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SCOTUS rules on gerrymandering on racial grounds — 15 Comments

  1. May God bless Justices Alito and Thomas, two firm, stalwart, clear-minded Originalists, who move the waffling Roberts’ crowd rightward, back into the land of reason. The three nay votes, as is the case so often, were cast by females nominated to the Court for political reasons as Democrats, including their XX chromosomal status.

  2. For me, the interesting part of new Florida map is how my district now includes all of Nassau county (very red) and most of Duval (Jacksonville) except for the very blue downtown. Downtown is now tied to Baker County through Orange Park (also red) to the west which will likely negate the blue downtown vote. In terms of racial makeup Jax downtown and NW Jax is black, the rest is white. The new map is definitely not drawn on racial lines.

    If we have gerrymandering might as well beat the Ds at their own game.

  3. I will admit that my analysis didn’t go as deep as yours did, Neo, but I think I reached much the same conclusion. I really don’t think this is the huge win a lot of people are making it out to be. Alito’s opinion didn’t in any way prohibit states from considering race when redistricting (he said specifically it could be done if consideration was consistent with the proper interpretation of Section 2 of the VRA), and the fact pattern in this case makes is pretty clear that extreme skepticism is necessary with regard to the Louisiana GOP Legislature’s defense they only considered partisanship when drawing a map for the express purpose of creating two majority black districts under a direct threat of a probably Democrat-leaning third party drawing a different one.

    Kagan’s overwrought dissent makes me think that the Democrats know their only hope of overweighting their representation in Congress is to be able to use the courts to draw partisan districts under the guise of protecting racial balance.

  4. I expect the real result will be that the really disjointed Districts will be found to be racially impermissible as it will be impossible to contend that race had nothing to do with the design of the District.

  5. My black republican Congressman appears to be on the verge of election to the Govenorship of Florida. So much for balanced representation, I guess.

  6. I can’t follow the articles summarizing the case, either. Over the weekend I’ll try to read the actual opinion.

  7. Re: ” The bottom line seems to be that, in order to have gerrymandered majority black districts, states need to present more strongly compelling reasons than before for why it’s necessary.”

    That’s my understanding as well. Maps that are overtly and explicitly racial are ruled out unless the state can express a damn good reason for it, but beyond that there’s a huge gray area and a lot of room for argument as to what makes a sufficiently “compelling reason” for drawing gerrymandered districts.

  8. From one of the excerpts Neo quoted: Thomas would have held, he added, that Section 2 “does not regulate districting at all.”

    I find that a mind-boggling statement, after all these decades of states being forced to draw district maps with race as a primary consideration.

    Taken in conjunction with Justice Thomas’s recent address on the Constitution and founding principles, and considering that he has heretofore been considerably more reserved in his speaking than other members of the Court during his tenure, I think he has finally had it with the Democrats.

    And I bet he knows who the SCOTUS leakers are.

  9. I think Justice Thomas is right, as he usually is. The Constitution guarantees every citizen the right to vote. It does not guarantee every group the right to a representative resembling them in race, religion, or even political views. For most of my two and a half decades in Wake County, NC, I was represented by leftist Democrats. I did what I could to help elect more reasonable officials, with only limited success. Now Dems think they have a good shot at electing a Dem out here in western NC. I’ll have to make donations to the Republicans here to help prevent that.

  10. The democrats will find a way to neuter the SCOTUS ruling; the dems are world class cheaters and liars.

  11. I agree, the legal analysis is unnecessarily complicated, but I don’t think Alito could have gotten agreement on something more straight-forward. Speaking of which, here is a backgrounder from Professor Ilan Wurman, which is:

    Here’s the basic problem with the Voting Rights Act litigation, which I discovered very quickly while I was clerking. The idea behind the Voting Rights Act was to prevent discrimination against minority voters. But because this applies to legislative districts, many different approaches could be argued to be discrimination. Most hysterically, if the legislature “cracked” minority voters — if you spread them out across multiple districts — that was discrimination. But if you “packed” them — if you put too many in one district — that was also discrimination! In the first instance, the idea was the legislature was trying to prevent minorities from electing anyone of their choice. In the second, the idea was the legislature was trying to give minorities only one district, and thereby discriminating against them that way.

    You see the problem. The Democratic/movement lawyer theory of the VRA was that the state legislatures were required to maximize minority voting power. That is, the only way to prove you didn’t discriminate, is if you created the maximum number of minority-majority districts as possible.

    This was doubly wrong. It was wrong because maximizing minority voting power is clearly not the negative of discrimination. The theory was totally unconnected to actual discrimination. But it was also wrong because, today, most minorities — especially if you are dealing with the African American population — vote almost entirely for the Democratic party. Thus, the movement lawyer theory of the VRA required maximizing Democratic voting power. And of course, Republican state legislatures could not try to maximize Republican voting power because that would necessarily seem to favor white voters in a world in which black voters overwhelmingly vote for the other side.

    The movement-lawyer interpretation of the VRA, in other words, was something akin to Democratic political lawfare. It meant using the legal process and laws intended for entirely different purposes to maximize their political advantage.

  12. I read a longer quote from Justice Thomas’s concurrence, and he indicated he’s stated he believes Section 2 does not control redistricting for decades.

    “As I explained more than 30 years ago, I would go further and hold that [section two] of the Voting Rights Act does not regulate districting at all,” Thomas, who was joined by Justice Neil Gorsuch, wrote in a concurrence.”

  13. Kate re North Carolina House candidates
    please suggest some North Carolina Republicans for donations. In the past two cycles, I have donated to Laurie Buckhout against Don Davis. She’s come close but has lost. I will donate to her, but would be interested in other candidates.

  14. A wrap-up to this topic from Jeff Childers.
    I don’t know where he finds the time to dash off one of these magnificent essays every day!

    https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/independence-day-friday-may-1-2026

    On Wednesday, the Supreme Court didn’t just tweak Louisiana’s map; it quietly detonated the Voting Rights Act’s entire race?engineering regime, and now that shrapnel is ripping through Congress, blue?state fortresses, and the forgotten local boards, commissions, and councils that for forty years have co-opted our democratic institutions via identity politics pods.

    RTWT!

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