All posts by Rick Hasen

With Louisiana Essentially Flipping Sides in Callais Case Before Supreme Court and Arguing Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act is Unconstitutional, Full Defense Shifts to Voting Rights Groups

As noted yesterday, Louisiana essentially flipped sides in the Lousiana v. Callais case. In an earlier brief, Louisiana argued that its congressional districts were not a racial gerrymander because politics, rather than race, predominated in drawing district lines. Now that the Supreme Court has disturbingly ordered reargument and put up to debate whether compliance with Section 2 could ever constitutionally justify making race the predominant factor in redistricting, Louisiana has done an about face, and is arguing in essence that Section 2 is unconstitutional in demanding race conscious redistricting, and it exceeds Congress’s power to act (citing Shelby County, where the Court held preclearance now exceeded Congress’s power and assured us, don’t worry, there’s always Section 2).

So it has fallen to the NAACP LDF, the ACLU and other leading voting rights organizations to file a brief (the brief for the “Robinson Appellants”) that takes to the main defense of the constitutionality of the VRA, setting up totally different dynamics at one of the highest stakes oral arguments in the new millennium.

It’s a compelling brief, and one of its earliest arguments is that the Court should not even reach the issues in this case because the question was not briefed below and there is no factual record in the lower courts:

First, because they did not raise this claim before the district court, Appellees presented no facts below casting doubt on the constitutional propriety of the Legislature’s reliance on the Robinson courts’ findings. There is simply no factual or other record basis in this case for this Court to address the asapplied argument that Appellees now urge. Cf. Milligan, 599 U.S. at 45 (Kavanaugh, J., concurring) (declining to consider this “temporal argument” where the state failed to raise it). In contrast, the decisions in Robinson of two unanimous Fifth Circuit panels and the district court were all faithful to this Court’s precedent. All found, based on an extensive record, that current conditions in Louisiana had denied Black voters the opportunity to elect the candidates of their choice. All agreed that the Robinson Appellants had offered reasonable plans that both did not allow race to predominate and better respected traditional redistricting criteria than the 2022 plan. Nothing in Appellees’ brief offers any evidence that might undermine the detailed findings and considered analysis of the Robinson courts.

The masterfully done brief continues:


Second, Appellees’ as-applied attack on §2 fails because the notion that the sun has set on the need for race-conscious remedial redistricting for identified instances of racial vote dilution is contrary to both the fact of ongoing discrimination in Louisiana and the text and purpose of §2 as it was amended in 1982 and has been consistently interpreted by this Court ever since. Congress enacted §2 pursuant to the specific textual authorizations in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, U.S. Const. amend. XIV § 5; U.S. Const. amend. XV § 2. Section 2 focuses on discriminatory results, not subjective intent. Banning state actions with a discriminatory result without requiring a finding of subjective discriminatory motive is “an appropriate method of promoting the purposes of the Fifteenth Amendment.” Milligan, 599 U.S. at 41 (citation omitted). And Congress wisely did not choose to enact a “freewheeling disparate-impact regime.” Brnovich v. Democratic Nat’l Comm., 594 U.S. 647, 674 (2021). Rather, §2’s “exacting requirements” serve to “limit judicial intervention to those instances of intensive racial politics where the excessive role of race in the electoral process denies minority voters equal opportunity to participate.” Milligan, 599 U.S. at 30 (cleaned up). Congress thus properly acted at the heart of its textually conferred constitutional powers when enacting §2. See id. at 41.


Section 2’s limited scope ensures that a state’s interest in remedying a violation is sufficiently
compelling to withstand constitutional scrutiny. The “prevention and remedying of racial discrimination and its effects is a national policy of ‘highest priority.’” United States v. Paradise, 480 U.S. 149, 168 (1987) (citation omitted). A state thus has a compelling interest in remedying discrimination if: first, the discrimination it seeks to remedy is “identif[ied] . . . with some specificity,” and second, the state has “a strong basis in evidence” to conclude that its remedial action is necessary to redress that discrimination. Shaw v. Hunt, 517 U.S. 899, 909-910 (1996) (citation omitted) (“Shaw II ”). Strict compliance with the Gingles standard ensures that §2 compliance remains a compelling interest, especially when used to remedy a violation pursuant to court order. Thornburg v. Gingles, 478 U.S. 30 (1986).

