The first two days of this week certainly seemed like a win for Democrats in Alabama and Congress.
We saw court-appointed mapmakers release new Congressional district maps that include one majority-Black district and another that would be at least 48-percent, all but handing the party two U.S. Representatives after the '24 elections. Then we saw the U.S. Supreme Court turn down the state's request that it reverse a federal-court decision to toss a much more GOP-friendly map that was drawn up earlier this year.
The Alabama Democratic Party acknowledged on the Site Formerly Known As Twitter that now the maps mean an opportunity to elect a second Democrat and help the national party get back into power in the U.S. House of Representatives.
However, Joe Reed, the chairman of the Alabama Democratic Conference -- that's the Black caucus -- said the group will be filing an objection to the maps, which he called unconstitutional because they don't go far enough.
While District 2 in the proposed maps have voting-age populations that are 48-50 percent Black, the plan endorsed by the Alabama Democratic Conference has a District 2 that is 54-percent Black.
Meanwhile, on the other side, Republican Attorney General Steve Marshall called the new proposals "racially gerrymandered."