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US Midterms 2026
19MAY

Alabama voids its own primary mid-vote

3 min read
18:17UTC

Alabama tabulated four congressional primaries on Tuesday whose results Governor Kay Ivey announced will be discarded; SCOTUS vacated the majority-Black district order one week earlier on 12 May.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

Alabama annulled a federal primary in progress to install a post-Callais map that eliminates its only Black-held congressional seat.

Alabama tabulated four congressional primaries on Tuesday 19 May 2026 whose results Governor Kay Ivey announced will be declared legally void. The 1st, 2nd, 6th and 7th district contests drew 2.4 million eligible voters under maps the state intends to discard. The US Supreme Court vacated the lower-court order requiring a second majority-Black congressional district on Tuesday 12 May, clearing Louisiana v. Callais to take operational effect inside Alabama. Ivey scheduled a re-do special primary for Tuesday 11 August under the redrawn map.

The redrawn map removes the seat held by Representative Shomari Figures, the Democrat elected in 2024 from Mobile as only the second Black congressman from Alabama in the state's modern history 1. No post-Voting Rights Act precedent exists for a state legislature voluntarily annulling an election already in progress under its own redrawn lines. Alabama was among the four states that called post-Callais redistricting sessions in late April ; today is what one of those resolutions looks like in practice.

The 12 May order was not a merits ruling on the new Alabama map. The Court vacated the existing remedial requirement on the strength of Callais and remanded, which is the procedurally smallest move that produces this outcome. Other states with pending Section 2 challenges, Louisiana and Georgia among them, will read the precedent. NAACP Legal Defense Fund counsel, cited by NPR, argued the opposite reading: the remand still permits the district court to reinstate the majority-Black requirement on the merits; nothing in the 12 May order forecloses that path before 11 August.

The broader pattern compresses the candidate fundraising window for the redrawn 7th district to roughly ten weeks. Figures-style coalitions must now hold a district without Section 2 protection, on a map drawn precisely to disperse the Black voters that Section 2 had clustered. That is the operational test the August primary will run.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

For years, US federal law required states with large Black populations to draw at least one congressional district where Black voters were the majority. That rule meant Alabama had to create a district where a Black candidate could win. In April 2026, the Supreme Court scrapped that requirement. Alabama had already drawn a new map without the Black-majority district. On 12 May the Supreme Court cleared the legal obstacle that had blocked that map. Alabama had just held four congressional primary elections on 19 May under the old maps. Governor Kay Ivey then declared those elections void, meaning the results from 2.4 million voters were thrown out. A new election will be held on 11 August under the new map, which cuts the seat held by Shomari Figures, the only Black congressman the state has had in modern times.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural conditions made Alabama's 19 May action possible.

First, Louisiana v. Callais removed the federal statutory floor that had made Section 2 remedial orders enforceable. Without the Gingles framework requiring majority-minority districts, the lower court's original order rested on a doctrine SCOTUS had overturned on 29 April. Appellate housekeeping then followed: when a court's remedial order rests on overturned doctrine, the vacatur is the mechanical consequence.

Second, Alabama's legislative caucus had drawn the post-Callais map before the ruling issued, using the same special-session mechanism other Republican states activated within 24 hours of 29 April . The contingent maps and the governor's void authority were legal infrastructure prepared in anticipation, not improvised.

Third, the compressed primary calendar created a perverse incentive. Had Alabama waited, the district court on remand might have reinstated the majority-Black requirement, forcing yet another redraw closer to November. Ivey's void declaration converts a live legal question into a fait accompli: any court order arriving after 11 August runs against a completed election, not a scheduled one.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The first documented case of a US state annulling a federal primary in progress sets a procedural template: any state with a pending Section 2 remedial order can now follow the Alabama sequence on the next SCOTUS vacatur.

    Medium term · 0.78
  • Consequence

    The 11 August re-do compresses candidate fundraising for the redrawn 7th district to roughly ten weeks, disadvantaging challengers who lack incumbent name recognition or donor networks.

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Risk

    If the district court on remand reinstates the majority-Black requirement before 11 August, Alabama faces a constitutional conflict between a state gubernatorial calendar and a federal court order, with no clear resolution mechanism.

    Short term · 0.55
  • Consequence

    Louisiana and Georgia, which also have pending Section 2 challenges, will read the 12 May vacatur as authority to implement their own post-Callais maps without waiting for district court guidance.

    Short term · 0.72
First Reported In

Update #6 · 168 Days to Go: A primary nullified mid-vote

NPR· 19 May 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Black voters in Alabama
Black voters in Alabama
Four congressional primaries are being voided while 2.4 million Alabamans cast ballots today, with Shomari Figures's majority-Black seat scheduled for elimination under the 11 August re-do map. Figures was elected in 2024 as only the second Black congressman from Alabama in modern history.
Independent voters
Independent voters
Silver Bulletin's generic ballot has held at D+5.3-5.9 across the fortnight, flat against the D+5.8 reading on 28 April. The number sits below the D+6.8 that yielded a 40-seat Democratic pickup in 2018, meaning the structural map advantage Republicans built through redistricting has not yet been overridden by the swing environment.
Crypto industry
Crypto industry
Fellowship PAC, backed by Tether and Cantor Fitzgerald, scrubbed its $1.75 million Paxton buy under establishment pressure, the first visible retreat of crypto-PAC spending inside a Republican primary. The $89 million gap between Fellowship's claimed and disclosed cash remains unresolved in FEC filings.
Civil rights groups
Civil rights groups
NAACP Legal Defence Fund and the Brennan Center are pursuing the Florida Fair Districts challenge under the state constitution's partisan-gerrymandering ban, arguing the 24R-4D map uses partisan data in every district. They are also filing Watson v. RNC amicus briefs defending the 14 states' mail-ballot grace periods.
Federal courts
Federal courts
The judiciary is now the only institution with a live 2026 map-changing role: Judge Hawkes's Florida Fair Districts ruling arrives before the 8 June qualifying deadline, the 9th Circuit panel ruling on Oregon sets circuit precedent for 23 active DOJ cases, and SCOTUS carries Watson v. RNC to end of June on a separate ballot-counting track.
Republicans (Callais wing)
Republicans (Callais wing)
Fellowship PAC and the ideological state legislatures pushed the fastest post-Callais action: four special sessions within 72 hours of the ruling and an active-election nullification in Alabama. South Carolina and Mississippi's refusals show the wing's reach is real but not universal inside the Republican coalition.