Third, Appellees’ as-applied attack fails because it rests on the faulty assumption that §2 contemplates overly broad race-based remedies. This fundamentally misunderstands the statute and the standards under which it operates. Congress and this Court have constrained race-conscious remedies in §2 in two critical respects: First, through the Gingles framework, it requires evidence that “present local conditions” evince race discrimination, and second, under Shaw’s predominance standard, race-conscious remedial districts are subject to safeguards against excessive consideration of race. See Abbott v. Perez, 585 U.S. 579, 619 (2018) (reversing §2 vote dilution findings where “almost none” of them referenced current conditions) emphasis added). In addition, the Gingles analysis and §2 remedial districting are always based on the latest census and election data, requiring the need for a remedy to be reevaluated at
least every ten years. Where new elections or census data show that a remedy is no longer viable or necessary, §2 cannot (and does not) justify race-based redistricting in perpetuity based on past violations. See Cooper v. Harris, 581 U.S. 285, 302-304, 306 (2017).


Section 2 remedies only come into play in places where a violation or potential violation is shown. Significantly, the first step in establishing a violation of §2 involves “Plaintiffs adduc[ing] at least one illustrative map that comport[s] with [this Court’s] precedents.” Milligan, 599 U.S. at 33 (plurality). Successful §2 cases thus always offer at least one narrowly tailored remedy. Id. Once a violation is proven, states have significant flexibility in enacting
§2 remedies. So long as it addresses the violation, a remedial district need not be majority-minority to satisfy §2 and must not consider race more than necessary to provide the required electoral opportunity. See Cooper, 581 U.S. at 305-306; Abrams v. Johnson, 521 U.S. 74, 93-94 (1997); Lawyer v. Dep’t of Justice, 521 U.S. 567, 575 (1997).


Section 2, moreover, applies nationwide, and thus does not implicate the concerns about equal
sovereignty and specific burdens imposed on states that animated this Court’s enjoining of the VRA’s preclearance coverage formula. See Shelby Cnty. v. Holder, 570 U.S. 529, 537, 557 (2013) (“Our decision in no way affects the permanent, nationwide ban on racial discrimination in voting found in § 2.”).


Fourth, because Appellees failed to adduce any evidence to support their attack on the
constitutionality of the Legislature’s reliance on the §2 findings in Robinson, this Court should reject that attack outright. But even if the Legislature’s consideration of race in SB8 exceeded §2’s careful constitutional constraints, this case should be remanded for development of a new map to remedy the §2 violation identified in Robinson. See Bush v. Vera, 517 U.S. 952, 994 (1996) (O’Connor, J., concurring) (“[I]f a State pursues that compelling interest by creating a district that substantially addresses the potential liability[], and does not deviate substantially from a hypothetical court-drawn § 2 district for predominantly racial reasons[], its districting plan will be deemed narrowly tailored.”) (cleaned up). The record in this case, as the district
court acknowledged, does not provide grounds for collaterally overruling the Robinson court’s
application of §2 to conditions in Louisiana or for assessing the constitutionality of other maps with two Black-opportunity districts.

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“Trump attacks Utah’s anti-gerrymandering ruling”

Axios:

President Trump took to Truth Social on Wednesday afternoon to attack a Utah court ruling that ordered new congressional maps pursuant to an anti-gerrymandering lawsuit.

What they’re saying: Trump claimed Monday’s order by state judge Dianna Gibson is “absolutely” unconstitutional.

  • “How did such a wonderful Republican State like Utah, which I won in every Election, end up with so many Radical Left Judges?” he continued. “All Citizens of Utah should be outraged at their activist Judiciary, which wants to take away our Congressional advantage, and will do everything possible to do so,” Trump added.
  • “This incredible State sent four great Republicans to Congress, and we want to keep it that way,” Trump concluded. “The Utah GOP has to STAY UNITED, and make sure their four terrific Republican Congressmen stay right where they are!”
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“Louisiana urges Supreme Court to bar use of race in redistricting, in attack on Voting Rights Act”

Mark Sherman for the AP:

Louisiana on Wednesday abandoned its defense of a political map that elected two Black members of Congress and instead called on the Supreme Court to reject any consideration of race in redistricting in a case that could bring major changes to the Voting Rights Act.

