State Senator Shelly Echols, R-Gainesville | Facebook
State Senator Shelly Echols, R-Gainesville | Facebook
The Georgia Legislature has given its approval for updated district maps for the state, a move that has stirred controversy as Democrats have raised concerns. They argue that these new maps may not comply fully with court orders to increase the number of Black-majority districts. This development sets the stage for ongoing debate and potential legal challenges as the General Assembly nears the deadline to conclude the redistricting process.
State Senator Shelly Echols of Gainesville indicated her primary objective is compliance with judicial directives, according to a Capitol Beat report. In October, U.S. District Judge Steve Jones issued a directive requiring the legislature to establish five additional Black-majority districts in the House and two more in the Senate. The court justified this order by pointing out that representative districts should align with Georgia's increasing Black population over the past ten years.
Democrats argue that newly created districts approved by Republicans fail to adhere to both Judge Jones' order and provisions of the Voting Rights Acts, according to another report from Capitol Beat. The same source also reported that House legislators accepted an amended House map following a 101-77 vote which split along party lines, while state senators similarly endorsed a new Senate map via a 32-23 vote predominantly divided along political affiliations. The ratified legislative maps are set for deliberation between both houses of government as they aim towards meeting a court-set December 8 deadline during this ongoing redistricting session.
AP News reports Republican House Speaker Jon Burns of Newington as saying that these redrawn maps meet their initial promise by fully complying with Judge Jones' order and upholding traditional redistricting principles practiced in Georgia. According to AP News, significant alterations have been made to congressional districts within these new outlines: Democrat David Scott will represent regions south and east of Atlanta including Gwinnett County; Republican Rich McCormick's district moves further into North Georgia; Democrat Nikema Williams' Atlanta district becomes majority Black bringing statewide total to five such districts. The map also reflects changes in six other metro Atlanta congressional districts while five districts to the south and east of Atlanta remain unchanged.