Washington — The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to take up a long-running redistricting dispute in Louisiana that could determine whether the state maintains a congressional map that includes ...
The Supreme Court ordered Louisiana to use its current map for the election ... the upcoming Supreme Court hearing will be at ...
The Supreme Court ultimately upheld the Alabama ruling, prompting the creation of a new map with an additional district ...
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear an appeal over Louisiana’s more ... divvy up the state into six congressional districts has been playing out for years, with repeated stops at the Supreme ...
The Supreme Court announced Monday that it will decide the future of Louisiana’s congressional map in a pair of cases about ...
By Abbie VanSickle Reporting from Washington The Supreme Court agreed on Monday to hear a long-running dispute over a congressional map in Louisiana that includes a second district with a majority ...
The nation's high court is expected to begin hearing oral arguments ... required legal deadlines. Louisiana lawmakers approved in January a new congressional map to increase the number of majority ...
The high court has not yet scheduled the hearing. A decision is expected ... The saga over Louisiana's congressional map goes back to the 2020 census, which revealed an increase in the population ...
WASHINGTON, Nov 4 (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on Monday to hear a bid by Louisiana officials and civil rights groups to preserve an electoral map that raised the number of Black ...
The Supreme Court announced Monday it will take up the fight over Louisiana’s congressional map, which has erupted into a messy legal battle over how to fix a racially gerrymandered design.
The Louisiana legislature then redrew its congressional map in January, creating two majority-Black districts, including one that stretched across the state from Shreveport to Baton Rouge.
The Supreme Court announced Monday it will take up the fight over Louisiana’s congressional map, which has erupted into a messy legal battle over how to fix a racially gerrymandered design.