WHITES AND BLACKS: The GOP helped send Black members to Congress!

FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2026

Hulse explains why the GOP did that: In yesterday's report, we floated a question about Rep. James Clyburn (D-SC):

Without the 1982 addition to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, would Rep. Clyburn ever have been elected to the House of Representatives from his home state of South Carolina?

Rep. Clyburn has been an extremely significant member of Congress. But, especially given the ways of the times, would he ever have gotten there, absent the1982 addition to the Voting Rights Act?

When we floated that question, we didn't remember the fact that Rep. Clyburn recently answered that question. Carl Hulse recorded his answer right at the start of this history lesson, which appeared on page A19 of the New York Times back on May 10 of this year:     

CONGRESSIONAL MEMO 
How Minority Districts Fueled the G.O.P.’s Southern Ascendancy in Congress

Representative James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, formerly the No. 3 Democrat in the House, is certain he would never have been elected to Congress without changes in the Voting Rights Act that the Supreme Court determined last week amounted to unconstitutional racial gerrymandering.

“And about half of the members of the Congressional Black Caucus wouldn’t be there,” said Mr. Clyburn, the first African American sent to Congress from his state since Reconstruction. He was part of the historic 1992 class of Black and Hispanic lawmakers elected after new maps were drawn to comply with 1982 changes meant to strengthen the Voting Rights Act.

Plainly, Hulse was referring to the changes made to the VRA in 1982, not to the original provisions of the legislation. That said, Clyburn's answer was clear:  

Absent those additions to the VRAchanges supported by both major partieshe never would have served in the House! 

Also, “about half of the members of the Congressional Black Caucus wouldn’t be there,” Clyburn said.   

New language was added to the VRA in 1982. In the redistricting which followed the 1990 census, those somewhat murky new provisions resulted in the deliberate creation of a significant number of districts which were newly majority Black. 

Those newly created districts sent new members to the Housenew members like Rep. Clyburn. There had long been Black members of the Housebut now the number roughly doubled. The leading authority on this significant change ciphers the matter like this:

1992 United States House of Representatives elections    

The 1992 United States House of Representatives elections were held on November 3, 1992, to elect U.S. Representatives to serve in the 103rd United States Congress. They coincided with the 1992 presidential election, in which Democrat Bill Clinton was elected president, defeating Republican incumbent President George H. W. Bush.

Despite this, however, the Democrats lost a net of nine seats in the House to the Republicans, in part due to redistricting following the 1990 census. This election was the first to use districts drawn up during the 1990 United States redistricting cycle on the basis of the 1990 census. The redrawn districts were notable for the increase in majority-minority districts, drawn as mandated by the Voting Rights Act. The 1980 census resulted in 17 majority-black districts and 10 majority-Hispanic districts, but 32 and 19 such districts, respectively, were drawn after 1990.

This was the first time ever that the victorious presidential party lost seats in the House in two consecutive elections. As of 2025, this is...the last time the Democrats won the House for more than two consecutive elections.   

Oof! The Democrats still controlled the House, but that was soon going to end. As we detailed yesterday, the GOP took control of the House in 1994 for the first time in forty years.  

The GOP didn't take control of the House because of those majority minority districts. Majority Black districts were mainly being created in the Southin states like Jim Clyburn's South Carolinabut Democrats lost more seats in the state of Washington that year (6) than in any other state.  

Incredibly, Speaker Tom Foley was swept out of office in that northwestern state in the 1994 elections. Strikingly, so were Rep. Maria Cantwell, a future United States senator, and Rep. Jay Inslee, a future governor of the state. 

With five incumbents defeated and a sixth (retiring) Democratic incumbent replaced by a Republican, the congressional delegation in Washington flipped in the 1994 elections from 8-1 Democratic to 7-2 Republican. "The Republican Revolution" struck on a nationwide basis that year, even on the Canadian border.

