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Alabama Scrambles to Supreme Court Seeking Reinstatement of GOP-Friendly House Map

Alabama Scrambles to Supreme Court Seeking Reinstatement of GOP-Friendly House Map

MONTGOMERY, Alabama — State officials in Alabama escalated their high-stakes redistricting battle to the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday, filing an emergency appeal to use a controversial congressional map that would likely secure an additional seat for the Republican Party in the upcoming midterm elections.

The emergency filing directly challenges a unanimous ruling issued Tuesday by a special three-judge federal panel. The panel blocked Alabama from using its newly proposed map, concluding that the state had intentionally discriminated against Black voters. The blocked boundaries would have allowed the GOP an aggressive opportunity to unseat freshman Democratic Representative Shomari Figures, who is one of only two Black members serving in the state’s seven-seat congressional delegation.

The Impact of Louisiana v. Callais

This latest fast-tracked appeal is part of a turbulent wave of mid-decade redistricting shifts catalyzed by a blockbuster Supreme Court decision in late April. In a contentious 6–3 ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, the high court’s conservative majority significantly gutted the protective power of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 against discriminatory redistricting practices.

The sweeping Callais precedent has provided a massive boost to Republican state lawmakers nationwide, encouraging aggressive efforts to redraw congressional lines mid-term to expand the party's narrow House majority. In its brief to the justices, Alabama argued that the Callais decision entirely vindicates the lawfulness of its redistricting plan, accusing the lower district court of rushing to judgment by declaring within a single week that the new precedent changed nothing. Alabama has requested a definitive ruling from the Supreme Court by Monday.

The Purcell Principle and Special August Elections

To justify the last-minute map overhaul, Alabama’s legal team is relying heavily on the "Purcell principle"—a well-established judicial doctrine stating that federal courts should avoid altering voting rules or district maps too close to an election to prevent widespread voter confusion.

While Alabama already held its standard primary elections earlier this month under the previously enforced boundaries, Republican Governor Kay Ivey has already signed emergency legislation authorizing special replacement primary elections this coming August. These contingency elections would proceed specifically within the affected congressional districts if the Supreme Court grants the state's request to reinstate the GOP-friendly map.

A Long History of Redistricting Clashes

The current showdown marks the third time Alabama's congressional maps have reached the nation's highest court in recent years. The legal dispute traces back to 2023, when the Supreme Court surprisingly upheld a lower court directive requiring Alabama to add a second Black-majority district to its seven-seat map, noting the original map likely diluted the political power of Black voters.

Consequently, the 2024 elections were conducted using a court-mandated map, which successfully led to the historic election of two Black Democratic representatives. Following the April 29 Callais decision, however, the Supreme Court's conservative majority intervened on May 11, pausing the court-drawn map over a fierce dissent from the three liberal justices.

Despite that intervention, the three-judge lower court panel firmly rejected Alabama’s replacement map on Tuesday, citing clear evidence of ongoing racial discrimination. "Ultimately, we cannot see our way clear to requiring Alabamians to cast their votes in the 2026 elections under a districting plan tainted by intentional race-based discrimination," the panel wrote, setting up the current emergency standoff before the high court.

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By: CNN Newsource

May 27, 2026

Alabama redistricting appealSupreme Court Voting Rights Act 2026Louisiana v Callais gerrymanderingRep Shomari Figures Black votersGovernor Kay Ivey Purcell principle
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Alabama Scrambles to Supreme Court Seeking Reinstatement of GOP-Friendly House Map