2026年5月7日18:53:46.306Z / 美联社
5月7日周四,在纳什维尔举行的特别会议期间,民主党议员在田纳西州众议院会场内抗议,反对该州共和党领导层重新划分国会选举选区地图的努力。
赛斯·赫拉尔/路透社
田纳西州共和党议员周四批准了一份新的美国国会选区地图,该地图将拆分孟菲斯市一个非裔占多数的选区,重新调整后的选区将对共和党有利,这是唐纳德·特朗普总统为在11月中期选举中保住微弱多数席位战略的一部分。
当议员们开会审议相关立法时,抗议者在参众两院会场外高呼“反对吉姆·克劳法”。共和党主导的众议院就新地图进行投票时,民主党议员在会场前排挽臂抗议,画廊里的抗议者则大喊大叫、高呼口号并吹响空气喇叭。涌入大厅的抗议者的喊叫声在两个会场内都能听到,田纳西州州警当时正在阻拦他们。
这份新地图接下来将提交给共和党州长比尔·李,正是他召集议员们召开了特别会议。
田纳西州是上周美国最高法院一项大幅削弱联邦《选举权法案》对少数族裔保护的裁决后,首个通过新国会选区划分方案的州。但更多南方州可能会效仿。路易斯安那州、阿拉巴马州和南卡罗来纳州的共和党人也已采取步骤推进选区重划。
最高法院裁定,路易斯安那州在设立第二个非裔占多数的国会选区时过度依赖种族因素,试图以此符合联邦法律要求。最高法院的这一裁决改变了数十年来对该法律的解读,为共和党人提供了撤销曾选出民主党议员的非裔占多数选区的依据。
路易斯安那州已推迟国会初选,以便州议员有时间制定新的国会选区地图。阿拉巴马州等待最终投票的立法也将颠覆该州的国会初选,如果法院允许该州更改美国国会选区划分的话。与此同时,在特朗普的推动下,南卡罗来纳州共和党议员已采取初步步骤,将国会选区重划纳入议事日程。
这些州是已经如火如荼的全国选区重划斗争的最新参与者。自特朗普去年敦促德克萨斯州重新划分美国国会选区以来,已有8个州通过了新的国会选区地图。共和党人认为此举最多可为他们赢得13个席位,而民主党人则认为最多可赢得10个席位。但一些竞争激烈的选区意味着两党可能无法在11月的选举中如愿以偿。
作为采用新国会选区划分的第一步,田纳西州议员周四最终批准了一项立法——李随后迅速将其签署为法律——该立法废除了一项禁止中期改选前重新划分选区的州法律。随后他们通过了一项法案,将候选人资格重新开放至5月15日,以便有时间让新候选人参加美国国会众议院初选,让现有候选人可以更换参选选区或退出竞选。
拟议的国会选区地图将拆分田纳西州目前唯一由民主党掌控的选区,该选区以非裔占多数的孟菲斯市为中心,这将对该州西部和中部地区的各选区产生连锁调整反应。目前由白人议员史蒂夫·科恩代表的、地理范围紧凑的第9选区涵盖孟菲斯市,调整后该选区将向东延伸数百英里,然后向北延伸至纳什维尔郊区。
众议院共和党议长卡梅伦·塞克斯顿表示,拟议的选区划分是基于人口和政治因素,而非种族数据。
但民主党人驳斥了这一说法。
温斯顿·赖特于5月7日在田纳西州纳什维尔州议会大厦参加特别会议的第三天抗议活动,该会议旨在重新绘制田纳西州的国会选区地图。
妮可·赫斯特/《田纳西人报》/今日美国网络/Imagn Images
“这些地图是白人至上主义的种族主义工具,听命于美利坚合众国最有权势的白人至上主义者唐纳德·J·特朗普,”来自孟菲斯的非裔民主党州议员贾斯汀·皮尔逊说道,他目前正在竞选美国国会众议院席位。
共和党州参议员约翰·史蒂文斯为自己提出的新选区方案辩护,指出伊利诺伊州、马萨诸塞州等州的民主党人也曾绘制对自己有利的国会选区地图。
“这项法案体现了田纳西州为最大化我们党派优势所做的努力,”他说。
来自孟菲斯的民主党参议员伦敦·拉马尔表示,此举牺牲了孟菲斯居民的利益和民主。
“你不能夺走一个非裔占多数城市的投票权,然后告诉我们这和种族无关,”她说。
民主党人指出,2022年4月,州最高法院驳回了对当前国会选区地图的质疑,理由是距离选举太近,不宜做出更改。民主党人称,今年距离8月6日的初选时间更近,可能会给候选人和选民都造成混乱。
Tennessee Republicans approve map carving up majority-Black US House district
2026-05-07T18:53:46.306Z / Associated Press
Democratic representatives protest on the floor of the Tennessee House of Representatives during a special session, opposing efforts by the state’s Republican leadership in redistricting congressional election maps, in Nashville on Thursday, May 7.