In states like Washington, the original partisan alignment would largely be restored over time. But in many Southern states, the 1994 Republican wins, along with the ongoing party-switching, was part of the larger movement in which "the solid South" slowly but steadily moved from solidly D over to solidly R.   

This raises the question which Hulse explores in his New York Times report. That question goes like this:   

If Republicans were slowly seizing control of the Southern states, why would they agree to form majority Black districts in those statesdistricts which would almost surely send Democrats on to the House? 

Why did Republicans do that? In 1982, why did they overwhelmingly supports the changes to the VRA which led to the creation of those new districts? After the 1990 census, why did they support the creation of majority Black districts in the Southdistricts like the one which enabled Rep. Clyburn's monumental career in the Congress?   

As far as we know, Hulse's answer to those questions is the standard historical answer. If memory serves, the Republican Party's political strategy was publicly discussed at the time.   

Why did Republicans agree to create those Democratic districts? Midway through his concise report for the Times, the historian Hulse explains:   

In the late 1980s, Republicans had been deep in the House minority for nearly 40 years. But growing dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party had begun moving white Southern conservatives into the Republican ranks, as illustrated by high-profile party switches in Washington. Then the redistricting initiated under a series of court decisions aimed at fostering more minority representation provided yet another opening that might have seemed counterintuitive at first glance.

Architects of the [new congressional] maps realized that if they could maximize Black and Hispanic representation in the new districts, they would simultaneously dilute Democratic strength in surrounding jurisdictions where coalitions of white and Black voters had elected white Democrats for decades. The shift would ultimately create dozens of openings for Republican candidates in what had formerly been known as Democrats’ “Solid South.”   

Slick! If Republicans packed Black voters into heavily Democratic districts, that would help Republican candidates win in the neighboring districts which had been robbed of such voters! The creation of those new [and heavily Democratic] districts "would create dozens of openings for Republican candidates" in other nearby districts!

As far as we know, this is fairly standard history of the era. As he continues, Hulse explains how the creation of those districts was accomplished:

[continuing from above]
Groups bankrolled by wealthy conservatives joined with liberal organizations to school minority advocacy groups in state capitals and in Washington about how to shape new districts to meet court tests and best guarantee the election of minority representatives for minority communities—an outcome that many on the left argued was long overdue. Republican groups even provided free access to expensive computer software that could craft the new districts. Democrats eagerly accepted the help.

Some civil rights figures such as Representative John Lewis, the Georgia Democrat, warned at the time that the new maps could empower Republicans by weakening the partnership of progressive white and Black voters in the South. But others said the new districts were the only way to overcome centuries of institutional discrimination against minorities in the region.  

According to Hulse, so the tradeoffs were assessed at that time.

According to Hulse, "many on the left" believed that "the [increased] election of minority representatives for minority communities...was long overdue" in the region. For their part, Republicans saw the creation of these majority minority districts as a way to continue their party's ongoing march through the South.   

In modern parlance, it was Red and Blue Together as Rs and Ds joined hands to move these changes along. Some high-end figurescongressional figures like Rep. Clyburnwere sent to Washington from these districts. As is occasionally true with white congressional reps, some of the new Black reps who were elected were perhaps occasionally perhaps a bit less impressive overall.   

At any rate, so it went as the GOP slowly accomplished its political conquest of the South. Early in his report for the Times, Hulse brings us up to date on the way Republican strategy has changed in the present day:   

Now, Republicans see the chance to cement their grip on the region—and to try to maintain their thin House majority—by eliminating the minority districts that initially worked to their advantage and to take those seats for their own.   

It is the latest chapter in an ongoing political saga that has had profound implications for the House of Representatives over the past three decades. Redistricting in minority communities could again be a major factor in deciding the November elections as Republicans try to lessen the traditional midterm advantages for the party out of power—the Democrats in this case—in a year when they face particularly strong headwinds.

Having consolidated their power throughout the South, Republicans are now emboldened to try to eliminate the majority-minority districts, believing they can carry them without risking their strength elsewhere as Democratic-leaning minority voters are dispersed into other districts.   

