The Supreme Court Republicans Make America Safe for White RepublicansTheir decision today is dishonest and shamefulFriends, Today, with all six Republican appointees in favor and all three Democratic appointees opposed, the Supreme Court in Louisiana v. Callais significantly weakened the Voting Rights Act. In striking down a Louisiana voting map as a racial gerrymander, the court opened the door for other states to redraw their maps in ways that dilute the votes of minority voters. But Justice Alito — writing for himself and the five other Republican appointees on the Court — did this by sleight of hand. Rather than directly strike down Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which prohibits voting practices that discriminate on the basis of race, Alito weakened Section 2 so much he renders it almost toothless. Until today’s decision, an assessment of whether a state violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act would begin with a simple question: Is a minority group sufficiently large and compact to form a single member district where they would have a fair chance of electing their candidate of choice? Now, according to the test announced by Alito, plaintiffs get that chance only if a random computer model would give them that opportunity. This is totally contrary to the history of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which Congress amended in 1982 specifically to respond to an earlier Supreme Court decision (City of Mobile v. Bolden) in which the Court said plaintiffs had to prove discriminatory intent. Congress responded by saying that if a redistricting plan results in vote dilution—that is, has that effect — plaintiffs have proven their case. Today Alito says that the Court must reject that 1982 law to avoid a clash with the 14th and 15th amendments. Rubbish. The ratifiers of those amendments engaged in race conscious legislation to protect former slaves. Everyone understood that those amendments permitted race consciousness in order to reverse America’s horrible history of slavery — which still has repercussions today. Rather than be faithful to Congress’s effects test, Alito revives the intentional discrimination test:
This effectively guts Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. It will end what has been the most successful way Black and other minority voters have gotten fair representation in Congress, state legislatures, and in local bodies. It will make all our legislative bodies whiter. It will significantly diminish protection for minority voters. A Supreme Court so fundamentally hostile to the rights of minority voters places the Court at odds with democracy itself. From now on, favoring a party is viewed as a venerable tradition in districting. And when a state favors a party in a way that significantly dilutes the votes of minorities, it’s not a section 2 violation unless minority voters would have been hurt without a redistricting plan that favors one party. What does this means for the 2026 elections? In many states, primaries are over, or nearly so. But the decision could affect places still redistricting for 2026, including most importantly Florida. It could also affect state and local elections, from school boards and city councils to state legislatures. Its major effect will be in 2028. Justice Kagan’s dissent is correct. She notes that the Court is now bringing back the requirement that minority voters prove discriminatory intent — while denying it is doing so. Alito knew precisely what he was doing today — make it seem as if he’s not gutting the Voting Rights Act through legal and technical gibberish, while turning it on its head. Alito’s mission has long been to favor the white Republicans he seems to think he represents, rather than all Americans. His five Republican-appointed colleagues on the Court appear to believe the same thing. Shame on them. So glad you can be here today. Please consider becoming a paid subscriber of this community so we can do even more. |