district court and U.S. Supreme Court found that the congressional map likely diluted Black voting strength, the Alabama Legislature defied the courts.

The Legislature proposed a new map that clearly still did not provide Black Alabamians an opportunity to elect candidates of choice in a second congressional district, despite the U.S. Supreme Court and district court compelling that opportunity.

鈥淲hen they [the state] refused to draw a fair congressional or state Senate map when they were offered the chance, they gave excuses and said they didn鈥檛 have to follow the judge鈥檚 order, so why would we have trusted the state to draw a fair map?鈥 asked Evan Milligan, an individual plaintiff in both cases. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a game they play to run the clock and play dumb.鈥

Following the state鈥檚 defeat in both cases, Allen appealed the state Senate map ruling to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. He then requested to stay the implementation of a new state Senate map that corrected the vote dilution pending a decision in another gerrymandered map case, Louisiana v. Callais, which the U.S. Supreme Court heard a second time on Oct. 15. The judge denied Allen鈥檚 motion to stay the state Senate map case until there is a ruling in the Callais case.

In Callais, 鈥渘on-Black鈥 plaintiffs are challenging the use of race to create voting districts under Section 2 of the VRA 鈥 which prohibits voting practices or procedures that discriminate on the basis of race 鈥 saying that the process violates their rights. Yet a ruling for Louisiana in Callais could endanger court-ordered, racially fair opportunity districts across the Deep South and beyond.

For example, depending on how extreme the Supreme Court鈥檚 ruling is in the Callais case, there are some scenarios in Alabama鈥檚 2nd and 7th congressional districts 鈥 which gave Black voters an opportunity to elect the candidates of their choice 鈥 that are of concern to voting rights advocates. In those districts, the seats of U.S. Rep. Shomari Figures and U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell, respectively, .

On Nov. 21, four days after the judge selected a remedial map to be used in the 2026 election, Allen filed his intention to appeal the remedy decision in the state Senate case based on his earlier assertion that any remedial map is racially gerrymandered.

In order for Allen to win a new appeal, the appeals court would have to disregard three years of rulings against Allen鈥檚 office, including the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 2023 ruling in the Milligan case, in which the court 鈥淎labama鈥檚 attempt to remake [the court鈥檚 Voting Rights Act Section 2] jurisprudence anew.鈥 The court also ordered Alabama to create a second Black opportunity congressional district.

鈥楶repared to fight on鈥

The plaintiffs said they are resolved to pursue the state Senate case to the end 鈥 no matter how long it takes.

鈥淲e are prepared to fight on,鈥 said Scott Douglas, executive director of the Greater Birmingham Ministries (GBM), one of the two organizational plaintiffs in both cases along with the Alabama NAACP.

Also prepared to fight on are the 人兽性交鈥檚 co-counsel, , , and the (LDF).

Douglas keeps a tagline on his email that reads, 鈥淎labama is a state, not an excuse.鈥  

As a young organizer in Alabama in the 1970s, Douglas saw how pervasive apathy among people struggling just to survive led them to give up power to white outsiders who came into the state with their own agendas for improvement.

鈥淚 came up with the tagline because we should have higher expectations to make Alabama a state that is less racist, more equitable and just,鈥 he said.

Milligan, Douglas and Benard Simelton, who served as the Alabama NAACP president for 16 years, agreed that voter suppression in the state is less prevalent across the state in areas with significant Black populations. Douglas said returning citizens 鈥 people who have been convicted of a felony but have served their sentences 鈥 are an exception because felony disfranchisement laws make it harder for returning citizens, who are disproportionately Black, to register to vote.

鈥淭he real devil we are dealing with is the total supermajority of the state Legislature,鈥 Milligan said. 鈥淚t isn鈥檛 so much that a grandma was pushed to the ground at a polling place or lives in senior housing and can鈥檛 get out to vote, but since Shelby County v. Holder in 2013, there has been a culture where voting is a hassle, or the outcome of elections are in doubt.鈥

In the Shelby County ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the of the VRA that聽required certain jurisdictions with a history of racial discrimination in voting to seek and receive federal approval before changing their election rules.

State鈥檚 tools for stalling

Simelton has participated in numerous challenges to the state鈥檚 gerrymandered voting district maps.

In September 2025, less than a month after the court rulings in the congressional and state Senate map cases, the Alabama NAACP and organizational co-plaintiff GBM won another case the LDF and co-counsel filed on their behalf: . In that case, a federal court ordered the county to redraw its commission district map that had packed Black voters into only two 鈥渟uper鈥 majority-minority districts. The commission has .

鈥淲hen the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act in 2013 and then Alabama implemented a photo ID requirement, [then-Secretary of State John] Merrill said he wanted to make voting easier and would send someone to make a photo ID for people,鈥 Simelton said. 鈥淏ut he didn鈥檛, and it made voting much harder.鈥

In response to the photo ID requirement, the NAACP began holding community events and sent mobile units to make photo IDs for people who couldn鈥檛 travel. But polling locations changed without warning and without information telling voters where they could go to cast their ballots.

鈥淭here was one older gentleman, in his upper 80s or 90s, who had been voting at the same location all his life, but he no longer drove so didn鈥檛 have a photo ID,鈥 Simelton recalled. 鈥淗e went to vote but couldn鈥檛, even though everyone at the polling place knew him. His daughter contacted us to see what we could do, but it was too late.鈥

鈥業ntentional dilution of Black and Brown voting strength鈥

As he awaits the appellate court decision, Allen continues his strategy of stalling the implementation of court decisions and limiting the political power of Black voters.

A Supreme Court decision in Callais that would gut Section 2 of the VRA and further turn back the clock on civil rights protections for voters would be a gift to the conservative legislators who win elections solely because they engineer a gerrymandered voting district map to favor white voters.

鈥淐losing our eyes to racial discrimination does not make it disappear,鈥 Genberg, the 人兽性交 attorney, said. 鈥淚f the court weakens Section 2鈥檚 protections for voters of color in Callais, it opens the floodgates to the intentional dilution of Black and Brown voting strength across the South and beyond.鈥

Illustration at top by the 人兽性交.