Within the realm of Republican strategy, it's time for those districts to go! According to Hulse, Republicans feel that they now could win every House district in some Southern states, especially if they're helped along by a bit of gerrymandering as they create those states' new districts.  

In such circumstances, it's time for those once-helpful districts to go! Or so goes current Republican strategy, at least according to Hulse.   

As far as we know, this is fairly basic political history. If memory serves this general Republican strategy was publicly discussed back in the 1990s.

None of this helps us evaluate the constitutional and legal merits of those recent Supreme Court decision. None of this tells us how various groups should react to the new legal realities concerning these endangered districts.

One such district is Alabama 7, a district which will remain largely unchanged and majority Black for this November's election. According to the leading authority, its modern history goes something like this:
Alabama's 7th congressional district   

Alabama's 7th congressional district is a United States congressional district in Alabama that elects a representative to the United States House of Representatives. ...The largest city entirely within the district is Selma.

The district has been majority nonwhite, with a majority of African-American residents, since the redistricting following the 1990 census. As such, and with a Cook Partisan Voting Index rating of D+13, it is the most Democratic district in Alabama...It is currently represented by Democrat Terri Sewell.
Back when he was still a Democrat, this was Rep. Shelby's district. In the years since its redistricting, it has sent three Black Democrats to the House—first Earl Hilliard, then Artur Davis, and now Terri Sewell.

(According to the leading authority, it was created in 1992 as "a 65 percent black-majority district." If that number is accurate, that seems like an unusually heavy degree of "packing," as these matters go.)

Rep. Sewell is highly capable. She recently spoke about the prospective dismantling of these majority Black Southern districts.

We strongly agreed with one of the things she said. Concerning a second statement she made, we may not agree quite so much.  

The issues here have always been quite complex. Much more remains to be said.

Still to come: Good grief! Will the mid-census dismantling of some majority Black districts let the GOP retain control of the House this year? 

Much, much more remains to be said about the many different aspects of this important topic.

THURSDAY: We're enormously sorry we brought it up!

THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2026

Our failed state and its douchebags: Yesterday afternoon, on The Five, it was Joe and Mika who were denounced as "douchebags."

"I never want to hear another moral lecture from those douchebags at Morning Joe," an angry fellow defiantly said

Five hours later, on Gutfeld!,  it was Rep. Jerry Nadler and the Southern Poverty Law Center's Bryan Fair who were denounced in that same colorful way. 

"What the hell are these douchebags talking about?" the angry youngster asked.  

On Tuesday evening, the same fellow had opened the Gutfeld! show with a joke calling Hillary Clinton a "bitch," instantly followed by a joke comparing Joy Behar to a cow. This is the braindead squalor our astonishing nation has chosen   

Back to yesterday's edition of The Five, our most-watched "cable news" show:

We're sorry we said, in this morning's report, that we would discuss yesterday's use of that angry fellow's new favorite word. If you try to discuss this gong-show too often, it's your brain cells, and no one else's, which quickly start to die.

In yesterday's opening segment, the rude, inane overtalking of Tarlov came on thick and fast. It may be time for Tarlov to goto abandon this squalid imitation of life, this burlesque of human behavior, though she'd have to abandon her pay.

In this report, Mediaite captures one amusing part of yesterday's opening segment. Much, much more remains to be said about that segment, but we can't do it today. 

Behar is 83. The termagant likes to call her a cow.

Suzanne Scott pays him to do it. What ever happened to Suzanne Sctt to leave her behaving this way?

Watters describes the world of The Five: During that opening segment, Jesse Watters said that he would go after Candidate Platner mainly through policy issues.

"We do a cable show, so we like to sensationalize it," the most-watched person in cable news said. "It's fun to talk about nipples and Nazis and his sex tape, but that's not going to do it."  

One of the other youngsters chuckled. According to the world's top experts, this is the downfall we've chosen. 

