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May 31, 2026

Political Earthquake In D.C. — Federal Court Ruling is 'Gamechanger' for Midterm Elections

Washington, D.C. - May 31, 2026

Federal Courts Deliver Split Redistricting Rulings as Republicans Score Major Victory in Tennessee, Face Setback in Alabama Ahead of 2026 Midterms

Washington, D.C. — Federal judges handed Republicans a significant boost in Tennessee while issuing a temporary roadblock in Alabama on Tuesday, intensifying the high-stakes battle over congressional maps that could determine control of the House in the upcoming midterm elections.

The dual rulings follow the Supreme Court’s landmark decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which sharply restricted race-based districting under the Voting Rights Act and empowered states to pursue race-neutral boundaries.

In Tennessee, U.S. Chief District Judge William L. Campbell Jr. rejected an emergency request from Democratic activists, Black voters in Memphis, and groups backed by the ACLU and ACLU of Tennessee to halt the state’s newly enacted Republican-backed congressional map. The plan, approved during a special legislative session, dismantles the majority-Black Memphis-area district long held by Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen and is projected to deliver a 9-0 Republican congressional delegation.

Plaintiffs had argued the map deliberately targeted Black voters and amounted to racial discrimination, warning that candidate filing deadlines made immediate relief essential.

“Relief is needed now before the maps are locked in and Black voters are irrevocably forced to use an illegal, discriminatory map,” the plaintiffs stated in court filings.

But Judge Campbell ruled the challengers failed to demonstrate a strong likelihood of success on the merits.

“While Plaintiffs may ultimately show discrimination was a motivating factor,” the judge wrote, “the Court cannot say that their likelihood of success on this claim is substantial.”

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