Category Archives: Voting Rights Act

“Louisiana Republicans delay election calendar to prepare for possible redistricting effort”

Jane Timm for NBC News:

Louisiana’s Republican-controlled Legislature passed two bills Wednesday to delay the state’s spring elections, a move designed to give them time for a possible redraw of the congressional map if the U.S. Supreme Court weakens a key provision in federal voting law.

The measures move the 2026 spring elections to May 16 and June 27, back from April 18 and May 30. The legislation passed in a special legislative session that was called the day after Louisiana argued a case before the Supreme Court over its current map, in which Republicans control four of the six districts.

“We pray that the Supreme Court brings us clarity and does so in an expedient manner. The situation we find ourselves is not typical, so it’s not unreasonable to think the Supreme Court might issue an opinion before the typical June,” state Rep. Gerald “Beau” Beaullieu, a Republican, said.

“We do not know when they will respond, nor the decision they will render, but we do know we have a little bit more time left on the calendar,” he continued.

The case concerns Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, a critical component of the landmark voting rights law. The provision bars the government from denying or limiting voting rights based on race, color or language minority. It’s been used to force Louisiana lawmakers to draw two majority-Black districts in a state where Black Americans make up about one-third of the population….

Nearly 70 districts are protected by Section 2 across the country, according to Nicholas Stephanopoulos, an election law expert and professor at Harvard Law School.

Stephanopoulos said he expected that Southern states with Republican trifecta control would try to eliminate those protected districts, which tend to elect Democrats.

“This would sort of introduce a structural, pro-Republican bias into the House that hasn’t been there for at least the last few years,” he said. “It would decimate minority representation in the House.”

Stephanopoulos added that it could lead to the first substantial drop in minority representation in Congress since the 1880s….

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“Republicans bet frenzied redistricting push can outrun historical trends”

Paul Kane for WaPo:

The fight for House control in next year’s midterm elections has shifted into unfamiliar terrain: state capitals and courthouses.

Rather than recruiting candidates and conductingearly fundraising, political operatives on both sides are focused on drawing new, mid-decade congressional maps. Instead of waiting forevery-10-year census figures to come out, both parties are engaged now in an arms race in up to a dozen state legislatures.

And depending on the partisan leanings of the emerging proposals, lawsuits from Democrats or Republicans have already started, and more are likely to come.

Republicans have been more aggressive so far, but Democrats are trying to play political catch-up in states where they dominate the legislature and typically have their party’s governor in place….

Despite so much talk, there’s a distinct chance that once all the dust settles next year, the new maps will add up to only a handful of additional seats for Republicans. In addition to a redistricting referendum driven by California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) that could help Democrats gain up to five seats, Democratic-dominated legislatures in Illinois and Maryland are considering drawing up lines to help their party.

If all the back-and-forth math is confusing, the Cook Political Report With Amy Walter is frequently updating a “redistricting tracker” for the latest developments and analysis, with a simple estimate at the top. Erin Covey, the top analyst on House races, wrote that the “likeliest scenario” would give Republicans an additional six to nine seats to add to their very slim majority of three seats.

Inside Elections with Nathan Gonzales estimates a similar range.

“The best case redistricting scenarios for each party look like Republicans gaining a significant advantage in 14 seats they don’t currently hold, and Democrats gaining a significant advantage in seven seats they don’t currently hold,” Jacob Rubashkin, deputy editor for Inside Elections, wrote in September.

These analyses do not account for a perhaps bigger long-term loss for Democrats, as a conservative Supreme Court majority increases the likelihood that the Voting Rights Act could be tossed aside. The current law has led to many majority-Black districts in the South, and its gutting could cost Democrats a dozen or so seats, with most of those coming in the 2028 elections….

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ELB Podcast 7:2: Leah Litman: (When) Is the Supreme Court “Lawless?”

Season 7, Episode 2 of the ELB Podcast:

How has the Supreme Court moved to the right in areas including voting rights and campaign finance?

What is happening with “shadow docket” rulings of the Supreme Court, and what does that tell us about the relationship between the Court and President Trump?

How should we understand how the Supreme Court has and should make decisions in its most controversial cases?

