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WED · 2026-05-06 · 11:00 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0506-74145
News/Mississippi house to hold redistricting session at site of J…
NSR-2026-0506-74145News Report·EN·Social Justice

Mississippi house to hold redistricting session at site of Jim Crow era capitol

Mississippi House lawmakers will convene a special redistricting session on May 20th at the Old Capitol building, a site historically linked to the Jim Crow era. This decision, attributed to renovations in the current House chamber, means the House will meet in the building where Mississippi seceded from the Union in 1861.

Adria R WalkerThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-06 · 11:00 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 3 min
Mississippi house to hold redistricting session at site of Jim Crow era capitol
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
3min
Word count
589words
Sources cited
4cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
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Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Mississippi House lawmakers will convene a special redistricting session on May 20th at the Old Capitol building, a site historically linked to the Jim Crow era. This decision, attributed to renovations in the current House chamber, means the House will meet in the building where Mississippi seceded from the Union in 1861. The session is called to redraw state supreme court districts following a recent Supreme Court decision that weakened the Voting Rights Act. Some lawmakers, including the chair of the legislative Black caucus, have expressed concern over the optics of holding redistricting discussions at a location with such a racist history, particularly given predictions that the new districts may dilute Black voting strength. The Senate will continue to meet in the new capitol building.

Confidence 0.90Sources 4Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Social Justice
Political Strategy
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
4
Well sourced
FewMany
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Key claims

5 extracted
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The Old Capitol building was the site where lawmakers met in 1861 to vote to secede from the union and where the state's 1890 constitution, which implemented Jim Crow laws, was established.

factual
Confidence
1.00
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Mississippi lawmakers will convene a special session to redraw state supreme court districts at the Old Capitol building.

factual
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1.00
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Donald Trump has called for Mississippi to redraw congressional districts to target Bennie Thompson.

factual
Confidence
0.90
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Some legislators and civic leaders find the decision to hold the redistricting session at the Old Capitol troubling due to its historical association with racist policies and disenfranchisement.

quoteKabir Karriem, Safia Malin
Confidence
0.90
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Many legislators predict that the redrawing of districts will be done to dilute Black voting strength, following a recent Supreme Court decision that weakened the Voting Rights Act.

prediction
Confidence
0.80
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Full report

3 min read · 589 words
When Mississippi lawmakers met in 1861 and voted to secede from the union in an effort to continue enslaving people, they did so in what is now known as the Old Capitol Museum. From 1839 to 1903, lawmakers met at a building that witnessed some of the state’s most racist history.And now, on 20 May, when members of Mississippi’s house convene for a special session to redraw state supreme court districts, they will do so at the Old Capitol, ostensibly because of renovations in the house chamber.Jason White, Mississippi’s Republican house speaker, told local outlet WLBT that any special session called between now and January 2027 would be held in the Old Capitol house chamber. The State Senate will still use the new capitol building.The last time lawmakers met at the Old Capitol was in 2009, when they did so to ceremonially acknowledge restoration to the building, which had been damaged during Hurricane Katrina. When lawmakers have needed to meet outside the current capitol building previously, during extensive renovations in the 1980s, they met at the old Central high school building, also in downtown Jackson.For some, the house’s decision to use the Old Capitol now is troubling.“I was a little taken aback with the location of the Old State Capitol,” Kabir Karriem, a Democratic state representative who leads the Mississippi’s legislative Black caucus, said. “Even though they said that they were doing some remodeling, the optics of it are horrific for 1.2 million Black folks here in the state of Mississippi.”Prior to the supreme court’s decision in Louisiana v Callais last week, which severely weakened section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, Mississippi governor Tate Reeves called lawmakers back to Jackson to redraw the state’s three supreme court districts. Many legislators predict that lawmakers will redraw districts to dilute Black voting strength.Donald Trump has also called for the Mississippi legislature to redraw congressional districts in an attempt to target Bennie Thompson, Mississippi’s lone congressional Democrat, who chaired the January 6 committee hearings, even though primaries have already been held.Using the Old Capitol at this time “feels like it’s almost a deliberate or intentionally cruel attempt, even if that’s not the way it’s being presented on its face”, said Safia Malin, policy director for One Voice Mississippi, a civic engagement organization.“It feels like a cool reminder of our past as it relates to regaining full citizenship in the state and the path that we’re moving towards,” she said.White supremacist lawmakers met there to establish the state’s 1890 constitution, which implemented Jim Crow and disenfranchised Black Mississippians for generations. More than 40,000 Black Mississippians are disenfranchised today due to those laws, which lawmakers at the time said were created solely to limit Black voting power.Cheikh Taylor, the chair of the Mississippi Democratic Party and a statehouse representative, said that the special session was about “power, and making sure Black Mississippians never have enough of it to threaten the people who currently hold it.“And now they plan to do it in the Old Capitol, the same building where Mississippi voted to secede from the Union over slavery, and where white supremacist delegates crafted the 1890 Constitution that stripped Black citizens of their voting rights and ushered in decades of poll taxes, literacy tests and racial terror,” Taylor said in a statement. “Rep Kabir Karriem is right. It is a slap in the face to the 1.2 million African Americans in this state. It is also a confession. They are returning to the scene of the crime to try and finish the job.”
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Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

9 terms
redistricting
1.00
jim crow era
0.90
voting rights act
0.80
old capitol museum
0.70
supreme court districts
0.70
black voting strength
0.60
mississippi
0.50
legislative black caucus
0.50
special session
0.40
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