REDS SWAMP BLUES: When Newt's troops overran D.C. ...

THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2026

...Dems like Jim Clyburn hung on: In November 1992, Bill Clinton regained the White House for the Democratic Party. For the record, he was a white Southerner. So was his running mate, Senator Al Gore (D-Tenn.).

After twelve years of Presidents Reagan and Bush, the Democrats were actually back in the White House! And in that year's congressional elections, the ancien regime prevailed:   

Congressional elections, November 1992   
Democrats: 258 seats
Republicans: 176 seats 

It had been that way since the dawn of time. Two years later, the deluge:

Congressional elections, November 1994
Democrats: 204 seats
Republicans: 230 seats

Say what? What the Capitol Hill? Yes, that actually happened! For all the data, click here!

The numbers can get a little confusing, but 34 incumbent Democratic House members were defeated in the general election that year. (That included Rep. Tom Foley, D-Wash., the speaker of the House.) 

In 22 other races, Republicans won open seats previously held by Democrats.    

Rep. Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) became the new speaker of the House. The GOP had seized control of the House, by a fairly comfortable margin, for the first time in forty years!

Republicans also seized control of the Senate with a pick-up of eight seats. The very next day, Senator Shelby (D-Alabama) party-switched, transitioning to an R. President Clinton would win re-election two years later, but the co-called "Republican Revolution" was very much underway.

Overall, Republicans had gained 54 seats in the House. Some of those gains, though by no means all, had occurred in Southern states as part of the process whereby "the solid South" (principally meaning the white South) was completing a slow, chaotic change from solidly Democratic to solidly GOP.  

It would be hard to overstate the shock at the size of the realignment, which brought a whole new generation of major Republican players to D.C. Indeed, six (6) future Republican senators won election as freshmen congressmen that year. We refer to future senators Brownback, Burr, Chambliss, Coburn, Lindsey Graham and Wicker.

Joe Scarborough even arrived in D.C. as a Republican congressman from the Florida panhandle! Today, Scarborough conducts the most intelligent conversations found on any of our struggling nation's daily cable news programs. 

Yesterday, he was denounced as a "douchebag" on the most-watched "cable news" show in our profoundly challenged nation. More on that this afternoon. For now, let's return to the Republican wave of 1994:

The solid South had always been politically and culturally conservative. But as the region fitfully moved from solidly D to solidly R, it moved away from the non-ideological alignment which had characterized our party politics for a great many years. 

That said, please remember this:

Even as the GOP was seizing final control of the South, an important change in the way certain House districts were formed meant that a new group of Black Democrats were entering the House from that region. 

To cite one prominent example, Rep. James Clyburn had won a House seat in November 1992. He was a straight-ahead Democratic congressman from the state of South Carolina!  

He would go on to be a major figure in American politics. He had won election in that state's new majority Black 6th congressional district, a district which had been created in the manner described by the leading authority:  

Jim Clyburn    

James Enos Clyburn (born July 21, 1940) is an American politician serving as the U.S. representative for South Carolina's 6th congressional district. First elected in 1992, Clyburn is serving his 17th term, representing a congressional district that includes most of the majority-black precincts in and around Columbia and Charleston, as well as most of the majority-black areas outside Beaufort and nearly all of South Carolina's share of the Black Belt.

[...]  

After the 1990 census South Carolina's district lines were redrawn. Due to prior racial discrimination before the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the Supreme Court required the 6th district, which had previously included the northeastern portion of the state, to be redrawn as a black-majority district. The 6th was reconfigured to take in most of the majority-black areas near Columbia and Charleston, as well as most of the Black Belt. Five-term incumbent Robin Tallon's home in Florence stayed in the district, but he chose to retire.  

Rep. Clyburn has had an extremely significant congressional career. As other people have frequently noted, he's an extremely capable person. 

Could he have won a House seat from his home state absent the creation of that majority Black district?  We can't necessarily answer that question, but the answer might be no.   

