May 14, 2026 Story by: Publisher
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp has called lawmakers back to the state Capitol for a special legislative session that will dramatically reshape Georgia’s congressional and legislative maps ahead of the 2028 election cycle, intensifying a growing national battle over voting rights and Black political representation across the South.
The special session, scheduled to begin June 17, comes just weeks after the Supreme Court of the United States issued its 6-3 ruling in Louisiana v. Callais, a decision that weakened key protections under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and opened the door for Republican-led states to revisit majority-Black congressional districts.
Kemp formally announced the session through a gubernatorial proclamation authorizing lawmakers to redraw Georgia’s congressional, state House and state Senate districts. The governor argued the Supreme Court’s ruling requires Georgia to revisit its electoral maps before the 2028 elections.
“It’s clear that Callais requires Georgia to adopt new electoral maps before the 2028 election cycle,” Kemp said following the ruling. He also praised the Supreme Court’s decision, saying it restored “fairness” to the redistricting process by limiting the role of federal courts in ordering race-conscious district maps.
The move immediately sparked outrage from voting-rights advocates and Democratic leaders, who warn Georgia Republicans are preparing to dismantle Black-majority districts that have historically allowed Black voters to elect candidates of their choice. Critics say the effort represents one of the most aggressive post-Callais redistricting pushes in the nation.
Among the districts expected to face scrutiny is Georgia’s 2nd Congressional District, represented by longtime Democratic Congressman Sanford Bishop. The southwest Georgia district is one of the last remaining rural Black-majority congressional districts in the Deep South and has long served as a political anchor for Black voters outside metro Atlanta.
Republican strategists have openly discussed reshaping the district to make it more favorable to GOP candidates, potentially threatening Bishop’s hold on the seat and reducing Black voting power in the region. Political observers note that Georgia Republicans currently control both chambers of the General Assembly and the governor’s office, giving the party broad authority to redraw district boundaries.
The special session also comes during a broader wave of mid-decade redistricting efforts sweeping Republican-led Southern states following the Supreme Court’s Callais decision. Tennessee lawmakers recently approved a congressional map that dismantled the last Black-majority district in Memphis, while officials in Alabama, South Carolina and Mississippi have considered similar redraws targeting Democratic-held or majority-Black districts.
Democrats and civil-rights organizations argue the emerging strategy reflects a coordinated effort to use the weakened Voting Rights Act to reshape congressional power before the next census.
U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock condemned the Supreme Court ruling as a major setback for minority representation, warning that it “paves the way for partisan politicians to pick their voters.”
Former Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams went even further, describing Republican-led redistricting efforts as “evil incarnate” during an interview discussing the post-Callais political environment. Abrams warned that dismantling majority-minority districts threatens decades of civil-rights progress secured after Reconstruction and the modern Voting Rights Act era.
Georgia Democrats also blasted Kemp’s special session announcement, accusing Republicans of attempting to dilute Black voting strength under the guise of legal compliance. Democratic Party of Georgia Chair Charlie Bailey called the effort a “brazen attempt to take away the voting power of Black Georgians.”
Beyond congressional boundaries, the special session will also address election administration issues tied to a controversial Georgia law set to take effect July 1. Lawmakers are expected to debate changes involving ballot procedures and election operations, adding another politically volatile layer to an already contentious session.
The stakes are especially high because Georgia remains one of the nation’s premier political battlegrounds. The state narrowly backed Democrat Joe Biden in 2020 before Republicans reclaimed statewide momentum in subsequent elections. Both parties view Georgia as central to future presidential and congressional control, making any redistricting overhaul nationally significant.
Legal experts expect any newly adopted congressional maps to face immediate court challenges, particularly if lawmakers substantially alter majority-Black districts. Civil-rights advocates argue that although the Supreme Court narrowed protections under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, constitutional challenges based on racial discrimination remain possible.
Still, the political reality after Callais appears to have fundamentally shifted. For the first time in decades, Southern Republican legislatures are openly reconsidering district lines that were previously protected under federal voting-rights precedent, signaling a potentially transformative era in American redistricting politics.
Sources: Axios / CBS News / The Guardian