Appealing to a conservative-dominated court that has been skeptical of the use of race, Louisiana is advancing a position that could allow it and other Republican-led states in the South to draw new maps that eliminate virtually all majority Black districts, which have been Democratic strongholds, voting rights experts said.

“If Louisiana’s argument prevailed at the Supreme Court, it would almost certainly lead to a whiter and less representative Congress, as well as significantly less minority representation across the country in legislatures, city councils, and across other district-based bodies,” UCLA law professor Richard Hasen said in an email….

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“Fresh off Texas Senate’s approval, new congressional map is target of lawsuits”

Texas Tribune:

Hours after the Texas Senate approved a new congressional map early Saturday morning that more heavily favors Republicans — legislation Gov. Greg Abbott plans to “swiftly” sign into law — a lawsuit against the governor was filed, alleging that the redrawn districts are racially discriminatory.

The 67-page complaint against Abbott and Secretary of State Jane Nelson supplements legal action filed by LULAC in 2021 challenging the state’s original maps and argues that redrawing districts mid-decade is unconstitutional…

Lawyers’ Committee:

 Today, the Texas NAACP, represented by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, filed a motion for a preliminary injunction in their ongoing lawsuit against the state of Texas, challenging its recently passed congressional maps for illegal, racial gerrymandering. The maps bulldoze important majority-minority districts and dilute the ability for Black and Brown communities to pick their political representation fairly. 

The Texas NAACP and Lawyers’ Committee originally filed the case in 2021 regarding Texas’ redistricting plan for Congress, as well as the state Senate and House, arguing that multiple districts at all levels—principally in the Dallas/Fort Worth and Houston areas—intentionally discriminate against people of color. 

In July of this year, the Department of Justice sent Texas Governor Greg Abbott a letter arguing that four Democratic districts—three of them coalition, or synonymously, majority-minority districts—were racially gerrymandered and that the Fifth Circuit had declared coalition districts unconstitutional. While this was a misstatement and blatant misinterpretation of the law, it still instructed Texas to redraw its maps, and Governor Abbott obliged by adding redistricting to the legislative agenda, claiming the state no longer needed coalition districts. 

Now, with the passage of the new maps, the Texas Legislature doubles down on its original gerrymander, seeking to dismantle majority Black and Brown communities and weaken their political power for the years to come, and critically, ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. 

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“Justice Dept. Broadens Inquiry Into Key Players in Russia Investigation”

NYT:

Pursuing a theory promoted by Trump loyalists, the Justice Department is investigating whether F.B.I. officials during and after the Biden administration tried to hide or secretly destroy documents that might cast doubt on the earlier inquiry into Russia’s attempt to tilt the 2016 election in President Trump’s favor, two people with knowledge of the matter said.

The steps taken by the Justice Department are the latest in a series of efforts by Mr. Trump and his allies to impugn the Russia investigation, which the president sees as having been a partisan witch hunt that unfairly dogged him throughout his first term.

The new inquiry seeks to determine if senior F.B.I. officials spent years working to cover up the supposed misdeeds of James B. Comey, the F.B.I. director at the time of the Russia investigation, and John O. Brennan, who was then the C.I.A. director, after the two men left government by squirreling away potentially damaging classified documents.

The disclosures bring into sharper focus how Kash Patel, now the F.B.I. director, is intent on substantiating longstanding claims Mr. Trump has peddled to his base that he was framed by the Obama administration. Under Mr. Patel and his deputy, Dan Bongino, the bureau has moved to oust employees they believe are disloyal or who have worked on investigations into Mr. Trump….

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“Silicon Valley Pledges $200 Million to New Pro-A.I. Super PACs”

NYT:

Silicon Valley corporations and investors, emboldened by President Trump’s embrace of the technology and crypto industries, have pledged up to $200 million to two new super PACs that are aimed at forcing out politicians whom they see as insufficiently supportive of the push into artificial intelligence.

