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Effort to block second majority-Black district in Louisiana comes to Supreme Court – SCOTUSblog

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Effort to block second majority-Black district in Louisiana comes to Supreme Court – SCOTUSblog


CASE PREVIEW

The March session will begin on Monday with
Louisiana v. Callais
. (Amy Lutz via Shutterstock)

In 2022, the Louisiana legislature adopted a congressional map that included only one majority-Black district among the six allotted to the state, though a third of the state’s population is Black. The map was challenged in federal court as a dilution of the votes of Black residents and in 2024 the legislature drew another map, this time with two majority-Black districts.

On Monday, the Supreme Court will take up the latest stage in the struggle over Louisiana’s congressional map. Defending the map, the state contends that it was effectively caught between a rock and a hard place as it tried to adhere to both the federal Voting Rights Act and the Constitution. But the voters challenging the new map counter that Louisiana never intended to comply with the Voting Rights Act, and they urge the justices to rule that the new map was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander – that is, it sorted voters based primarily on their race.

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The federal district court that threw out the 2022 map ruled that it likely violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which bars election practices that result in a denial or abridgement of the right to vote based on race. The court blocked the state from using the map for congressional elections, and it ordered the state to draw a new plan that would include a second majority-Black district.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit upheld the district court’s conclusions and directed the state to adopt a new map by Jan. 15, 2024. If the state did not do so by then, the court of appeals indicated, then the district court would hold a trial and, if needed, adopt a map for the 2024 elections.

The Louisiana legislature went back to the drawing board and enacted a new map, known as S.B. 8. It created a second majority-Black district that begins in the northwest corner of the state near Shreveport and stretches 250 miles southeast toward Baton Rouge.

That prompted another challenge, this time from a group of voters who describe themselves as “non-African American.” They filed a new lawsuit arguing that S.B. 8 was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. A three-judge federal district court agreed with them and prohibited the state from using it in future elections.

In May 2024, a divided Supreme Court paused the district court’s decision, clearing the way for the state to use S.B. 8 in the 2024 election. Cleo Fields, a state senator who had represented a majority-Black district in Congress for two terms during the 1990s until he was forced out by redistricting, was elected to represent the newly drawn district.

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The state and the voters who had challenged the 2022 map appealed to the Supreme Court in July, and the justices in November set the case for oral argument.

In its brief at the Supreme Court, Louisiana argues that the “divvying up of Americans by race is a stain on our Nation’s history” that “should be a disgraced relic of the past.” But the Supreme Court’s voting rights cases, it contends, compel states “to continue that vile practice today — penalizing States both when they consider race too little and when they consider race too much.”

But the Supreme Court, Louisiana says, should not even reach the merits of the case. Instead, it should hold that the “non-African American voters” do not have a legal right to sue, known as standing, to bring their lawsuit alleging that the 2024 map unconstitutionally sorts Black voters by race. Those voters, it stresses, did not submit any evidence at trial to show how they were harmed by the creation of a second majority-Black district.

If the court does reach the merits, Louisiana continues, it should make clear that states have “breathing room” “between the competing demands of the” Voting Rights Act and the Constitution’s equal protection clause, which bars the government from treating people differently without good reason.

The challengers in this case did not show that race was the primary factor behind the legislature’s decision, Louisiana maintains. Instead, to the extent that it focused on race, it only did so because the district court would have created a second majority-Black district if the state did not. And with a second majority-Black district inevitable, the state explains, the redistricting process “became a rescue operation,” in which the legislature sought to “best protect its most important incumbents,” House Speaker Mike Johnson and Rep. Julia Letlow, both Republicans. But even if race had been the motivating factor, the state adds, the legislature had good reason to believe that it had to draw the second majority-Black district to comply with the VRA.

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But “the most important step” that the Supreme Court should take in this case, Louisiana concludes, is to “provide clear guidance regarding how States must navigate this notoriously unclear area of the law” so that it can “put an end to the extraordinary waste of time and resources that plagues the States after every redistricting cycle.”

The original group of challengers to the map with only one majority-Black district joins the state in defending the new map. They argue that if the state contends (as it does) that politics, rather than race, were at the heart of its redistricting decisions, then the “non-African American” voters in this case must “disentangle race from politics” and meet the “high bar” of showing that “race for its own sake” was the primary factor in the legislature’s decision to adopt S.B. 8. But they cannot do this, the 2022 challengers contend, when there was “copious” evidence that the legislature drew that map to protect Johnson and Letlow’s seats, “preserve representation for north Louisiana, and join communities with shared interests along the Red River.”

