KEY POINTS
  • A panel of three federal judges blocked Alabama from conducting any elections using a congressional map that was accused of being racially gerrymandered against the state's Black voters.
  • Finding that it would be "practically impossible" for the state's legislature to fix the map ahead of the 2024 election cycle, the panel ordered a special master and a cartographer to draw up a new one.
  • The judges, in a 217-page opinion, also expressed deep concerns about the state's defiance of prior court rulings for them to fix key elements of the congressional map.
A map of a GOP proposal to redraw Alabama's congressional districts is displayed at the Alabama Statehouse in Montgomery, Ala., Tuesday, July 18, 2023.

A panel of three federal judges on Tuesday struck down an Alabama congressional map accused of being racially gerrymandered against the state's Black voters.

Finding that it would be "practically impossible" for the state's legislature to fix the map ahead of the 2024 election cycle, the panel ordered a special master and a cartographer to draw up a new one.