Supreme court poised to weaken voting rights act
Summary
- The
Supreme Court considers limiting Voting Rights Act protections. - Focus
on Section 2, barring racially discriminatory electoral maps. - Conservative
justices skeptical of indefinite race-based districting.
The court’s six conservative justices appeared likely to
essentially overturn a Louisiana congressional district with a Black majority
due to its over-reliance on race throughout the two and a half hours of
arguments.
The Civil Rights Movement’s main piece of legislation, the
1965 Voting Rights Act, which was successful in granting Black Americans the
right to vote and lowering ongoing discrimination in voting, would undergo a
significant shift as a result of this achievement.
Legislators may be able to change congressional maps in
southern states as a result of a Louisiana judgment, which would improve
Republican election prospects by removing districts with a plurality of Black
and Latino voters that often support Democrats. Due to a 2019 Supreme Court
ruling, legislatures are already allowed to create highly political districts,
with state courts being the only ones to examine them.
Two years previously, in a similar issue concerning
Alabama’s political borders, the court upheld a decision that found a probable
violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by a vote of 5–4. Justice Brett
Kavanaugh and Chief Justice John Roberts joined their three other liberal
colleagues in the decision.
Particularly in their inquiries to civil rights attorney Janai
Nelson on Wednesday, Roberts and Kavanaugh adopted
a different tone.
The chief justice argued that the Alabama ruling should not
be interpreted to mandate a similar result in Louisiana since it was narrowly
focused on its facts.
Nelson was questioned by Kavanaugh about whether the Voting
Rights Act’s use of race-based districts should be discontinued now or
“permanently extended.”
In their efforts to prevent prejudice, the liberal justices
of the court emphasized the history of the Voting Rights Act. According to
Justice Elena Kagan, a court must identify “a specific identified, proven
violation of law” before it can proceed with the remedy of redrawing districts.
Following Republican President Donald Trump’s calls for
Texas and other GOP-controlled states to redraw their congressional boundaries
in order to help the GOP maintain its slim majority in the House, a mid-decade
war over redistricting is already taking place across the country.
The conservative majority on the court has been unconvinced
of racial concerns, most recently abolishing college admissions affirmative
action. Another cornerstone of the historic voting statute, which required
states with a history of racial discrimination to obtain prior clearance from
the Justice Department or federal judges before implementing election-related
changes, was bludgeoned by the court twelve years ago.
Separately, the court has allowed state legislatures to gerrymander
for political reasons. States would not be subject to any restrictions on how
they create electoral districts if the Supreme Court were to weaken or
invalidate Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Extreme gerrymandering by the
party in power at the state level is likely to follow from such a result.
Two more Black Democrats were elected to Congress as a
result of new districts created in Louisiana and Alabama as a result of the
court’s 2023 ruling.
However, the court has now asked the parties to respond to a
basic question: “Does the state’s deliberate creation of a second
majority-minority congressional district violate the U.S. Constitution’s
Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments?”
Together with a group of white voters, Louisiana and the
Trump administration argued that the challenged district should be declared
illegal and that it would be far more difficult to establish discrimination in
redistricting.
The arguments led Justice Sonia Sotomayor to assert that the
administration’s “bottom line is just get rid of Section 2.”
Justice Department lawyer Hashim Mooppan disagreed and said
state lawmakers would have no incentive to get rid of every majority Black
district because doing so would create swing districts and imperil some
Republican incumbents.
In addition, Mooppan said, only 15 of the 60 Black members
of the House represent majority Black districts. “But even if you eliminated
Section 2 entirely, fully 75% of the Black congressmen in this country are in
districts that are not protected by Section 2.”
Roberts expressed doubts about the second majority Black
district, which elected Democratic Representative Cleo Fields last year, during
the initial arguments in the Louisiana case in March. Roberts compared the
district, which connects portions of the Shreveport, Alexandria, Lafayette, and
Baton Rouge cities, to a “snake” that is more than 200 miles (320
kilometers) long.
Three years have passed since the judicial battle over
Louisiana’s congressional districts began.
In 2022, the state’s Republican-controlled legislature
created a new congressional map that took into consideration changes in the
population as reported by the 2020 census. However, the modifications
essentially preserved the current configuration of one majority Black district
with a Democratic leaning and five Republican-leaning majority white districts.
A lower court decision that the districts probably
discriminated against Black voters was secured by civil rights activists.
In order to abide by the court’s decision and safeguard its
powerful Republican lawmakers, such as House Speaker Mike Johnson, the state
ultimately created a new map. In their separate case, however, white Louisiana
voters asserted that race was the primary cause. The latest high court case
began when a three-judge court agreed.