At the very least, the 2022 challengers suggest, the court should send the case back to the three-judge district court because that court should not have considered the “non-African American” voters’ request to temporarily block the 2024 map and the merits of their claim at the same time, on an “extraordinarily expedited” schedule that did not give the one-district challengers a sufficient opportunity to prepare and present their case.

The challengers to the map with two majority-Black districts urge the justices to leave the three-judge district court’s decision in place. That decision, they write, was correct when it found it “utterly implausible” that race and a desire to protect Republican incumbents played an equal role in the legislature’s decision to draw S.B. 8. The reality, they say, is that the legislature “‘first made the decision’ to impose the racial quota, eliminating one Republican seat, and ‘only then’ had to choose which Republican to sacrifice.” But if Louisiana’s true motive was to comply with the VRA, they continue, “that intent alone is evidence that race” was the primary motivating factor in drawing the second majority-Black district.

The “non-African American” challengers push back against the state’s suggestion that they lack standing to bring their lawsuit. Several of them, they note, live in the district that they are challenging, which is all that the law requires.

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They also insist that the original challengers cannot now contest the procedures that the three-judge district court used. The 2022 challengers were not harmed by the timeline because their lawyers already had experience on redistricting litigation in Louisiana, they emphasize.

In a “friend of the court” brief supporting the group of non-Black voters, Alabama (joined by 13 other states) complains about a “judicially driven expansion of the VRA,” arguing that it “departs from the guardrails imposed by Congress in 1982.”

Alabama suggests that the court has two options to remedy this expansion. First, it could adopt a narrow reading indicating that members of a minority group can participate in the political process, and therefore states do not violate Section 2, as long as they can register to vote, vote, “choose the political party” they want to support, and “participate in its affairs.” Alternatively, it posits, the court could go further and hold that the application of Section 2 to redistricting plans is itself unconstitutional.

The District of Columbia, joined by a different group of 19 states, counters that the justices should not even consider the issues that Alabama raises, because they are not before the court in Louisiana’s appeal. But if it does consider those issues, D.C. continues, the court “should reject them. The Court’s settled” law interpreting Section 2, D.C. explains, “is workable and has been used by States for decades.”

Unlike many high-profile redistricting cases, the federal government will not be participating in Monday’s oral arguments. In December, the Biden administration filed a brief in which it contended (among other things) that Louisiana had good reason to believe that it needed to draw a second majority-Black district to comply with the VRA, and it sought to appear as a “friend of the court” to argue that position.

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But on Jan. 24, Acting Solicitor General Sarah Harris notified the justices that the Trump administration did not stand by her predecessor’s position, and the government no longer wanted to participate in the oral arguments.

This article was originally published at Howe on the Court. 



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Louisiana

Louisiana considers opening recreational alligator hunting season

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Louisiana considers opening recreational alligator hunting season


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  • Louisiana lawmakers are considering a bill to create a recreational alligator hunting season.
  • The proposed season would be open to 5,000 lottery-selected hunters annually, with a two-gator limit.
  • Louisiana’s wild alligator population has grown to over 2 million, a significant conservation success.
  • Recreational hunters would be limited to using a hook and line from land.

Louisiana may expand its wild alligator harvesting opportunities to recreational hunters if the Legislature passes a bill that secured unanimous approval in a committee hearing March 11.

Franklin state Sen. Robert Allain’s Senate Bill 244 would authorize the Louisiana Wildlife Commission to create a recreational season that would be open to 5,000 hunters annually, each with a two-gator limit.

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The state already has a commercial hunting season for alligators, which is chronicled in the popular “Swamp People” TV reality series.

“We think the time is right,” Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Secretary Tyler Bosworth testified during the Senate Natural Resources Committee hearing. “We want to provide a recreational opportunity for the common folk of Louisiana.”

Louisiana’s alligator population has exploded in the past 50 years from fewer than 100,000 to more than 3 million today. Of those, about 2 million are wild with another 1 million farmed.

That’s at least twice the population in Florida, the state with the second most number of alligators.

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And their Louisiana numbers have grown throughout the state where they can be commonly spotted from Lake Martin in Breaux Bridge to Caddo and Cross lakes in Shreveport to Caldwell Parish in northeastern Louisiana.

“This is a conservation success story on the highest level,” LDWF general counsel Garrett Cole said during the hearing. “This would create a true recreational opportunity outside our commercial season.”

Garrett said hunters would compete for hunting tags through a lottery will statewide opportunities. Recreational hunters would be limited to hook and line harvesting from land. No gators could be taken by boat as commercial hunters are allowed to do.

If approved, the first season could take place beginning Oct. 1.

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Greg Hilburn covers state politics for the USA TODAY Network of Louisiana. Follow him on Twitter @GregHilburn1.



