See here. That court seems stuck in a tough spot. If they issue an opinion soon, parties will go back to the San Antonio court and argue that the interim maps should be changed to reflect the D.C. ruling.… Continue reading
The divide between Latino and African-American voters’ rights groups. Many Latino leaders are happy with the interim maps and many African-American leaders are not. The issue is that Latino gains may come (at least in part) from African-American voting power.… Continue reading
You can find the court’s order here (via Texas Redistricting). May 29 primary and July 31 runoff–unless there is a further delay caused by either a Supreme Court stay request or some action from the D.C. court.
Here, at the Texas Tribune. From one of the three, written by Rep. Dukes:
I understand that the court’s plan is based on a plan that MALDEF, the Latino Task force and U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, proposed along… Continue reading
AP: “Minority groups in Texas objected Wednesday to new congressional and state House maps drawn by a San Antonio court, urging a separate court in Washington, D.C., to speed up a review that could mark the last opportunity to… Continue reading
The verdict appears to be “yes.” Rothenberg Political Report:
While neither party gets its ideal scenario, the proposed map is likely to result in a split of the state’s four new congressional districts by creating three new Hispanic-majority seats that… Continue reading
The Court says “an opinion” coming later. I would think (but cannot guarantee) that the signature of the three judges and the references to “an” opinion means no dissents. From the order: