The Louisiana state legislature has until the middle of January to enact a new congressional map after a federal court ruled that the state’s current map illegally disfranchises Black voters.
A conservative federal appeals court in New Orleans issued the deadline on Friday. According to the order, if the state legislature doesn’t pass a new map by the deadline, then a lower district court should conduct a trial and develop a plan for the 2024 elections.
Whether the outgoing Democratic governor, John Bel Edwards, will call a special session to redraw the political boundaries or whether his elected Republican successor, Jeff Landry – who will be inaugurated on 8 January – will have enough time to call a special redistricting session and meet the court’s deadline has yet to be determined.
Black voters in Louisiana represent about one-third of the state’s population, but currently represent a majority in just one out of six congressional districts in the state.
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There is a voting system like that, and it works quite well:
In a nutshell, votes are first counted in a district; if I’ve candidate had enough votes to secure a seat they do so, but all the remaining votes and votes above the count needed to win the seat, are pooled into a larger region. A number of seats are then assigned in the larger region, depending on which exact system is used, ‘unused’ votes from the region might be pooled on a state or national level afterwards.