Those majority Black Southern districts have been in the news of late, due to several Supreme Court decisions involving redistricting in Louisiana and Alabama. As a result of one of those decisions, Alabama will have one majority Black district this Novemberone such district out of seven districts total, instead of the current two.   

These districts were formed in various Southern states in the wake of an addition to the Voting Rights Act in 1982. The Republican Party strongly supported that addition to the VRA.

After the 1990 census, the Republican Party also supported the creation of those majority Black districtsdistricts which were virtually guaranteed to send Democrats to the House, even as the region was party-switching its way to Republican control.   

Today, we're involved in a great civil war about the likely dismantling of many or all of those majority Black districts. Blue America, including the nation's many Black Democrats, is faced with the challenge of deciding what to think and say, and what to do, in the face of this likely dismantling.

First, though, why did the GOP support the creation of those surefire Democratic districts in the first place? As their revolution was emerging, why did the GOP support the creation of those Democratic districts? 

Carl Hulse recently outlined the standard history in this Congressional Memo for the New York Times.

Tomorrow, at long last, we believe we'll finally get to Hulse's account. Rep. Sewell's recent assessments still lie ahead.  

Tomorrow: At long last, Hulse explains


WEDNESDAY: In search of the New York Times' excuse!

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2026

The normalization of everything: We're going to spend this one last day discussing the president's conduct on Sunday's Meet the Pressrather, discussing the way the New York Times disappeared his remarkable conduct.  

Inevitably, he was soon back on his favorite topic. At one point, here's what he said to NBC's Kristen Welker:

The election was rigged. It was a dirty election.   

He was talking about the 2020 presidential election. But then, what else is never new?

By now, the president has had more than five years to produce some sort of "white paper" offering evidence in support of that poisonous claim. He hasn't done so, presumably for the obvious reason. 

Concerning his general relationship to the concept of evidence, here's something he said to Welker moments later:   

TRUMP (continuing directly from above): And it’s happening again right now in California.

WELKER: You’ve never presented evidence that the 2020 election was rigged.

TRUMP: It’s happening right now in California. Right now, it’s look at what’s happening in California.

WELKER: Where’s the evidence to that? The Republicans are doing well in California.

TRUMP It’s four days. In California, it’s— No they’re not! They’re dropping fast because it’s a rigged election. Let me tell you, it’s four days and they aren’t even close to coming up with the –

WELKER: That’s how they count the votes in California.

TRUMP: Do you know why they’re doing that? Because they’re cheating on the election.

WELKER: There’s— What? Do you have evidence to support that?

TRUMP: It’s— All I have to do is look. All I have to do is look.  

There and elsewhere, Welker kept asking for evidence. In the end, the president said that he only needs to look.   

Welker kept asking for "evidence" in support of Trump's endless claims. She said the word fourteen times in the course of the interview. 

The president kept using his own favorite words—crooked and dirty and rigged and fake, with stupid thrown in several times. Inevitably, he ended up insulting Welker, again and again, as the interview neared its premature end. 

By now, his face was getting red with anger as Welker asked him to justify his claims. His face got red and he raised his voice. Finally, after the typical welter of insults, he angrily (and prematurely) rose up and walked off the set.  

We feel that the president has an excuse. We're inclined to think his niece is right when she says he's experiencing an "obvious" cognitive decline, layered atop decades of untreated mental illness.   

We're inclined to assume that her assessment is accurate; we regard that as a tragic but dangerous state of affairs. At any rate, that would be the president's excuse for his peculiar, dimwitted behavior. But what's the excuse for the way the New York Times reported that high-profile interview?   

In its news report in Monday's print editions, the Times completely disappeared the most striking part of the interview—the endless repetition of the endless claims, followed by the typical insults, the growing anger, and the refusal to continue.  Below, you see the only hint the Times provided of the session's most striking aspect: 

Trump Says He Never Promised No New Wars, and Defends Compensation Fund  

President Trump, who campaigned on a central promise to keep the United States out of overseas wars, denied in an interview aired on Sunday that he’d ever made the pledge.