One of the new PACs, Meta California, is funded by tens of millions of dollars from Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram and has been investing heavily in A.I. The second super PAC, Leading the Future, is backed initially with $50 million from the A.I. investor Andreessen Horowitz and $50 million from Greg Brockman, a co-founder of OpenAI, and his wife, Anna.

The first-of-their-kind groups reflect a new appetite for political combat from the A.I. industry, which is a relatively new policy area without clear partisan allegiances.

Meta, Google, OpenAI, Microsoft and others are shoveling tens of billions of dollars into developing A.I. models, building data centers, hiring top researchers and taking a lead in the technology. At the same time, the companies face questions over whether A.I. might take away people’s jobs and whether the technology is safe, as well as mounting concerns over the environmental effects of data centers….

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“Trump privately pushed top state lawmakers to redistrict”

WaPo:

President Donald Trump privately pushed Indiana’s top GOPlawmakers to redraw their state’s congressional maps this week, while outside allies lodged a pressure campaign, part of an increasingly urgent effort to help Republicans preserve their narrow majority in next year’s U.S. House elections.

Indiana’s Republican lawmakers remain divided. But Trump’s direct input appears to be making a difference, with at least one critic who attended meetings at the White House on Tuesday, which also included Vice President JD Vance, softening his position.

State Rep. Jim Lucas (R) told the Indianapolis Star that he was more open to redistricting after hearing from Vance, a sharp turn in rhetoric from just weeks ago, when he questioned on X whether it was worth “putting many good state elected officials at risk because of a political redistricting stunt!”

The Indiana debate shows how closely every seat is being fought. Republicans already hold seven of nine U.S. House seats and it’s possible new maps would yield them only a single new favorable district. But that couldmake a difference in a Congress where Republicans now hold a narrow advantage, 219-212, with four vacancies. A loss of GOP control would let Democrats thwart some of Trump’s agenda and investigate his administration…

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“A Dark Money Group Is Secretly Funding High-Profile Democratic Influencers”

Wired:

In a private group chat in June, dozens of Democratic political influencers discussed whether to take advantage of an enticing opportunity. They were being offered $8,000 per month to take part in a secretive program aimed at bolstering Democratic messaging on the internet.

But the contract sent to them from Chorus, the nonprofit arm of a liberal influencer marketing platform, came with some strings. Among other issues, it mandated extensive secrecy about disclosing their payments and had restrictions on what sort of political content the creators could produce.

In their group chat, influencers debated the details.

“Should we send a joint email (with all of our email addresses) … or, are we just going to send things separately and hope they change everything for everyone?” Laurenzo, a nonbinary creator in Columbus, Ohio, with over 884,000 TikTok followers, asked the group. Some joked about collective bargaining. “Any Newsies fans here?” Eliza Orlins, a public defender and reality TV star known for her appearances on Survivor, posted in the group. “‘We’re a union just by sayin’ so!’”

The influencers in the chat collectively had at least 13 million followers across social platforms. They represented some of the most well-known voices online posting in support of Democrats, and they’re key to wherever the party moves next. But ultimately, the group didn’t make much progress.

“Reading through this revised Chorus contract like: you win some, you lose some,” a reproductive justice influencer named Pari, who posts under the handle @womeninamerica, responded later in the thread. “I also think there’s at least 4 other things that should change 🤣but the vibe I got from their email was that there would be minimal, if any, changes.” (Laurenzo, Orlins, and Pari did not reply to requests for comment.)

“I don’t feel strongly about pushing tbh,” Aaron Parnas, a Gen Z news influencer who has been called the Gen Z Walter Cronkite and has been lauded in legacy media outlets, posted to the chat. “They aren’t going to modify it anymore. Seems like a take it or leave it.” (Parnas declined to comment.)

“I believe we are in Stage 5: Acceptance,” Pari responded. Creators began signing on to the deal….

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“What to Expect Next in the Trump Administration’s Strategy to Meddle with the Vote”

New Brennan Center report:

Last Monday, President Trump posted on social media that he would sign an executive order aimed at eliminating mail voting. It would be his second executive order on elections, following a March executive order that, among other things, sought to implement a show-your-papers rule requiring Americans to present a passport or similar document to register to vote. Since then, the White House has seemingly walked back its threat for a new elections executive order. But that doesn’t mean the president’s attempt to undermine upcoming elections is now over.