On Season 7, Episode 2 of the ELB Podcast, we speak with Michigan law professor Leah Litman, author of the new book, “Lawless.”

You can subscribe on SoundcloudApple Podcasts, and Spotify.

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Callais Re-Argument Recap

Earlier today, I attended the oral argument in Callais. My global takeaway is a bit more sanguine than Rick’s. When the case was set for re-argument, the new QP flagged Section 2’s constitutionality: whether it constitutes a compelling governmental interest and whether there is a temporal limit to race-based remedial redistricting. However, the conservative Justices seemed more interested in tweaking the Gingles framework than in overturning Section 2 outright. For example, in questioning NAACP LDF attorney Janai Nelson, Justices Thomas and Alito focused more on Gingles and Robinson than the constitutional question. Moreover, Nelson did not receive a question about the temporal-limit argument until she—for the second time—raised it approximately 18 minutes into her argument. This is not to say the result won’t be bad or that Section 2 as applied to redistricting won’t get the Brnovich rewrite. But as someone who also attended the oral arguments in Northwest Austin, Shelby County, and Rucho, the Callais re-argument was not catastrophic. The tea leaves are harder to read this time. Here’s some key takeaways.

First, although it might have technically been captioned as a re-argument in Louisiana v. Callais, it sounded more like a re-argument of Allen v. Milligan. The Justices and advocates spent considerable time discussing what was—and what was not—decided in Milligan. The fact that this case is a Shaw challenge was missing from large portions of the argument. Indeed, the fact that Justice Thomas repudiated Shaw claims in his 2024 Alexander concurrence went noticeably unmentioned by him or any other Justice.

Second, in a related vein, the Robinson litigation loomed large, just as in last spring’s argument. The fact that the Justices are still toying with whether the Robinson preliminary injunction was rightly decided and whether it constitutes a strong-basis-in-evidence to engage in race-based redistricting suggests (a) there’s still low stakes off-ramps and (b) that a majority disintegrated last Term rather than some pre-ordained plan to tee up the constitutional question this Term.

Third, a significant amount of time was spent discussing the U.S. Solicitor General’s proposal to incorporate partisan outcomes in the first Gingles prong, which Nick wrote about earlier. Under this re-writing of Gingles, mapmakers could say that they had the goal of creating a 7-1 Republican congressional map, a move that would effectively create a partisan gerrymandering defense to Section 2. What I found striking about the SG’s proposal is that it couched partisan interests as a traditional redistricting principle. But the Rucho Court only greenlight partisan gerrymandering claims in 2019. It strains credulity to say that blatant partisan interests is a traditional redistricting principle. Indeed, Justice Kavanaugh alluded to this wrinkle when he correctly observed that States were reluctant to raise partisan gerrymandering defenses before Rucho. And for his part, Justice Gorsuch raised hard questions about the workability of the SG’s new standard.

In my view, the SG’s partisan outcome proposal has no place as a defense in a Section 2 case. To the extent it does find its way into some compromise opinion, it would be better considered as part of the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis, rather than at the Gingles prongs. Indeed, the totality-of-the-circumstances analysis is capacious and specifically looks to the tenuousness of a mapmaker’s explanation, which could be read to include partisan goals and why a particular partisan map was chosen over others. This would put a small thumb on the scale in favor of a mapmaker’s partisan goals while not cutting valid Section 2 claims off at Gingles’s gateway.

Fourth, unsurprisingly, Justice Kavanaugh repeatedly asked questions about temporal limits to Section 2—something that Milligan did leave unresolved, as Alabama did not raise it. Here, Nelson adeptly answered these questions, both on the meta-level of whether a temporal limit is appropriate and on the nitty-gritty level of Section 2’s self-sunsetting nature. I wrote more on this point yesterday.

Fifth, as Ned Foley already flagged, several conservative Justices asked questions that assumed Boerne’s congruence and proportionality test controlled here. That is disappointing given the weak originalist case for that standard, one that Justice Scalia renounced in his 2004 Tennessee v. Lane dissent.

A final thought on the post-pandemic argument format. This was my first time seeing an oral argument in person since the pandemic, and the new format was fascinating to observe in person. That said, it is simply too long. At two-and-a-half hours, it had the runtime of long movie. The one versus three lawyer dynamic (given Louisiana’s about-face) compounded the matter, as the Justices went down the queue with four separate lawyers.

