On The Docket: Minority voters fight gerrymandered map in Tarrant County
National GOP operatives set their sights on local gerrymandering in Texas; Alabama Republicans put their redistricting efforts on hold; RNC intervenes in support of Trump’s anti-voting EO
THIS WEEK
National GOP operatives set their sights on local gerrymandering in Texas
Alabama Republicans put their redistricting efforts on hold
RNC intervenes in support of Trump’s anti-voting executive order
TEXAS
Minority voters sue Tarrant County Republicans over gerrymander
Republican officials in Tarrant County, Texas, approved a new redistricting plan this week to boost their own power in county government, and they insist packing minority voters into one precinct has nothing to do with race. But it’s easy to read between the (gerrymandered) lines: Minority communities now make up a majority of Tarrant County’s population and Republicans don’t want elections to reflect that.
A group of minority voters quickly filed suit, arguing the new map violates the Voting Rights Act and the U.S. Constitution.
While there’s nothing new about lawmakers – on both sides of the aisle – redrawing maps to their benefit, this case is a little different. Local Republicans brought in Adam Kincaid, the national GOP’s top map-maker, and the Public Interest Legal Foundation, a high-profile anti-voting law firm in Washington, D.C., to lead the redistricting effort. Then they approved an eleventh-hour version of the map that came out after public hearings had already happened.
And that’s not all. As soon as the map was approved, a far-right Republican state lawmaker immediately announced he was running to represent the county precinct that was just redrawn to his party’s benefit.
Local Democrats are warning this type of coordinated attack from the national GOP won’t end with Tarrant County. And there’s no doubt the plan’s architects have the power to make that happen: In addition to Kincaid’s role, the project was overseen by Maureen Riordan, who was an attorney at the Public Interest Legal Foundation until last month. You’ll never guess where she works now.
She just became the acting chief of the voting section at the U.S. Department of Justice, as Democracy Docket reported exclusively Saturday. Read more about Tarrant County redistricting here.
ALABAMA
After defying court orders, Alabama backs off on redistricting plan
One thing state lawmakers have in common: They don’t like being put under federal preclearance. That’s a sort of “time out” period for states with a record of racially discriminatory voting practices during which they have to get federal approval before they can make changes to maps, laws or other policies related to elections.
After a long legal battle, Alabama is now putting off any further redistricting until 2030, after a judge raised the threat that the state could be placed under federal preclearance.
That warning came after Alabama defied orders from a federal court and the U.S. Supreme Court to add two majority-Black congressional districts – instead doubling down on a racially discriminatory map. A panel of three federal judges ruled unanimously against the state last month.
“[T]ry as we might, we cannot understand the 2023 Plan as anything other than an intentional effort to dilute Black Alabamians’ voting strength and evade the unambiguous requirements of court orders standing in the way,” the panel wrote.
Next, the parties could reach an agreement on a map that can be used for the rest of this cycle – until the whole process starts again after the 2030 Census. If not, a federal court could determine whether federal oversight is necessary. Read more about Alabama redistricting here.
TRUMP
RNC intervenes in litigation against Trump’s anti-voting order
This week, the Republican National Committee (RNC) teamed up with the White House to defend the Trump administration’s major anti-voting executive order from March.
Opponents called the sweeping order unlawful and vowed to challenge it in court. Now, the RNC is backing up President Donald Trump’s plan to seize authority from states over how they run their elections.
Trump’s order aims to crack down on the threat of noncitizens voting in U.S. elections – which, in reality, is a vanishingly rare occurrence – and it directs the Election Assistance Commission to cut off funds to states deemed to be out of compliance. It also pressures states to reject mail ballots postmarked by Election Day that arrive late, and it directs the EAC to re-certify voting systems under new standards.
In some ways, the RNC’s motion in the lawsuit says the quiet part out loud: National Republicans believe that pro-voter policies, like accepting mail ballots that arrive after Election Day, hurt their chances of winning. Read more about the RNC’s legal action here.
And that's why we have Trump destroying our country right now. He is sending 20,000 members of the National Guard to LA right now. Not ICE, real members of the military.
Let them vote kill gerrymandering