2026年5月1日 晚上10:22 UTC / 路透社
作者:约瑟夫·阿克斯
2026年51月1日 晚上10:22 UTC 1小时前更新
节点运行失败
[1/2]美国路易斯安那州州长杰夫·兰德瑞于2025年6月28日在路易斯安那州新奥尔良的一场洗礼仪式上发表讲话。路透社/凯瑟琳·弗林 资料图
- 内容摘要
- 阿拉巴马州、田纳西州、南卡罗来纳州或推动重新制定选区地图
- 民主党就暂停选举起诉路易斯安那州州长
- 最高法院裁决削弱了具有里程碑意义的《选举权法案》
- 特朗普麾下共和党人力争掌控国会
5月1日(路透社)——美国阿拉巴马州、南卡罗来纳州和田纳西州的共和党州长周五明确表示,他们将在11月中期选举前推动出台更有利于本党的国会选区地图,这是美国最高法院周三作出的重磅投票权裁决引发的最新连锁反应。
与此同时,民主党选民、民权团体以及一名美国众议院民主党候选人提起诉讼,起诉路易斯安那州共和党州长杰夫·兰德瑞暂停该州国会初选并推动重新制定选区地图的决定。
通过《每日案卷》新闻简报,将最新法律新闻直接发送到您的收件箱,开启您的清晨。点击此处订阅。
广告 · 继续滚动浏览
兰德瑞于周四推迟了原定于5月16日举行的初选投票,以便州议员有时间重新制定选区地图,取消至少一个由民主党掌控的黑人选民占多数的国会选区。此前最高法院裁定现行地图违宪。原计划于周六启动的提前投票已被搁置。
总统唐纳德·特朗普所在的共和党正力争在中期选举中继续掌控众议院以及参议院。
事态的快速发展凸显出,最高法院这项大幅削弱1965年通过的具有里程碑意义的《选举权法案》的裁决,给原本就已令人眼花缭乱的全国范围内的选区重划之争增添了新一轮混乱。
广告 · 继续滚动浏览
阿拉巴马州州长凯·艾维宣布,她已召集州议会于周一召开特别会议,以便议员们考虑推迟5月19日的初选,希望最高法院能允许该州使用新的地图。
阿拉巴马州黑人选民占选民总数的四分之一,目前该州使用的是法院下令制定的地图,7个选区中有2个是黑人选民占多数的选区,这两个席位均由黑人民主党人占据。
最高法院作出裁决后,阿拉巴马州立即提起紧急动议,请求法院允许该州恢复使用仅包含一个黑人选民占多数选区的旧版地图。
黑人选民通常支持民主党候选人。
“我仍对阿拉巴马州能从美国最高法院获得有利裁决抱有希望,”艾维在一份声明中说道。
共和党籍田纳西州州长比尔·李周五也宣布召集州议会于周二召开特别会议,对该州的国会选区地图进行“审查”。他在一份声明中表示,官员们必须“确保我们的国会选区准确反映田纳西州选民的意愿”。
共和党籍南卡罗来纳州州长亨利·麦克马斯特则暗示,他希望州议会考虑重新制定选区地图。南卡罗来纳州目前仅有的一个民主党席位是由长期担任美国众议员的吉姆·克莱伯恩占据的黑人选民占多数选区,该选区涵盖州首府哥伦比亚的部分区域。
“鉴于法院最近就《选举权法案》作出的裁决,州议会确保南卡罗来纳州的国会选区地图仍然符合联邦法律和美国宪法的所有要求是恰当的,”麦克马斯特在X平台上写道。
在路易斯安那州,新提起的诉讼辩称,兰德瑞暂停选举的行为超越了其职权范围,且允许其他职位的选举继续进行会让选民感到困惑。原告还指出,至少已有部分缺席选票被寄出。
“路易斯安那州一直在依法行事,”兰德瑞在周五的社交媒体帖子中回应诉讼时说道。
在被称为“选区重划”的流程中,美国各地的立法选区边界会根据每十年一次的全国人口普查统计的人口变化进行重新调整。选区重划通常每十年由州议会进行一次。
去年特朗普发起了前所未有的中期改划选区行动,从德克萨斯州开始在共和党领导的州重新绘制地图,由此引发了多州的选区重划之争,共和党和民主党目前仍在就此展开较量。
约瑟夫·阿克斯 报道;唐娜·布赖森与威尔·邓汉姆 编辑
我们的准则:路透社信任原则。
Republican governors pursue new congressional maps after US Supreme Court ruling
2026-05-01 10:22 PM UTC / Reuters
By Joseph Ax
May 1, 2026 10:22 PM UTC Updated 1 hour ago
节点运行失败
[1/2]Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry speaks during a christening ceremony in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., June 28, 2025. REUTERS/Kathleen Flynn/File Photo
- Summary
- Alabama, Tennessee, South Carolina could pursue new maps
- Democrats sue Louisiana governor over suspended election
- Supreme Court ruling weakened landmark Voting Rights Act
- Trump’s Republicans fighting to keep control of Congress
May 1 (Reuters) – The Republican governors of Alabama, South Carolina and Tennessee made clear on Friday they will try to push through congressional maps more favorable to their party ahead of November’s midterm elections, the latest fallout from the U.S. Supreme Court’s seismic voting rights ruling on Wednesday.