Disclosure: I filed an amicus brief in support of the Robinson appellants in Louisiana v. Callais.

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Early Signs from Oral Argument in Callais Suggest that Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act is in Real Trouble

As I explained back in August, the Supreme Court reached and and in the most opaque way on a late Friday afternoon in mid-summer, the Court turned a ho-hum racial gerrymandering case where the court had to determine whether race or party predominated (something the Court has had to deal with numerous times before) into a case where the constitutionality of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act is now squarely in the conservative Justices’ cross-hairs.

Oral argument in Callais is ongoing now. Janai Nelson, head of the LDF, argued in favor of Section 2’s continued constitutionality. She did an excellent job, but it may not be enough. The conservative Justices have asked questions that indicate that the very race consciousness that Section 2 requires in order to remedy race discrimination is itself unconstitutional. The idea that the Court may use the Reconstruction Amendments to the Constitution to bar a remedy that helps minority voters is both ahistorical and repugnant.

But here we are. Because the Court won’t want to take the political hit of striking down Section 2, my expectation is that the case will get the Alito Treatment: it will use statutory interpretation to sap Section 2 of its power without formally overturning it. (Never mind that Gingles should be subject to super strong stare decisis treatment as a court interpretation of a statute.) The Supreme Court once again thwarts congressional intent and democratic processes. It will be an earthquake in the American political system, and I hope it leads to a new civil rights movement.

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Originalism and Expiration Dates

Tomorrow, the Supreme Court will hold a rare re-argument in Louisiana v. Callais on whether Section 2 of the VRA is unconstitutional as applied to redistricting. I’ve filed an amicus brief arguing that Shaw should be overturned—a point that my co-contributor Ned Foley recently agreed with on SCOTUSBlog. I will not rehash my amicus brief’s arguments against Shaw, which I have also made in my scholarship.

Here, I want to address the thorny question of the necessity of sunset provisions in statutes enacted pursuant to Congress’s Reconstruction Amendment enforcement authority. This claim popped up in Justice Kavanaugh’s concurrence and Justice Thomas’s dissent in Milligan. Similar versions appeared in SFFA and Shelby County. In my view, sunset provisions are not required under the original understanding of Congress’s Fifteenth Amendment enforcement authority.

One major reason that sunset clauses became the touchstone in this area of law is that Sections 4 and 5 of the VRA were time limited. The first preclearance regime was meant to last for five years. That wasn’t enough time to overcome nearly a century of disenfranchisement, so Congress reauthorized the preclearance regime in 1970, 1975, 1982, and 2006. It made perfect sense for the Court, in upholding the first four iterations of the preclearance regime, to note its temporary character. And when Justice Kennedy—who was not an originalist—announced Boerne’s congruence and proportionality test, he pointed to the VRA’s sunset provisions as evidence of a statute’s constitutionality.

Against this doctrinal backdrop, Pam Karlan explained back in the 1990s how Section 2 has a built-in expiration date. I agree with Karlan, but I would go farther. Put bluntly, the Court has confused a voluntary feature that Congress included in its most aggressive Fifteenth Amendment enforcement legislation with a requirement that must appear in all such statutes.

For an originalist Court pushing this temporal-limit theory, there is a deep irony. The Reconstruction Framers had two central motivations in ratifying the Fifteenth Amendment. The first was to enfranchise Black men in Northern and Border States. The second—and more relevant here—was to preserve congressional power over the Southern States after they were re-admitted to the Union. Congress had imposed fundamental conditions on the Southern States, but the enforceability and legality of those conditions was fiercely contested even in theRepublican Party. And prior to the Fifteenth Amendment, Congress lacked authority to regulate voting rights in the States. Thus, the Fifteenth Amendment was entrenched in the Constitution to create and maintain congressional power against States in perpetuity. Tellingly, the Reconstruction Congress’s Fifteenth Amendment enforcement legislation did not contain expiration dates. The Reconstruction Framers did not envision any temporal limit to their authority.