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How a sinkhole caused a whirlpool and formed Louisiana’s deepest lake

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How a sinkhole caused a whirlpool and formed Louisiana’s deepest lake


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While Louisiana’s largest lake, the Toledo Bend Reservoir, spans 1,200 miles of shoreline, the state’s deepest lake only spans 1,125 acres.

Lake Peigneur is the deepest lake in Louisiana, with a depth measuring approximately 200 feet.

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Lake Peigneur is a brackish lake, meaning it contains saltwater but has less salinity than seawater, located in New Iberia Parish in South Louisiana.

How did Lake Peigneur become the deepest lake in Louisiana?

Lake Peigneur was not always considered the deepest lake in Louisiana, as it was only a 10-foot-deep freshwater lake 40 years ago.

On Nov. 20, 1980, an oil rig crew was attempting to free a 14-inch drill bit when they heard popping noises and the rig began to tilt. Shortly after the crew abandoned the rig and headed for shore, the crew watched the 150-foot oil rig disappear into the 10-foot-deep lake.

Soon, a whirlpool formed in place of the oil rig. The whirlpool grew rapidly until it was able to suck up nearby boats, barges, trees, a house and half an island.

At the same location of the oil drilling site, there was also a salt mine, and when the whirlpool formed after the oil rig collapsed, the mine began to fill with water. As the whirlpool grew, water was able to enter the mine at such a force that it caused a geyser to spew out of the mine’s opening for hours until the lake was drained.

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After the lake was emptied, the Delcambre Canal began to flow backward, marking the only time in history that the Gulf of Mexico flowed into the continental U.S. This backflow continued until the entire mine and lake were filled with water, except now the lake was filled with saltwater, according to an article published on Louisiana Tech Digital Commons.

Can you swim in Lake Peigneur?

Before the oil rig and salt mine accident, Lake Peigneur was a popular spot for fishing and recreational activities. However, since the lake is almost entirely surrounded by private property, visitors will have to enter the nearby Rip Van Winkle Gardens in order to get a closer look, according to Atlas Obscura.

While there are no reports indicating the lake is unsafe, the lake is not exactly developed for public access. However, there are things to do around Lake Peigneur, like visiting Rip Van Winkle Gardens on Jefferson Island, or visiting Avery Island to tour the Tabasco Factory.

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Presley Bo Tyler is a reporter for the Louisiana Deep South Connect Team for USA Today. Find her on X @PresleyTyler02 and email at PTyler@Gannett.com



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Officials confirm Pensacola Beach residue is algae, not oil from Louisiana spill

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Officials confirm Pensacola Beach residue is algae, not oil from Louisiana spill


PENSACOLA BEACH, Fla. — A local fisherman raised concerns about the substance now coating Opal Beach, citing a recent oil spill off the coast of Louisiana.

WEAR News went to officials with the Gulf Islands National Seashore and Escambia County to find out the cause.

They say it’s not related to an oil spill, but is in fact algae.

The Marine Resources Division says they can understand beachgoers’ concerns, and hope to raise awareness.

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“You don’t even want to get near it because it’s so gooey and sticky,” local fisherman Larry Grossman said. “It was accumulating on my beach cart wheels yesterday, and it felt like an oil product.”

Grossman messaged WEAR News on Monday after noticing something brown and oozy in the sand. He says it started showing up by Fort Pickens and stretched down to Opal Beach.

Grossman said a park service employee told him it could be oil from a recent spill in Louisiana. So he took a message to social media, sparking some reactions and raising questions.

“it certainly didn’t seem like an algae bloom because I was in the water, I caught a fish and I put some water in the cooler to keep my fish cool and it almost looked like oil in it,” Grossman said. “I know some people think it’s an algae bloom, but it certainly smelled and felt and looked like oil.”

A Gulf Islands National Seashore spokesperson confirmed to WEAR News on Tuesday that the substance is algae.

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WEAR News crews were at the beach as officials with the Escambia County Marines Resources Division came out take samples.

“What I found here washed up on the beach is some algae — filamentous algae, single celled algae — that washed ashore in some onshore winds,” said Robert Turpin, Escambia County Marines Resources Division manager. “This is the spring season, so with additional sunlight, our plants, they grow in warmer waters, with plenty of sunlight.”

Turpin says this algae is not harmful.

He also addressed the concerns that this could be oil, saying he’s familiar with what oil spills look like.

He says he appreciates when people like Grossman raise the concerns.

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“The last thing in the world we want is something to gain traction on social media that is faults in nature that could harm our tourism,” Turpin said. “Our tourism is very important to our economy, and we want to give the right information out to the public so we all enjoy the beaches and enjoy them safely.”

Turpin says if you see something or suspect something may be harmful on the beach, avoid it and contact Escambia County Marine Resources.



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