In fact, as the Brennan Center recently explained in The Trump Administration’s Campaign to Undermine the Next Election, there is a concerted White House effort to interfere in future elections. In our previous report, we laid out everything the administration has done thus far and explained how these actions can be seen as part of a bigger strategy. But what additional steps can we expect in the coming months, even without a new executive order?

If we dig into the details of the March order, we can see the drumbeat of actions that are likely to come: from the spread of misleading claims and reports by federal agencies, to the instigation of spurious investigations and prosecutions, to attempts to meddle with vote counting. Laying out this strategy gives state and local governments, pro-democracy civil society, and voters time to prepare and ensure that we have free and fair elections this November, in 2026, and in 2028….

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“Pa. election conspiracy activist appointed to election integrity role at Department of Homeland Security”

WITF:

A Pennsylvania-based activist tied to President Donald Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 election is now overseeing election security matters for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. 

Heather Honey, of Lebanon County, is serving as the deputy assistant secretary for elections integrity, a political appointment in the department’s Office of Strategy, Policy, and Plans, according to the department’s website

The office is responsible for leading, conducting and coordinating “Department-wide policy development and implementation and strategic planning,” according to its page. 

DHS did not answer questions about Honey’s responsibilities, or whether she will still be able to both work in government and hold positions in several advocacy groups that push conspiratorial election claims….

Votebeat had an earlier profile of Honey, This Pa. activist is the source of false and flawed election claims gaining traction across the country. MORE from Democracy Docket.

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“Judge rules Utah’s congressional map must be redrawn for the 2026 elections”

AP:

The Utah Legislature will need to rapidly redraw the state’s congressional boundaries after a judge ruled Monday that the Republican-controlled body circumvented safeguards put in place by voters to ensure districts aren’t drawn to favor any party.

The current map, adopted in 2021, divides Salt Lake County — Utah’s population center and a Democratic stronghold — among the state’s four congressional districts, all of which have since elected Republicans by wide margins.

District Court Judge Dianna Gibson made few judgments on the content of the map but declared it unlawful because lawmakers had weakened and ignored an independent commission established by voters to prevent partisan gerrymandering.

“The nature of the violation lies in the Legislature’s refusal to respect the people’s exercise of their constitutional lawmaking power and to honor the people’s right to reform their government,” Gibson said in the ruling.

New maps will need to be drawn quickly, before candidates start filing in early January for the 2026 midterm elections. The ruling gives lawmakers a deadline of Sept. 24 and allows voting rights groups involved in the legal challenge to submit alternate proposals to the court.

But appeals expected from Republican officials could help them run out the clock to possibly delay adopting new maps until 2028.

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“How AOC built a Democratic fundraising juggernaut”

CNN:

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is building a fundraising juggernaut that is rivaling some of the Democratic Party’s core infrastructure, prompting questions about both her future and the party’s.

Small-dollar donations – contributions of less than $200 – are the lifeblood of campaigns and a key measure of voter enthusiasm. And on ActBlue, Democrats’ largest online fundraising platform, the New York congresswoman received the third-most small-dollar donations in the first half of the year.

That trailed only the Democratic National Committee and the party’s Senate campaign arm, key party infrastructure. Ocasio-Cortez beat the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, the House campaign arm, and every other individual candidate.

Ocasio-Cortez raised nearly $15 million total in the first half of 2025 from 736,000 contributions, an average of $20 a donor. Notably, her fundraising spiked after the March announcement that she would join Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ national “Fighting Oligarchy” tour….

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Unanimous Third Circuit Panel Holds Unconstitutional Pennsylvania Requirement to Discard Timely Received Mail-in Ballots That Have Wrong or Missing Dates

It’s an interesting case that finds only a minimal burden under the Anderson-Burdick balancing test but still finds the state law unconstitutional. Here, the date requirement on timely received ballots was found to serve no government interest.

I expect the RNC will seek U.S. Supreme Court review.

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