Tennessee enacts mid-decade congressional map eliminating Memphis majority-Black 9th district
On May 7, 2026, the Tennessee General Assembly passed and Governor Bill Lee signed a new congressional district map that splits Memphis — the population core of Tennessee's only majority-Black, Democratic-held U.S. House district — among three Republican-leaning districts. The action followed by eight days the U.S. Supreme Court's April 29, 2026 decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which substantially weakened Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and removed a key legal constraint on mid-decade racial-vote-dilution maps.
Actors
- Tennessee General Assembly
- Bill Lee (Governor of Tennessee)
"Racism doesn't become less racist just because it's called partisan."
— Tennessee Lookout
On May 7, 2026, the Tennessee General Assembly passed a new U.S. congressional district map; Governor Bill Lee signed it the same day. The map splits Memphis — the population core of Tennessee's 9th congressional district — among three districts that extend hundreds of miles into surrounding rural and exurban territory, each drawn to favor a Republican candidate. The 9th was the state's only Democratic-held U.S. House seat and one of two majority-minority districts; the redrawn map eliminates both characteristics. Approximately 60 percent of voters in the prior District 9 were Black; the new lines disperse those voters across three districts in which they constitute the minority.
The action followed eight days after the U.S. Supreme Court's April 29, 2026 decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which weakened the private right of action under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and removed a key legal constraint on mid-decade racial-vote-dilution maps. Tennessee finished its regular legislative session on April 23, and Lee called lawmakers back for a special session in the immediate wake of Callais. The bill also repealed a half- century-old Tennessee statute prohibiting mid-decade redistricting. According to reporting in The Intercept and NBC News, the special session was preceded by public pressure from President Donald Trump and Sen. Marsha Blackburn urging the Republican-led legislature to redraw the map and convert the state's 8-1 Republican congressional delegation into a 9-0 sweep.
Tennessee is the ninth state to enact a new congressional map in this mid-decade cycle, which began in Texas in 2025 and has since spread to at least nine states across both parties. Democratic state lawmakers and attorneys have indicated plans to file suit, arguing the map was drawn on racial lines and adopted too close to the August 6 primary.
Coverage from The Intercept, NBC News, and Tennessee Lookout documents the final-passage events and quotes from state legislators on both sides; Democracy Docket's earlier reporting situates the action within the broader post-Callais context.
Sources
- Tennessee Republicans pass US House map carving up Memphis days after SCOTUS guts Voting Rights Act — Tennessee Lookout primary accessed May 19, 2026
- Tennessee GOP Moves to Decimate Black Voting Power After Supreme Court's Blessing of Jim Crow — The Intercept primary accessed May 19, 2026
- Tennessee Republicans pass map dividing up state's lone majority-Black district — NBC News primary accessed May 19, 2026
- Tennessee Republicans move to eliminate state's last Democratic district following Voting Rights Act carnage — Democracy Docket secondary accessed May 19, 2026
See also
- U.S. House passes SAVE America Act (H.R. 22) requiring documentary proof of citizenship for federal voter registration
- Tennessee House Speaker strips entire Democratic caucus of all committee assignments in retaliation for May 7 floor protest of anti-Black gerrymander
- OGE releases Q1 2026 financial disclosures: President Trump conducted between $220M and $750M in securities transactions during his first three months in office
- Trump administration runs 67M+ voter registrations through DHS SAVE database for federal noncitizen/deceased checks; voting-rights advocates warn of pre-midterm purge
- Trump White House backed taxpayer-funded 'Rededicate 250' worship service on National Mall