Sunday, May 31, 2026
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Members
  • Sign in
Westfair Communications
  • HOME
    • WESTCHESTER
    • FAIRFIELD
  • E-EDITIONS
    • Business Journal
    • 250 Years of Business & Commerce in America
    • Podcasts
  • MEMBERS
  • BUSINESS LISTS
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Economic Development
    • Real Estate
    • Hudson Valley
    • Courts
    • Banking & Finance
    • Construction
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Health Care
    • Food & Beverage
    • Government
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Nonprofits
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Home & Design
    • Health & Fitness
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • SMALL BUSINESS
    • Small Business
    • Food & Restaurants
  • EVENTS
    • 2026 C-Suite Awards
    • 2026 Women Innovators
    • 2026 Millennial & Gen Z
    • 2026 Hispanic Innovators
    • Events Calendar
    • Past Events
      • 2026
        • 2026 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2026 40 Under Forty
        • 2026 Real Estate
        • 2026 Women in Power
      • 2025
        • 2025 Hispanic Innovators
        • 2025 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2025 C-Suite Awards
        • 2025 Women Innovators
        • 2025 40 Under Forty
        • 2025 Millennial & Gen Z
        • 2025 Real Estate
      • 2024
        • 2024 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2024 Women Innovators
        • 2024 40 Under 40
        • 2024 Real Estate
        • 2024 Women In Power
      • 2023
        • 2023 Women In Power
        • Milli + Genz
        • Women Innovators
        • Forty Under 40
        • Doctors of Distinction
        • Real Estate
      • 2022
        • 2022 Millennial + GenZ Awards
        • 2022 C-Suite Awards
        • 2022 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2022 THE FUTURE OF REAL ESTATE
        • 2022 FORTY UNDER 40
      • 2021
        • 2021 FORTY UNDER 40 VIRTUAL EVENT
        • 2021 TOP WEALTH ADVISORS Virtual Event
        • 2021 Milli + GenZ Awards
        • 2021 C-SUITE
        • 2021 DOCTORS OF DISTINCTION
  • GOOD THINGS
  • VIDEOS
    • Our Starting Lineup
    • News Videos
  • PARTNERS
  • ADVERTISE
  • SUBSCRIBEACT NOW
    • NEWSLETTERS
    • DIGITAL ACCESS
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
    • WESTCHESTER
    • FAIRFIELD
  • E-EDITIONS
    • Business Journal
    • 250 Years of Business & Commerce in America
    • Podcasts
  • MEMBERS
  • BUSINESS LISTS
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Economic Development
    • Real Estate
    • Hudson Valley
    • Courts
    • Banking & Finance
    • Construction
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Health Care
    • Food & Beverage
    • Government
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Nonprofits
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Home & Design
    • Health & Fitness
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • SMALL BUSINESS
    • Small Business
    • Food & Restaurants
  • EVENTS
    • 2026 C-Suite Awards
    • 2026 Women Innovators
    • 2026 Millennial & Gen Z
    • 2026 Hispanic Innovators
    • Events Calendar
    • Past Events
      • 2026
        • 2026 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2026 40 Under Forty
        • 2026 Real Estate
        • 2026 Women in Power
      • 2025
        • 2025 Hispanic Innovators
        • 2025 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2025 C-Suite Awards
        • 2025 Women Innovators
        • 2025 40 Under Forty
        • 2025 Millennial & Gen Z
        • 2025 Real Estate
      • 2024
        • 2024 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2024 Women Innovators
        • 2024 40 Under 40
        • 2024 Real Estate
        • 2024 Women In Power
      • 2023
        • 2023 Women In Power
        • Milli + Genz
        • Women Innovators
        • Forty Under 40
        • Doctors of Distinction
        • Real Estate
      • 2022
        • 2022 Millennial + GenZ Awards
        • 2022 C-Suite Awards
        • 2022 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2022 THE FUTURE OF REAL ESTATE
        • 2022 FORTY UNDER 40
      • 2021
        • 2021 FORTY UNDER 40 VIRTUAL EVENT
        • 2021 TOP WEALTH ADVISORS Virtual Event
        • 2021 Milli + GenZ Awards
        • 2021 C-SUITE
        • 2021 DOCTORS OF DISTINCTION
  • GOOD THINGS
  • VIDEOS
    • Our Starting Lineup
    • News Videos
  • PARTNERS
  • ADVERTISE
  • SUBSCRIBEACT NOW
    • NEWSLETTERS
    • DIGITAL ACCESS
No Result
View All Result
Westfair Communications
No Result
View All Result
Home World News

Supreme Court rules against Alabama in voting case: VIDEO

CNN Wire by CNN Wire
September 26, 2023
0
Share on LinkedInShare on FacebookShare on Twitter

Originally Published: 26 SEP 23 13:03 ET
By Joan Biskupic, CNN Senior Supreme Court Analyst

(CNN) — The Supreme Court delivered a brief but clear message to Alabama on Tuesday: When we said you defied the law, we meant it.

It rejected state officials’ plea for emergency intervention in the Republican-led effort to essentially sidestep a ruling from June and maintain an Alabama redistricting plan that disadvantaged Black voters.

The brief order demonstrated that while the Supreme Court remains open to curtailing the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act, as it has in the past, the justices themselves want to take the lead. Alabama had pushed too far and too fast.

The justices’ action will have immediate consequences in Alabama and perhaps nationwide in the 2024 elections. The state, which is 27% Black, will now be forced to adopt a map with two Black-majority districts, among the seven congressional seats.

That is likely to mean the state will pick up a new Democratic member of Congress. Black voters lean Democratic in other states with redistricting battles underway, too, and repercussions from the wider redistricting controversy could influence whether Republicans maintain their slim majority in the US House of Representatives.

When the court first ruled, 5-4, against the Alabama map that diluted Black voting power, just three months ago, the justices were emphatic as they ordered a new plan. They said the state’s argument “runs headlong” into past decisions interpreting the protections of the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act.

But Alabama defied the court majority and refused to draw a new map that would give Black voters a fair opportunity to elect their candidates of choice. State officials, instead, hung their hopes on a separate statement by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who cast the critical fifth vote in the case of Allen v. Milligan after being torn for weeks in internal negotiations.

In their latest appeal to the high court, state officials cited Kavanaugh 10 times.

Kavanaugh did indeed offer some caveats that could favor states in future litigation, including that “the authority to conduct race-based redistricting cannot extend indefinitely into the future.” But for Alabama in the current situation, Kavanaugh signed onto Chief Justice John Roberts’ strongest defense of the VRA’s Section 2, which prohibits discrimination based on race.

“The heart of these cases is not about the law as it exists,” Roberts wrote in June, joined by Kavanaugh and the three liberal justices. “It is about Alabama’s attempt to remake our Section 2 jurisprudence anew.”

The dispute began in 2021, after the 2020 Census, and as the Republican-controlled Alabama legislature drew just one Black-majority congressional district. A three-judge US district court found that the legislature unlawfully diluted Black voting power by packing much of African American population into one district and dividing the rest among other districts. The judges directed Alabama to draw “two districts in which Black voters either comprise a voting-age majority or something quite close to it.”

After the Supreme Court affirmed that decision in its June ruling in Allen v. Milligan, Alabama legislators drafted a new map. But the revision included a new district with a 40% Black population – less than what would guarantee Black voters an opportunity to elect a candidate of their choice. In that July action, the legislature also lowered the Black population in one longstanding Black-majority district, from about 55% to 51%.

The special three-judge panel again ruled against the state, citing racially polarized voting in Alabama and that the revised map would continue to deprive Black Alabamians of an equal opportunity to elect candidates of their choice.

In an unstinting rebuke to Alabama, the judicial panel said it knew of no other instance “in which a state legislature, faced with a federal court order declaring that its electoral plan unlawfully dilutes minority votes and requiring a plan that provides an additional opportunity district, responded with a plan that the state concedes does not provide that district.”

Alabama, as it appealed again to the high court, justified its revised map by saying that the newly created district consolidated some previously dispersed Black voters and that, more broadly, “states retain broad discretion in drawing districts to comply with the mandate of Section 2.”

Black voters represented by ACLU and NAACP Legal Defense Fund lawyers told the justices the state legislature simply refused to even try to comply with the district court. And they recalled the nation’s “unfortunate history of States resisting civil rights remedies,” most notably in the 1960s.

Alabama’s own history in that regard is distinct. Congress passed the 1965 Voting Rights Act in the wake of the March 7 “Bloody Sunday” violence on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma. State troopers with clubs and bullwhips attacked civil rights protesters.

For years, the Supreme Court had expansively interpreted the protections of the iconic law to try to ensure the franchise for Black and Hispanic people alongside other racial minorities. But it was a case from Alabama, in fact, that significantly marked the Roberts Court’s departure from such precedent.

In 2013, in the Shelby County v. Holder decision, a five-justice majority eviscerated a VRA requirement that states with a history of race discrimination obtain federal approval for any electoral changes. The chief justice wrote at the time that the provision was no longer needed. “Our country has changed,” he said.

Alabama, as the current litigation showed, had not changed – or at least not enough even for today’s conservative-dominated bench.

