Current:Home > ContactNew North Carolina congressional districts challenged in federal court on racial bias claims -VitalWealth Strategies
New North Carolina congressional districts challenged in federal court on racial bias claims
View
Date:2025-04-15 17:11:21
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) — North Carolina Black and Latino voters sued in federal court on Monday seeking to strike down congressional districts drawn this fall by Republican state legislators that they argue weaken minority voting power in violation of the U.S. Constitution.
The lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court challenges four districts where the plaintiffs contend GOP leaders in charge of the General Assembly moved around groups of voters that minimizes the voting strength of minorities while beefing up the Republican’s partisan advantage. They want a new map drawn.
The map enacted in October puts Republicans in good shape to win at least 10 of the state’s 14 congressional seats next November. Under the iteration of the congressional map that had been drawn by state judges for the 2022 elections, Democrats and Republicans each won seven seats. The shift could help Republicans on Capitol Hill retain control of the U.S. House.
“North Carolina’s minority populations have long suffered from voting discrimination and vote dilution and as a result have endured persistent disparities in political representation,” the lawsuit reads, adding that “the state’s newly enacted congressional redistricting plan exacerbates these issues.”
The lawsuit filed by 18 individuals challenging the 1st, 6th, 12th and 14th Congressional Districts as racial gerrymanders was filed the same day that candidate filing began for those seats and other positions on the ballot in 2024. The 1st District, covering many rural, northeastern districts, and the Charlotte-area 12th District are currently represented by Black Democrats.
While the plaintiffs seek to prevent the state’s full congressional map from being used in elections, their filings don’t immediately seek a temporary restraining order preventing their use in 2024. Candidate filing ends Dec. 15 for the March 5 primaries.
State House Speaker Tim Moore, a Republican and one of several lawsuit defendants, said the lawsuit contains baseless “allegations” and a “desperate attempt to throw chaos into North Carolina’s elections, on the first day of candidate filing no less. We are fully confident that these maps are going to be used in this election and every election this decade.”
The lawsuit contends that minority voters were harmed by the new Greensboro-area 6th District because they were removed from the previous 6th District and distributed to surrounding districts that are heavily Republican. This weakened their voting strength while also making the new 6th a GOP-leaning district, the lawsuit said. Democratic Rep. Kathy Manning is the current 6th District member.
Republican mapmakers also unlawfully diluted the voting strength of minority voters in the 1st District by removing from the district reasonably compact minority communities in Pitt County, the lawsuit said. Democratic Rep. Don Davis is the current 1st District lawmaker.
Looking at Charlotte and points west along the South Carolina border, the lawsuit alleges that Republicans removed minority voters out of the 14th District and into the adjoining 12th District so that the 14th was no longer a district where white voters could join up with minority voters to elect their preferred candidate. Meanwhile, the number of minority voters grows in the 12th, which is represented by Rep. Alma Adams of Charlotte.
Rep. Jeff Jackson, a Mecklenburg County Democrat, already said he’s running for state attorney general, saying he can’t win reelection under the new congressional map. Moore, the House speaker, is now running for the 14th District seat.
Two years ago, the state Supreme Court suspended candidate filing for the 2022 elections while state lawsuits challenging congressional and legislative redistricting maps initially approved by the General Assembly in fall 2021 could be reviewed.
The state’s justices struck down those maps, ruling in February 2022 that Republican lawmakers conducted unlawful partisan gerrymandering, and ordered new maps be drawn. But a new edition of the state Supreme Court with a majority of Republican justices essentially reversed that ruling in April, opening the door for GOP legislative leaders to adjust lines that favor again their party’s candidates.
That ruling, along with an earlier U.S. Supreme Court that prevent similar partisan gerrymandering claims in federal courts. This largely forces the congressional map’s foes to challenge the map on claims of racial bias, which the plaintiffs say date from the Reconstruction era to the recent past.
The latest congressional map “continues North Carolina’s long tradition of enacting redistricting plans that pack and crack minority voters into gerrymandered districts designed to minimize their voting strength,” the plaintiffs’ lawyers write.
veryGood! (8784)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Elon Musk Reveals New Twitter CEO: Meet Linda Yaccarino
- EPA Agrees Its Emissions Estimates From Flaring May Be Flawed
- Exxon’s Big Bet on Oil Sands a Heavy Weight To Carry
- Michigan lawmaker who was arrested in June loses reelection bid in Republican primary
- 13 Things You Can Shop Without Paying Full Price for This Weekend
- Lily-Rose Depp Confirms Months-Long Romance With Crush 070 Shake
- Algae Fuel Inches Toward Price Parity with Oil
- Connie Chiume, South African 'Black Panther' actress, dies at 72
- National Teachers Group Confronts Climate Denial: Keep the Politics Out of Science Class
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Politics & Climate Change: Will Hurricane Florence Sway This North Carolina Race?
- City Centers Are Sweltering. Trees Could Bring Back Some of Their Cool.
- Transcript: North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum on Face the Nation, June 11, 2023
- Olympic disqualification of gold medal hopeful exposes 'dark side' of women's wrestling
- A new kind of blood test can screen for many cancers — as some pregnant people learn
- Exxon’s Big Bet on Oil Sands a Heavy Weight To Carry
- What’s Causing Antarctica’s Ocean to Heat Up? New Study Points to 2 Human Sources
Recommendation
British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
Henrietta Lacks' hometown will build statue of her to replace Robert E. Lee monument
Bloomberg Is a Climate Leader. So Why Aren’t Activists Excited About a Run for President?
90 Day Fiancé: The Other Way Finale Sees Gabe Break Down in Tears During Wedding With Isabel
Immigration issues sorted, Guatemala runner Luis Grijalva can now focus solely on sports
Lessons from Germany to help solve the U.S. medical debt crisis
Henrietta Lacks' hometown will build statue of her to replace Robert E. Lee monument
Person of interest named in mass shooting during San Francisco block party that left nine people wounded