Federal Trial Reveals Intentional Racial Discrimination in North Florida’s Congressional Districts

2023-10-03 10:31:00

Attorneys for civil rights groups and voters who are suing over North Florida’s congressional districts called their final witnesses on Monday in a federal trial that’s expected to end early this week.

Redistricting experts, voters and officials involved in the state’s 2022 redistricting process were among the witnesses who took the stand during the first few days of the trial, which began last week. Plaintiffs are trying to convince a three-judge panel that the removal of the region’s only congressional district where Black voters might elect their candidate of choice was intentionally racially discriminatory.

“The maps are just bad. They’re unconstitutional,” Florida House Minority Leader Rep. Fentrice Driskell (D-Tampa) told WFSU News in an interview following her testimony on Monday. “I think that legislative leadership knew that.”

Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a map last year that eliminated the region’s only district from Pensacola to Jacksonville where African American voters might elect their candidate of choice to Congress. That was following he vetoed two maps from the legislature that attempted to preserve Black voting power in the region. DeSantis then called lawmakers into a special session to pass his plan, which eliminated the region’s only African American opportunity district. “The legislature basically capitulated to him,” Driskell said.

“The governor’s involvement not only deprived the public of the opportunity to have input, it deprived voters, particularly Black voters in North Florida with the opportunity to elect their candidate of their choice.”

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