The justices on Tuesday spurned the request for intervention in a single, terse sentence of denial, with no recorded vote or dissent.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

This page is available to subscribers. Click here to sign in or get access.

Previous Post

Brothers sue brother over control of White Plains condo apartment

Next Post

CT and NY join in federal lawsuit against Amazon

Related Posts

Report finds high-speed dismantling of democracy in U.S.
World News

CNN WIRE — Trump steps into spotlight after performers bail from his Great American State Fair event

May 31, 2026
U.S. and world news for May 29
World News

U.S. and world news for May 29

May 29, 2026
CNN WIRE — Trump drains U.S. oil reserves faster than Biden did
World News

CNN WIRE — Trump drains U.S. oil reserves faster than Biden did

May 28, 2026
Next Post
Synchrony teams with Amazon to offer credit card for no- or bad-credit customers

CT and NY join in federal lawsuit against Amazon

Subscribe to our newsletter

Lifestyle

  • Exclusives
  • Good Things Happening
  • Food & Restaurants
  • Travel
  • Health & Fitness
  • Home & Design

World News

Report finds high-speed dismantling of democracy in U.S.
World News

CNN WIRE — Trump steps into spotlight after performers bail from his Great American State Fair event

by CNN Wire
May 31, 2026
0

By T.M. Brown, Alejandra Jaramillo, CNN (CNN) — President Donald Trump is now hosting the opening ceremony for the Great...

U.S. and world news for May 29

U.S. and world news for May 29

May 29, 2026
CNN WIRE — Trump drains U.S. oil reserves faster than Biden did

CNN WIRE — Trump drains U.S. oil reserves faster than Biden did

May 28, 2026
U.S. and world news for Jan. 16

U.S. and world news for May 28

May 27, 2026
CNN WIRE — NY and NJ AGs investigate sky-high World Cup ticket prices

CNN WIRE — NY and NJ AGs investigate sky-high World Cup ticket prices

May 27, 2026
U.S. and world news for May 27

U.S. and world news for May 27

May 27, 2026
No Result
View All Result

Latest News

Report finds high-speed dismantling of democracy in U.S.
World News

CNN WIRE — Trump steps into spotlight after performers bail from his Great American State Fair event

by CNN Wire
May 31, 2026
0

By T.M. Brown, Alejandra Jaramillo, CNN (CNN) — President Donald Trump is now hosting the opening ceremony...

Lamont makes move to cut electric bills in CT

CT Bond Commission approves $652M in spending for programs

May 31, 2026
Cross County groundbreaking for new retail buildings

Cross County groundbreaking for new retail buildings

May 31, 2026
Manhattanville University plans athletic field upgrades

Manhattanville University plans athletic field upgrades

May 29, 2026
Marist plans new 100,000-square-foot Science and Health building

Marist plans new 100,000-square-foot Science and Health building

May 29, 2026
Logo Westfair Business Journal

Latest News

CNN WIRE — Trump steps into spotlight after performers bail from his Great American State Fair event

CT Bond Commission approves $652M in spending for programs

Cross County groundbreaking for new retail buildings

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Sign in

Trending Westchester

Subscribe to our newsletter

© 2024 Westfair Business Publications. All rights reserved. Westfair Communications (Westfair), a privately held publishing firm based in Mount Kisco, N.Y., publishes the Westchester County Business Journal in New York state and the Fairfield County Business Journal in Connecticut.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
    • WESTCHESTER
    • FAIRFIELD
  • E-EDITIONS
    • Business Journal
    • 250 Years of Business & Commerce in America
    • Podcasts
  • MEMBERS
  • BUSINESS LISTS
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Economic Development
    • Real Estate
    • Hudson Valley
    • Courts
    • Banking & Finance
    • Construction
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Health Care
    • Food & Beverage
    • Government
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Nonprofits
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Home & Design
    • Health & Fitness
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • SMALL BUSINESS
    • Small Business
    • Food & Restaurants
  • EVENTS
    • 2026 C-Suite Awards
    • 2026 Women Innovators
    • 2026 Millennial & Gen Z
    • 2026 Hispanic Innovators
    • Events Calendar
    • Past Events
      • 2026
      • 2025
      • 2024
      • 2023
      • 2022
      • 2021
  • GOOD THINGS
  • VIDEOS
    • Our Starting Lineup
    • News Videos
  • PARTNERS
  • ADVERTISE
  • SUBSCRIBE
    • NEWSLETTERS
    • DIGITAL ACCESS

© 2024 Westfair Business Publications. All rights reserved. Westfair Communications (Westfair), a privately held publishing firm based in Mount Kisco, N.Y., publishes the Westchester County Business Journal in New York state and the Fairfield County Business Journal in Connecticut.