Tennessee Lawmakers Move to Strengthen Congressional Representation
Following Supreme Court Ruling
In the wake of a landmark Supreme Court decision, Tennessee lawmakers are seizing the opportunity to bring the state’s congressional map into full constitutional compliance — and potentially deliver more balanced representation for all Tennesseans, including those in Memphis and Shelby County.
A Court-Cleared Path Forward
On April 29, 2026, the United States Supreme Court issued its ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, finding that race-based congressional districts violate the Fifteenth Amendment. The decision gave state legislatures across the South the legal clarity they needed to replace outdated, race-conscious maps with districts drawn on legitimate partisan and geographic grounds.
Tennessee’s 9th congressional district — the state’s only majority-minority district and its sole Democratic seat — drew immediate scrutiny following the ruling. Governor Bill Lee responded swiftly and responsibly, calling a special session beginning May 5 to ensure Tennessee’s map reflects both constitutional standards and the will of its voters.


Leave feedback about this