We’re in the final stretch of President Donald Trump’s redistricting war — for this election cycle. The last rulings are coming in, and they’re bleak.
This week, the Florida Supreme Court allowed the state to use a GOP-backed congressional map that blatantly violates a voter-approved ban on partisan gerrymanders. And you may not see this key fact reported elsewhere: The only judge to dissent was the sole justice who was not appointed by Gov. Ron DeSantis (R). Meanwhile, a Missouri judge postponed proceedings in a court case challenging the state’s new pro-GOP gerrymander, de facto helping Republicans run out the clock on their opponents. Further misery ahead: Georgia begins redistricting next week.
I wish we had better news for you — but maybe an aptly-named cocktail recipe at the bottom of this newsletter will help.
As always, thanks for reading.
A Missouri state judge handed Republicans a big win this week: yet another delay in a months-long battle over a partisan gerrymander that the GOP passed last year. The move makes it very likely that the GOP will defeat opponents of the new map by simply running out the clock.
The judge’s decision comes as county clerks say they urgently need a straight answer on which map is in effect for the upcoming Aug. 4 primary election — not another ambiguous signal from Missouri courts.
In response to the Supreme Court’s ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, which gutted the Voting Rights Act (VRA) and made gerrymandering even easier, Gov. Brian Kemp (R) has called a redistricting special session starting Wednesday.
At a press briefing Thursday, voting advocates with Fair Fight said Georgia will be the first state post-Callais to redraw more than just its congressional districts. Kemp’s proclamation calls for redistricting the maps for the state senate, state house and “any other state office elected by district.” (For the nerds: Alabama did change its state senate map this summer, too. But it’s using a map previously found to be discriminatory, whereas Georgia will be drawing a new one.)
One small silver lining in Georgia: The new maps won’t go into effect for this year’s midterms.
Odds and ends
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