Current:Home > StocksGeorgia Republicans move to cut losses as they propose majority-Black districts in special session -AssetTrainer
Georgia Republicans move to cut losses as they propose majority-Black districts in special session
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:21:46
ATLANTA (AP) — Georgia lawmakers will open a special session Wednesday as majority Republicans move to minimize their losses while also trying to increase the number of Black-majority districts to comply with a federal court order.
It’s one in a series of redistricting sessions across the South after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the 1964 Voting Rights Act, clearing the way for Black voters to win changes from courts.
Georgia House Republicans on Tuesday released a map that would likely cost them only two seats from their current 102-78 majority while creating five more majority-Black districts that Democrats would be likely to win. That’s because the map would also pair three sets of Democratic incumbents, meaning Democrats would lose three of those members after 2024 elections
And Senate Republicans could improve on that performance — the map they proposed on Monday creates two additional Black-majority voting districts, but would probably retain the GOP’s current 33-23 edge in the upper chamber.
Still to come is a new congressional map, where lawmakers have been ordered to draw one new Black-majority seat. Republicans currently hold a 9-5 edge in Georgia’s congressional delegation. To try to hold that margin, they’d have to dissolve the only congressional district held by a Democrat that’s not majority-Black, Lucy McBath’s 7th District in the Atlanta suburbs of Gwinnett and Fulton counties.
It’s unclear if that would be legal. U.S. District Judge Steve Jones wrote in his order that Georgia can’t fix its problems “by eliminating minority opportunity districts elsewhere.”
Jones in October ordered Georgia to draw Black majorities in the additional districts, finding that current maps drawn by Republicans after the 2020 Census illegally diluted Black votes. That ruling came after a trial when plaintiffs argued that opportunities for Black voters hadn’t increased even though their share of population increased in the state over the previous decade.
“There had been truly massive levels of black population growth and change and yet there was no increase in the number of black majority districts,” said Ari Savitzky, an American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who represents some of the plaintiffs.
Because Black voters in Georgia vote overwhelmingly for Democrats, new Black-majority districts will favor the party. But Democratic hopes to gain seats may have been premature.
“Republicans are clearly going to control the process and the outcome,” said University of Georgia political science professor Charles Bullock, who studies redistricting.
The House map would create one new Black majority district running east from Macon to Milledgeville and a second district running northwest from Macon into Monroe County. It would create two additional Black majority districts in Atlanta’s southern suburbs, one in Henry and Clayton counties around Hampton and a second one in Henry County around McDonough and Locust Grove. Finally, a fifth Black-majority district would be created in suburban Douglas County west of Atlanta.
Only the Macon-to-Milledgeville district would have a current incumbent, Republican Ken Vance of Milledgeville. The other four would be open seats in 2024.
Paired House Democrats would include Saira Draper and Becky Evans of Atlanta, Teri Anulewicz and Doug Stoner of Smyrna, and Sam Park and Greg Kennard of Lawrenceville. One set of Republicans would be paired, David Knight of Griffin and Beth Camp of Concord.
Under Georgia law, state legislators must have lived in their districts for a year before they are elected. Because 2024’s election is less than a year away, it’s too late for anyone to move to another district to run.
The Senate map doesn’t pair any incumbents. It increases the number of Black majority districts by eliminating two white-majority districts currently represented by Democrats — State Sens. Jason Esteves and Elena Parent, both of Atlanta.
Democrats released their own Senate map Wednesday. It would convert two Republican districts held by Sens. Marty Harbin of Tyrone and Brian Strickland of McDonough into majority-Black districts. Senate Democratic Minority Leader Gloria Butler of Stone Mountain said the Republican Senate plan doesn’t meet the terms of the court order.
“Instead of remedying the specific Voting Rights Act violations identified by the court in the specific areas identified by the court, the Republican proposal primarily moves Black voters living outside of the areas in which the court found Voting Rights Act violations into majority-Black districts,” Butler said in a statement.
That’s an argument aimed at Jones. The state has pledged to appeal the federal judge’s order. If the state later wins an appeal, Georgia could have new districts in 2024 and revert to current lines in 2026. But for now, it’s Jones, and not Republicans, who will decide whether lawmakers complied with his order.
veryGood! (559)
Related
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Two GOP presidential debates are set for Iowa and New Hampshire in January before the voting begins
- A small police department in Minnesota’s north woods offers free canoes to help recruit new officers
- Youngkin calls for increased state spending on child care programs
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- ‘New Year’s Rockin’ Eve’ will feature Janelle Monáe, Green Day, Ludacris, Reneé Rapp and more in LA
- Saudi Royal Air Force F-15SA fighter jet crashes, killing 2 crew members aboard
- Donald Glover, Maya Erskine are 'Mr. & Mrs. Smith'. What to know about the reboot series
- Sam Taylor
- Georgia lawmakers send redrawn congressional map keeping 9-5 Republican edge to judge for approval
Ranking
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- NTSB holds forum on pilots' mental health, chair says the existing rules are arcane
- Man arrested after Target gift cards tampered with in California, shoppers warned
- Kroger stabbing: Employee killed during shift at Waynedale Kroger in Indiana: Authorities
- Average rate on 30
- Elijah Wood, other actors unwittingly caught up in Russia propaganda effort
- ‘Oppenheimer’ will get a theatrical release in Japan, after all
- Recording Academy, ex CEO Mike Greene sued for sexual assault of former employee Terri McIntyre
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Ex-Ohio vice detective pleads guilty to charge he kidnapped sex workers
Applesauce recall linked to 64 children sick from high levels of lead in blood, FDA says
Former congressman tapped as Democratic candidate in special election to replace George Santos
Could your smelly farts help science?
The Bachelor's Joey Graziadei Breaks Down in Tears During Dramatic Teaser
Dump Bill Belichick? Once unthinkable move for Patriots might be sensible – yet still a stunner
This week on Sunday Morning (December 10)