The NAACP filed an emergency petition Thursday in Davidson County Chancery Court seeking to block Tennessee's newly enacted redistricting plan, which would eliminate the state's only majority-Black congressional district, according to The Hill. The organization argues the plan violates the Tennessee state constitution and urged Gov. Bill Lee and the legislature not to enact it while litigation proceeds.
This is the oldest move in the Southern legislative playbook — and its longevity is the point. From the White Primary cases of the 1920s through the post-Shelby County dismantling of preclearance after 2013, the mechanism has been consistent: draw lines that dilute Black political power, then force voting rights advocates to exhaust themselves in court while the election cycles run. The burden of proof lands on the injured party.
The state constitutional framing is significant. By grounding the claim in Tennessee's own charter rather than solely in federal law, the NAACP may be trying to find ground that the current Supreme Court cannot easily reach.