Current:Home > MySome Mississippi legislative districts dilute Black voting power and must be redrawn, judges say -MoneyTrend
Some Mississippi legislative districts dilute Black voting power and must be redrawn, judges say
View
Date:2025-04-15 22:44:30
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Three federal judges are telling Mississippi to redraw some of its legislative districts, saying the current ones dilute the power of Black voters in three parts of the state.
The judges issued their order Tuesday night in a lawsuit filed in 2022 by the Mississippi State Conference of the NAACP and several Black residents.
“This is an important victory for Black Mississippians to have an equal and fair opportunity to participate in the political process without their votes being diluted,” one of the plaintiffs’ attorneys, Jennifer Nwachukwu, of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said in a statement Wednesday. “This ruling affirms that the voices of Black Mississippians matter and should be reflected in the state Legislature.”
Mississippi’s population is about 59% white and 38% Black.
In the legislative redistricting plan adopted in 2022, 15 of the 52 Senate districts and 42 of the 122 House districts are majority Black. Those are 29% of Senate districts and 34% of House districts.
The judges ordered legislators to draw majority-Black Senate districts in and around DeSoto County in the northwestern corner of the state and in and around Hattiesburg in the south, and a new majority-Black House district in Chickasaw and Monroe counties in the northeastern part of the state.
The order does not create additional districts. Rather, it would require legislators to adjust the boundaries of existing districts. That means multiple districts could be affected.
The Mississippi attorney general’s office was reviewing the judges’ ruling Wednesday, spokesperson MaryAsa Lee said. It was not immediately clear whether the state would appeal it.
Legislative and congressional districts are updated after each census to reflect population changes from the previous decade. Mississippi’s new legislative districts were used when all of the state House and Senate seats were on the ballot in 2023.
Tommie Cardin, an attorney for state officials, told the federal judges in February that Mississippi cannot ignore its history of racial division, but that voter behavior now is driven by party affiliation, not race.
“The days of voter suppression and intimidation are, thankfully, behind us,” Cardin said.
Historical voting patterns in Mississippi show that districts with higher populations of white residents tend to lean toward Republicans and that districts with higher populations of Black residents tend to lean toward Democrats.
Lawsuits in several states have challenged the composition of congressional or state legislative districts drawn after the 2020 census.
Louisiana legislators redrew the state’s six U.S. House districts in January to create two majority-Black districts, rather than one, after a federal judge ruled that the state’s previous plan diluted the voting power of Black residents, who make up about one-third of the state’s population.
And a federal judge ruled in early February that the Louisiana legislators diluted Black voting strength with the state House and Senate districts they redrew in 2022.
In December, a federal judge accepted new Georgia congressional and legislative districts that protect Republican partisan advantages. The judge said the creation of new majority-Black districts solved the illegal minority vote dilution that led him to order maps to be redrawn.
veryGood! (96689)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Standing Rock Leaders Tell Dakota Pipeline Protesters to Leave Protest Camp
- RHONJ: Teresa Giudice's Wedding Is More Over-the-Top and Dramatic Than We Imagined in Preview
- Four killer whales spotted together in rare sighting in southern New England waters
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- Kids’ Climate Lawsuit Thrown Out by Appeals Court
- What should you wear to run in the cold? Build an outfit with this paper doll
- As Solar Panel Prices Plunge, U.S. Developers Look to Diversify
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Trump delivered defiant speech after indictment hearing. Here's what he said.
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Amazon Web Services outage leads to some sites going dark
- The Top Moisturizers for Oily Skin: SkinMedica, Neutrogena, La Roche-Posay and More
- From a green comet to cancer-sniffing ants, we break down the science headlines
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Christina Hall Recalls Crying Over Unnecessary Custody Battle With Ex Ant Anstead
- Most Americans say overturning Roe was politically motivated, NPR/Ipsos poll finds
- Today's Hoda Kotb Says Daughter Hope Has a Longer Road Ahead After Health Scare
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Oklahoma Tries Stronger Measures to Stop Earthquakes in Fracking Areas
Keith Urban Accidentally Films Phoebe Bridgers and Bo Burnham Kissing at Taylor Swift's Concert
Step Inside RuPaul's Luxurious Beverly Hills Mansion
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
At the first March for Life post-Roe, anti-abortion activists say fight isn't over
Police officer who shot 11-year-old Mississippi boy suspended without pay
Nursing home owners drained cash while residents deteriorated, state filings suggest