Democratic voters, civil rights groups and a Democratic candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives meanwhile filed lawsuits challenging Republican Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry’s decision to suspend his state’s congressional primary elections and pursue a new map.
Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.
Advertisement · Scroll to continue
Landry on Thursday postponed the scheduled May 16 primary vote to give state lawmakers time to draw a new map that would dismantle at least one Democratic-held majority-Black U.S. House district, after the Supreme Court found the current map unconstitutional. Early voting had been set to begin on Saturday.
President Donald Trump’s fellow Republicans are fighting to maintain their control of the House, as well as the Senate, in the midterm elections.
The rapid developments underscored how the court’s decision, which severely weakened the landmark Voting Rights Act passed in 1965, has injected a fresh dose of chaos into what had already been a dizzying national fight over redistricting.
Advertisement · Scroll to continue
Alabama Governor Kay Ivey announced that she had called a special legislative session starting on Monday so lawmakers can consider postponing the May 19 primary election in the hope that the Supreme Court will permit the state to use a different map.
Alabama, where Black voters make up a quarter of the electorate, is currently using a court-ordered map that includes two majority-Black districts out of seven. Both are held by Black Democrats.
Following the Supreme Court’s decision, Alabama immediately filed emergency motions asking the court to allow it to revert to an older map with only a single majority-Black district.
Black voters tend to support Democratic candidates.
“I remain hopeful Alabama will receive a favorable outcome from the U.S. Supreme Court,” Ivey said in a statement.
Republican Tennessee Governor Bill Lee on Friday also called a special legislative session beginning on Tuesday to “review” the state’s congressional map, saying in a statement that officials must “ensure our congressional districts accurately reflect the will of Tennessee voters.”
And Republican South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster suggested that he would like his state’s legislature to consider a new map. South Carolina’s lone Democratic seat, a majority-Black district that includes parts of the capital Columbia, is represented by longtime U.S. Representative Jim Clyburn.
“In light of the court’s most recent decision on the Voting Rights Act, it would be appropriate for the General Assembly to ensure that South Carolina’s congressional map still complies with all requirements of federal law and the U.S. Constitution,” McMaster wrote on X.
In Louisiana, the new lawsuits argued that Landry had overstepped his authority in suspending the election and that allowing the contests for other offices to proceed would confuse voters. The plaintiffs also noted that at least some absentee ballots had already been cast.
“Louisiana is following the law,” Landry said in response to the litigation in a social media post on Friday.
In a process called redistricting, the boundaries of legislative districts across the United States are reconfigured to reflect population changes as measured by the national census conducted every 10 years. Redistricting typically has been carried out by state legislatures once per decade.
Republicans and Democrats have been waging a multistate redistricting fight ignited last year when Trump initiated an unprecedented mid-decade effort to redraw maps in Republican-led states, starting with Texas.
Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Donna Bryson and Will Dunham
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
发表回复