Advocates ask Supreme Court to back Louisiana's new, mostly Black House district

FILE - Louisiana Attorney General candidate Liz Murrill takes part in a forum as part of the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana's 2023 conference, April 26, 2023, at the Crown Plaza Hotel in Baton Rouge, La. A panel of federal judges who recently threw out a congressional election map giving Louisiana a second mostly Black district said Tuesday, May 7, 2024, that the state Legislature must pass a new map by June 3 or face having the panel impose one on the state. However, voting rights advocates and Republican Attorney General Murrill said they would head take an appeal in defense of the new map to the Supreme Court. (Travis Spradling/The Advocate via AP, File)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Voting rights advocates filed an emergency motion Wednesday asking the Supreme Court to keep a new Louisiana congressional map in place for this year's elections that gives the state a second majority Black district.

A divided panel of federal judges in western Louisiana ruled April 30 that the new map, passed by lawmakers in January, was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. Wednesday's Supreme Court filing seeks to block that ruling, keeping the new districts in place while appeals continue. The high court asked for responses to the appeal by Monday morning — two days before the state's election officials have said they need to have a map in place to prepare for the fall elections.

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