The Alabama state legislature's second run at Congressional redistricting still didn't past muster for a three-judge federal court that rejected the new map on the grounds that it's still likely in violation of the Voting Rights Act, reports AL.com's Mike Cason.
So the court wants Alabama to move further away from what appears to be racially gerrymandered districts while the Republicans who control the legislature didn't produce a plan that would risk allowing the Democrats to have a real shot at picking up a second Alabama seat in the U.S. House of Representatives.
So where do we go from here? The Supreme Court, if Republican state Attorney General Steve Marshall has his way. He's appealed the case to the high court. When dealing with the original redistricting map, the Supreme Court upheld the lower court's rejection.
Outside of any judicial reversals, a new map is being produced not by the Legislature but by officials that have been appointed by the court.
Richard Allen will oversee the process. He's been a chief deputy under four Alabama attorneys general, he was the state prison commissioner for five years, and he retired from the U.S. Army Reserve as a brigadier general.
Cartographer David Ely will join Allen in working up three maps by Sept. 25. There will be three days in which people can object to the maps, and then there'll be a hearing on Oct. 3.