So, what’s Alabama’s plan for avoiding having to draw a second majority-Black congressional district?
With its new Supreme Court filing, we got a big, if unsurprising, hint that boils down to one word: Kavanaugh.
The state’s lawyers name-checked Justice Brett Kavanaugh 10 times in the emergency application, in which they’re trying to get the high court to halt a lower court’s order against the defiant state’s new voting map.
Last week, a three-judge district court panel said it was “disturbed” by Alabama’s behavior after its surprise 5-4 loss at the Supreme Court in June in Allen v. Milligan. The judges — two of whom were appointed by President Donald Trump — noted they weren’t aware “of any other case 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.”
But Alabama is all in, taking the fight back to the high court and taking umbrage at the district court’s umbrage.
And that’s where Kavanaugh comes in — the state hopes. Though the Trump appointee joined the majority in upholding the Voting Rights Act in June, he wrote a separate concurrence that said, among other things, “the authority to conduct race-based redistricting cannot extend indefinitely into the future.” Alabama’s emergency application quotes part of that line three times.
Alabama wants a stay by Oct. 1, and the voting rights plaintiffs will first get to weigh in with their own filing by Sept. 19, so look for the court to rule later this month.