“I didn’t guarantee no war,” Mr. Trump said in a lengthy interview with Kristen Welker, the host of NBC’s “Meet the Press,” taped during his trip to Wisconsin on Friday. “Why would I have built the strongest military in the world?”  

[...]   

Mr. Trump eventually ended the wide-ranging interview after being repeatedly pressed by Ms. Welker about claiming, without evidence, that recent elections in California were rigged.

That's it! He "ended the interview," the Times reported. Welcome to an offshore island belonging to North Korea!

It went unmentioned by the New York Times. Unlike in the Washington Post, the disorder was all disappeared.

The Times has been playing it this way forever. We'd guess that the president is mentally ill, but what is the Times' excuse?


WHITE AND RED: White politicians kept switching parties...

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2026

...as the South moved from D to R: During the era in question, the so-called "solid South" was solidly changing sides.  

We mainly refer to the "solid" white South, which was fitfully switching from solidly Democratic to solidly Republican. 

Senator Strom Thurmond (S.C.) switched from Democrat to Republican in 1964. In 1948, he had included a stop along the way the Dixiecrat presidential candidate. 

(Briefly it was a third party. Formally, the party was the States' Right Democratic Party.) 

Briefly, he sought the White House as a Dixiecrat. Here's the famously surprising way that famous campaign turned out

1948 presidential election  
Harry Truman (D): 24.2 million
Thomas Dewey (R): 22.0 million
Strom Thurmond: 1.2 million   

He won four states across the South (Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, South Carolina). Georgia took a major pass on his candidacy. We've never seen that explained.   

Thurmond switched to the Republican Party in 1964. In a fitful succession of changes, most white southern pols eventually followed suit. 

The South was moving from D to R. As an example of that progression, let us riddle you this:

In 1966, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana had xx seats in the House. Every member was a Democrat, but

One year after Thurmond switched, the original version of The Voting Rights Act passed both houses of the Congress by overwhelming margins. 

It passed the Senate, 79-18. "No" votes came from both senators in eight Southern states, even including Virginia. 

At that time, Thurmond was the only Republican among that group of 16. Eventually, though, across the white South, the deluge finally came.  The white South was moving from D to R, adopting the political profile which exists today.

In short, this was the era in which the solid South was becoming a solidly Republican region. Except, of course, for the bulk of the region's Black citizens, who were now much more able to register to vote and who were emerging as an increasingly solid Democratic voting bloc.   

There were some amusing party switches as the region moved from overwhelmingly Blue to overwhelmingly Red. Consider, for example, the evolution of Senator John Kennedy (R-La.), a familiar presence today on the Fox News Channel. 

Today, he's as folksy a white southern Republican as a fellow can possibly get. But it wasn't ever thus. We proceed with the rest of the tale:

John Kennedy (Louisiana politician)

John Neely Kennedy (born November 21, 1951) is an American politician and attorney who has served as the junior United States senator from Louisiana since 2017. ,,,[H]e served as the Louisiana State Treasurer from 2000 to 2017, as Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Revenue from 1996 to 1999, and as special counsel and then cabinet member to Governor Buddy Roemer from 1988 to 1992.

Born in Centreville, Mississippi, Kennedy graduated from Vanderbilt University and the University of Virginia School of Law before attending Oxford for an additional degree in law. In 1988, Governor Buddy Roemer selected Kennedy to serve as special legal counsel and later appointed him Secretary of the Cabinet. He left Roemer's staff in 1991 to run for state attorney general as a Democrat. In 1999, he was elected state treasurer; he was reelected in 2003, 2007, 2011, and 2015. Kennedy ran for U.S. Senate in 2004 and 2008. In August 2007, he became a Republican.

Decades after Thurmond's switch, the Oxford-educated Virginia Law grad was serving Governor Roemer as a Democrat. In 2004, he even ran for the Senate as a Democrat, failing to emerge from Louisiana's "jungle primary." 

