February 19, 2026 Story by: Publisher
The legal battle over North Carolina’s electoral map has reached a critical juncture as the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals begins reviewing a high-stakes challenge to state Senate districts in the northeastern “Black Belt.”
At the heart of the dispute is whether the Republican-led General Assembly illegally diluted the power of Black voters when it drew Senate Districts 1 and 2.
In an order filed Dec. 22, the 4th Circuit declined an en banc hearing after no judge requested a poll of the court, maintaining the standard three-judge panel assignment. Under a separate scheduling order, the petitioner’s opening brief must be filed by Feb. 2, with the response following on March 2. The court has not yet set a date for oral arguments.
A federal judge upheld North Carolina’s state Senate map in September 2025, rejecting arguments that Republican lawmakers had drawn district lines to weaken the political influence of Black voters.
The Core Conflict: “Cracking” vs. Coalition
The lawsuit, led by plaintiffs Rodney Pierce and Moses Matthews, alleges that the 2023 redistricting plan violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
The plaintiffs argue that the map “cracks” a cohesive Black community across two districts, leaving each with roughly a 30% Black voting-age population. By splitting this population, they contend, Black voters are stripped of their ability to elect a “candidate of choice” in a region where voting remains intensely polarized along racial lines.
The State’s Defense: Republican legislative leaders and the state’s defense team argue that the map is legally sound. They point to recent election results—including the success of Black candidates in districts without a Black majority—as evidence that North Carolina has moved past the era where “race-based districting” is a legal necessity.
A Recent Procedural Blow for Plaintiffs
In late December 2025, the full 4th Circuit Court of Appeals issued a brief but significant order. The court denied a petition for an “initial en banc” hearing.
- What this means: Instead of all 15 eligible judges hearing the case at once, the appeal will follow the standard procedure of being decided by a three-judge panel.
- The Significance: Plaintiffs had pushed for the full court to hear the case immediately, citing its “exceptional importance” and the tight timeline of the 2026 elections. The denial by the full court—notably with no judge even requesting a poll on the matter—is seen as a procedural win for the state.
The Lower Court Ruling
U.S. District Judge James C. Dever III — a George W. Bush appointee — concluded that the configuration did not violate the Voting Rights Act. In his 126-page opinion, Dever declined to order the legislature to create a majority-Black Senate district, stating that doing so would require “the odious practice of sorting voters by race.”
“Due in part to societal progress on race and due in part to the VRA, North Carolina is a very different state politically and socially than it was in 1965 or 1982. Black voters in northeast North Carolina and throughout North Carolina have elected candidates of their choice (both white and black) with remarkable frequency and success for decades. Black elected officials in North Carolina are at or near-parity with their share of the statewide population.”
He concluded that Black voters in the northeast are capable of forming successful coalitions with other voters, making a mandatory majority-Black district unnecessary under current Supreme Court precedents.
Timeline and What’s at Stake
With the en banc request denied, the case is moving on an expedited briefing schedule:
- Opening Briefs: Filed in early February 2026.
- Response Briefs: Due by March 2, 2026.
- Oral Arguments: Yet to be scheduled, but expected this spring.
If the 4th Circuit panel reverses Judge Dever’s decision, the General Assembly could be forced to redraw the Senate map for the northeastern part of the state mid-decade. If the ruling stands, the current boundaries for Districts 1 and 2 will likely remain in place through the 2030 census.
Source: The Carolina Journal









