US Supreme Court upholds SC redistricting lines
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina’s redrawn state house and congressional maps are being allowed to stand.
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday summarily affirmed a federal court’s ruling that South Carolina’s new lines are fair and don’t discriminate.
Six black voters sued, claiming the GOP-dominated state Legislature drew lines that segregate white and black voters into election districts and pack black voters into one congressional district. They called it “voting apartheid.”
But a federal panel says plaintiffs provided no convincing evidence that legislators drew the lines to dilute the voting power of blacks.
An attorney for voters who sued and a spokesman for state House Speaker Bobby Harrell didn’t immediately comment on the decision.
Redistricting is a once-a-decade process to ensure political district lines reflect population changes as shown by the U.S. Census.
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