Indeed, to the extent there is post-ratification evidence in support of sunset provisions, it comes for the Redemption-era Court, not the Reconstruction Congress. In The Civil Rights Cases, the Court invalidated the Civil Rights Act of 1875’s ban on racial discrimination in public accommodations. When discussing Congress’s ThirteenthAmendment enforcement authority less than two decades after emancipation, the Court notoriously opined: “When a man has emerged from slavery, and by the aid of beneficent legislation has shaken off the inseparable concomitants of that state, there must be some stage in the progress of his elevation when he takes the rank of a mere citizen, and ceases to be the special favorite of the laws, and when his rights as a citizen, or a man, are to be protected in the ordinary modes by which other men’s rights are protected.”

To be clear, I am not making a genealogical claim that sunset provisions are problematic simply because they were endorsed by the Redemption-era Court, though the parallels between the dismantling of the First Reconstruction and the potential demise of the Second Reconstruction are difficult to ignore. More fundamentally, my claims are historical and institutional. Historically, sunset provisions are products of the doctrine—not the Constitution’s original public meaning. Institutionally, it is Congress—not the Court—that is tasked with enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment’s protections.

In this originalist age, it is imperative that we accurately reconstruct the past. If the past is going to rule us, we need to know what the past requires and what it permits. Requiring Congress to include a sunset provision when enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment is deeply ahistorical and indefensible on originalist grounds.

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Section 2’s Limits

Sparked by Nick Stephanopolous’s amicus brief, there’s been discussion on this blog about Section 2’s limits and how that might impact tomorrow’s re-argument in Callais. To help readers understand the import of this controversy with a real-world example, I want to highlight Missouri’s mid-decade congressional redistricting to illustrate Section 2’s importance and its limits.

For those unfamiliar with the Show Me State, some basic facts. Missouri is 77% White and 11.4% Black. While Missouri was a swing state a couple decades ago, it is now solidly red. However, the St. Louis and Kansas City metro areas are blue enclaves at opposite ends of the State. After the 2020 Census, Missouri had eight congressional districts, and Missouri’s Republican-controlled state legislature drew a 6-2 map. But Missouri got caught up in the mid-decade redistricting wave sweeping the country, and Republicans enacted—what they hope to be—a 7-1 map. The question, then, was which of the two Democratic districts was dismantled?

District 1 is centered in St. Louis. At 46% Black, it is a Black-plurality or Black-opportunity district. District 1 is currently represented by Wes Bell, who is Black and the former progressive prosecutor of St. Louis County. By contrast, District 5 is based in Kansas City. District 5 is majority White and only 21.7% Black. It is represented by Emanuel Cleaver, who is Black and the former mayor of Kansas City.

Missouri dismantled District 5. Why? The straightforward explanation is that District 1 is protected by Section 2. District 5 is not. The Black population in Kansas City is not sufficiently large or compact to satisfy Gingles prong 1. So what does this tell us about Section 2?

For starters, Missouri’s mid-decade redistricting is a salient example of Section 2’s limits. The VRA does not perpetually protect all Democratic districts or even those represented by Black officeholders. It only protects those that satisfy the Gingles prongs, and District 5 could not satisfy the compactness requirement.

District 1 has lessons as well. District 1 is not majority-Black. Nor is the remedial district that ended up being drawn in Alabama after the Court’s 2023 decision in Milligan. Thus, Section 2 has plenty of play in the joints. The VRA does not require the mechanical creation of 50%+1 majority-minority districts.

Although District 1 is reliably blue, the general election is not the only site of democratic contestation. Indeed, District 1 has witnessed a fair amount of turnover in the Democratic Party primary in recent years. In 2020, progressive Cori Bush defeated long-serving Representative Lacy Clay. Then, in 2024, Bush was herself unseated by the more moderate Bell. Bush recently announced that she’s going to seek her seat again in 2026, setting up another primary fight. District 1 is anything but a “safe” seat within the Democratic Party.

What happens in a world without Section 2? Missouri could target District 1, creating the possibility of an 8-0 map. Somewhat unbelievably a decade ago, we could see re-re-redistricting in Missouri. In addition, Louisiana and Alabama will almost certainly redraw their maps. The Court, therefore, may exacerbate the redistricting wars rather than calm them.

Disclosure: I filed an amicus brief in support of the Robinson appellants in Louisiana v. Callais.

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