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Supreme Court decision could end up creating new majority-minority district, changing District 7 lines

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A decision by the highest court in the land may soon have repercussions in the Black Belt after the United States Supreme Court upheld a decision that ruled Alabama’s congressional maps violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.

Two consolidated cases, arising from a new congressional district map drawn by the Alabama Legislature after the 2020 census, were challenged by individual voters and the Alabama State Conference of the NAACP. Sen. Bobby Singleton of Greensboro was among the Plaintiffs.

The challengers argued that the map discriminated against Black voters, as it created only one district out of seven in the state where Black voters could elect a candidate of their choosing, despite Alabama’s population being more than a quarter African-American.

The decision has implications for Alabama’s 7th Congressional District, the state’s only majority-minority district, which spans from parts of Birmingham to Tuscaloosa to Montgomery and across most of the Black Belt region. That district includes all of Hale and Perry Counties.

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For the past 31 years, the district has been the sole majority Black district in Alabama, and for 12 of those years, U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell has been its Representative. Sewell, a self-described “daughter of the Black Belt,” expressed her views on the future of her district, which is likely to be divided to create a second majority-minority district in the state, in a press conference following the decision on Thursday.

“It’s a small price to pay to carve up my district in order to be able to have two majority-minority districts,” Sewell said, acknowledging that the redrawing of the map could result in Birmingham and Selma no longer being included in the same district. Despite this, she expressed a commitment to continue.

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