In 2008, he ran for the Senate againbut this time, he ran as a Republican, after a party switch. He had endorsed Candidate Kerry for president in 2004. Three years later, he switched his party affiliation, as was his perfect right. 

As for Governor Roemer, Kennedy's mentor, the story (in part) goes like this:

Buddy Roemer   

Charles Elson "Buddy" Roemer III (1943 – 2021) was an American politician, investor, and banker who served as the 52nd governor of Louisiana from 1988 to 1992, and as a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1981 to 1988. In March 1991, while serving as governor, Roemer switched affiliation from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party.

Roemer was a candidate for the presidential nominations of the Republican Party and the Reform Party in 2012...

The Harvard-educated Roemer switched from D to R too! To show you how bad this claim-jumping became, here's what happened to (the plainly talented) Roemer, now a Republican, in 1995:

In 1995, Roemer attempted a political comeback when he again ran for governor. ...Roemer held a wide lead for much of the campaign, but faded in the days before the primary election as State Senator Mike Foster, who switched affiliation from Democratic to Republican during the campaign, took conservative votes away from him. As a result, Roemer finished fourth with 18 percent of the vote, two percentage points from making the runoff, called the general election in Louisiana.

Roemer was bumped aside by a more recent party-switcher! This general history unfolded over the course of decades as the solid South moved it on over from D to R. 

Eventually, almost every ambitious white politician in the South was sporting an R after his or her name. In the America of today, they even start out that way!

This was a long, drawn-out political process in which the Republican Party, slowly but surely, came to control the bulk of the American South. Indeed, it still does maintain that hold in the states which have been in the news in the past few years, at the center of protracted legal disputes concerning the rules which govern the creation of congressional districts. 

During this erain 1982, to be exactan important addition was made to the original Voting Rights Act. In the congressional redistricting which followed the 1990 census, that somewhat murky addition to Section 2 of the VRA led to the creation of majority Black congressional districts in various Southern states.   

As in 1965, so too in 1982! The addition to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act passed overwhelmingly in both houses of Congress. The new addition to Section 2 was heavily supported by the GOP, as was the creation of those majority Black congressional districts after the 1990 census.  

This starts to bring us up to the legal dispute which now involves those districts. Recent decisions by the Supreme Court make it seem that state legislatures will now be able to eliminate those majority Black congressional districts.

In the wake of the Republican conquest of the South, they're the only districts which have been sending Democrats to the House of Representatives from such states as Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, South Carolina. With one brief exception, they're also the only districts which have been electing Black congressional reps from those states.

A historical question is lingering here. Why did the GOP support the creation of those (Democratic) districts back in the 1990s? (Also, why is the GOP hoping to eliminate those majority Black districts now?)

Back on May 10, in an overview which generated no discussion, Carl Hulse recently presented the standard historical explanation of that first question.  (Headline: "How Minority Districts Fueled the G.O.P.’s Southern Ascendancy in Congress.")

As far as we know, the explanation Hulse offers in that Congressional Memo is basically accurate. If memory serves, it was fully discussed in real time.

Tomorrow, we may finally get to Hulse's historical overview. That leaves Blue America, and Black America, trying to determine what to do in the face of those recent Supreme Court decisions.

How should Black America, but also Blue America, respond to those recent decisions? Last Wednesday, on Deadline: White House, the highly capable Rep. Sewellshe's a Democrat from Alabama!was shown making several statements about those decisions.

Sewell is a highly capable House member from Alabamaand long after the GOP took control of the South, Rep. Terri Sewell is a stone-cold Democrat!  Her district isn't being dismantled this year, but other such districts areat a time when the Democratic Party is hoping to find a way to regain control of the House.

This is the conundrum our struggling nation has chosen. We strongly agree with one of the statements Rep. Sewell made. With respect to another one of her statements, possibly not quite so much.

Tomorrow: Hulse claims to explain