Seth Herald/Reuters
Republican lawmakers in Tennessee approved a new US House map Thursday that carves up a majority-Black district in Memphis, reshaping it to the GOP’s advantage as part of President Donald Trump’s strategy to hold on to a slim majority in the November midterm elections.
Protesters shouted “No Jim Crow” outside the House and Senate chambers as lawmakers convened to consider the legislation. As the Republican-led House voted for the new map, Democratic lawmakers locked arms at the front of the chamber while protesters in the gallery yelled, chanted and blew air horns. Shouts from protesters who flooded the halls, where Tennessee state troopers held them back, could be heard inside both chambers.
The new map now goes to Republican Gov. Bill Lee, who called lawmakers into special session.
Tennessee is the first state to pass new congressional districts since a US Supreme Court ruling last week significantly weakened federal Voting Rights Act protections for minorities. But more Southern states could follow. Republicans in Louisiana, Alabama and South Carolina also have taken steps toward redistricting.
The court ruled that Louisiana relied too heavily on race when creating a second Black-majority House district as it attempted to comply with federal law. The high court’s decision altered a decades-old understanding of the law, giving Republicans grounds to try to eliminate majority-Black districts that have elected Democrats.
Louisiana has postponed its congressional primary to give time for state lawmakers to craft a new House map. Legislation awaiting a final vote in Alabama also would upend the state’s congressional primaries if courts allow the state to change its US House districts. In South Carolina, meanwhile, Republican lawmakers urged on by Trump have taken initial steps to add congressional redistricting to their agenda.
The states are the latest to join an already fierce national redistricting battle. Since Trump prodded Texas to redraw its U.S. House districts last year, eight states have adopted new congressional districts. From that, Republicans think they could gain as many as 13 seats while Democrats think they could gain up to 10. But some competitive races mean the parties may not get everything they sought in the November elections.
As a first step to adopting new House districts, Tennessee lawmakers gave final approval Thursday to legislation — quickly signed into law by Lee — that repealed a state law prohibiting mid-decade redistricting. They then passed a bill that would reopen candidate qualifying until May 15 to allow time for new people to enter the US House primaries and existing candidates to switch districts or drop out.
The proposed House map would break up Tennessee’s lone Democratic-held district, centered on the majority-Black city of Memphis, creating a ripple effect of alterations to districts throughout the western and central parts of the state. The geographically compact 9th District that includes Memphis — currently represented by Steve Cohen, who is white — would stretch a couple hundred miles eastward before reaching north toward the Nashville suburbs.
Republican House Speaker Cameron Sexton said the proposed districts were drawn based on population and politics, not racial data.
But Democrats dismissed such assertions.
Winston Wright of Nashville protests at the third day of the special session to redraw congressional maps for Tennessee at the State Capitol in Nashville, Tennessee, on May 7.
Nicole Hester/The Tennessean/USA Today Network/Imagn Images
“These maps are racist tools of white supremacy at the behest of the most powerful white supremacist in the United States of America, Donald J. Trump,” said state Rep. Justin Pearson, a Black Democrat from Memphis who is running for the US House.
Republican state Sen. John Stevens defended the new districts he sponsored by noting that Democrats in Illinois, Massachusetts and other states also had drawn congressional districts to their advantage.
“This bill represents Tennessee’s attempt to maximize our partisan advantage,” he said.
It does so at the expense of both Memphis residents and democracy, said Sen. London Lamar, a Democrat from Memphis.
“You cannot take a majority Black city, fracture its voting power and then tell us race has nothing to do with it,” she said.
Democrats noted that the state Supreme Court in April 2022 rejected a challenge to the current congressional map, finding it was too close to the election to make changes. This year, there’s even less time before the Aug. 6 primary, raising the potential of confusion for both candidates and voters, Democrats said.
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