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May 17, 2026

Political Earthquake — Supreme Court Sends Midterm Election Shockwaves

Washington, D.C. - May 17, 2026

Alabama Asks Supreme Court to Allow Map With One Majority-Black District as Redistricting Battles Intensify Nationwide

Alabama has formally asked the U.S. Supreme Court to permit the use of its 2023 congressional map, which contains one majority-Black district, rather than a court-ordered map that includes two such districts. Alabama Solicitor General A. Barrett Bowdre argued in the filing that continuing to use the court-ordered map would force the state to “hold elections under a map that was erroneously ordered at best and unconstitutional at worst.”

“Nothing requires that result,” Bowdre wrote. “Americans, no less in Alabama, deserve a republic free of racial sorting now, and state officials deserve an opportunity to give it to them.”

The request comes amid a broader national redistricting struggle that is reshaping the political landscape ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. Republicans have secured substantial net gains through completed maps in states including Florida, Texas, Ohio, North Carolina, and Missouri. Democrats have made gains in California and Utah, but the overall trajectory currently favors Republicans, with analysts projecting potential net gains of up to 18 seats for the GOP compared to roughly six for Democrats.

Additional Republican opportunities exist in South Carolina, Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi following the Supreme Court’s recent decision narrowing Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The ruling held that districts drawn predominantly on the basis of race can violate constitutional equal protection standards.

In Tennessee, the Republican-led legislature recently approved a new congressional map that removes the state’s only Democrat-held, majority-Black district, resulting in an all-Republican delegation. A new “Crystal Ball” redistricting analysis suggests this shift could have broader implications for the fight for control of the House.

The developments come as Democrats, including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, assess the potential impact on their party’s chances of regaining control of both chambers. On Friday, the Virginia Supreme Court struck down a Democrat-inspired gerrymandered congressional map that would have given the party four of the five seats currently held by Republicans in a state that is about as evenly divided as any in the country.

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