The Supreme Court ruled on a challenge by white voters to a congressional map in Louisiana creating a second Black majority district
Washington (United States) (AFP) - The US Supreme Court on Wednesday sharply limited the use of race in drawing electoral districts, in a decision that could reshape congressional maps nationwide and boost Republican prospects ahead of midterm elections.
In a 6–3 ruling split along ideological lines, the conservative-dominated court struck down a map that creates a second majority-Black district in Louisiana, finding it amounted to an unconstitutional racial gerrymander despite being drawn to comply with the 1965 Voting Rights Act (VRA).
The decision leaves the core of the VRA intact but narrows how it can be applied, and will be seen by civil rights activists as a blow to a landmark law that has already been weakened by previous rulings over the past decade.
Democracy Docket, a voting rights media platform, said the ruling could help secure 27 extra Republican seats, cementing the party’s control in the US House of Representatives “for at least a generation.”
“Without racial protections, maps could be redrawn with almost no limits,” the outlet reported.
It was not immediately clear how much the ruling will affect November’s elections, with primaries already underway and legal challenges likely to delay any changes.
Republicans are nonetheless expected to push for new maps in states where time and the law permit.
Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel Alito said that compliance with the VRA “could not justify” the use of race in the case, arguing that Section 2 of the act does not require states to draw districts primarily on racial lines.
“That map is an unconstitutional gerrymander, and its use would violate the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights,” he said, referring to the group of non-Black voters who brought the case.
Both the majority ruling and the dissent were read from the bench, a rare move in the high court.
- Sweeping consequences -
Justice Elena Kagan warned that the decision would have sweeping consequences, saying it risked letting states “systematically dilute minority citizens’ voting power.”
The case centered on an electoral map redrawn after the 2020 census to add a second district in which Black voters formed a majority, following court challenges that the previous map diluted minority voting strength.
That revised map was then challenged by a group of non-Black voters who argued it relied too heavily on race.
The implications could extend far, by making it harder to create or maintain majority-minority districts – a key tool used for decades to ensure representation for minority voters.
Such districts have often favored Democratic candidates, meaning the decision could give Republicans an in-built advantage.
Chuck Schumer, the top Democrat in the US Senate, called the decision a “devastating blow” to the VRA.
“Today, the Supreme Court turned its back on one of the most sacred promises in American democracy – the promise that every voice counts,” Schumer said in a statement.
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act – the provision at the center of the case – was designed to prevent voting practices that dilute minority influence, even without explicit evidence of discrimination.
But the court’s conservative majority has increasingly signaled discomfort with race-conscious remedies, suggesting they must have limits under what conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, who is Black, described as a “color-blind” Constitution.
The case comes amid an intensifying national battle over redistricting, with both Republican- and Democratic-led states seeking to redraw boundaries in ways that could shift the balance of power in Congress.
Soon after the Supreme Court’s ruling, the Florida legislature approved a new congressional map proposed by Republican Governor Ron DeSantis seeking to give his party four more likely seats in the US House.
The Sunshine State typically has 20 Republicans and eight Democrats in the House delegation it sends to Washington, but DeSantis’s map aims to eliminate or shrink Democratic-leaning districts in Tampa and Orlando, as well as along the southeast coast.