Supreme Court case could lead to loss of Black representation in Congress, but the scope is unknown

15.10.2025    WTOP    1 views
Supreme Court case could lead to loss of Black representation in Congress, but the scope is unknown

WASHINGTON AP A neutering by the Supreme Court of the Voting Rights Act s last remaining major provision would potentially trigger a political avalanche an event that starts narrow but gathers momentum as it spreads across the national map In this affair the benefit would be to Republicans seeking to maintain a majority in the House of Representatives perhaps for a great number of years to come Such a change seemed more plausible Wednesday after the court s conservative majority indicated a willingness to limit race-based districts under Section of the Voting Rights Act The landmark civil rights law requires the drawing of legislative districts that allow minorities to select representatives of their choosing That has created majority-Black and Latino districts that vote reliably Democratic in specific of the nation s largest part conservative states Plaintiffs in one of those states Louisiana brought the development before the high court after the state was ordered by a federal judge to redraw its congressional map to include a second majority-Black district one that was won by a Democrat last year If the plaintiffs win their matter it could turn that district back into one likely to be represented by a Republican and possibly even eliminate its other Democratic seat which also was mandated under the Voting Rights Act That could ripple across the South where the Democratic group Fair Fight identified that there are VRA-mandated Democratic-held seats that Republicans could conceivably redraw to their benefit I m really worried that given the political context that we re in and the conservative nature of this court and then rolling back affirmative action and giving more executive power to the president that this will not end well for us mentioned Rep Terri Sewell an Alabama Democrat Laborious to predict the extent of GOP gains in Congress Republicans have increasingly complained about Section contending it forces them to either violate the Constitution by using racial factors in redistricting or get sued if they re not solicitous enough of racial groups that lean Democratic We are damned if we do and damned if we don t Louisiana Attorney General Elizabeth Murrill described reporters Wednesday If the court sides with Louisiana specific Democratic members of Congress explained they hoped the decision would be narrowly tailored to that circumstance rather than an all-out assault on the last major pillar of the landmark civil rights law Even if the court strikes a broader blow to the Voting Rights Act it s unlikely greater part of those districts could be redrawn before the midterm elections and the number that ultimately could swing to the GOP is likely smaller Still with the House decided by a razor-tight margin in up-to-date elections the GOP now controls the chamber by three votes every seat counts It makes it harder for Democrats to create a majority if they are eliminating only Democratic districts reported Jonathan Cervas a political scientist at Carnegie Mellon University who has helped draw maps ordered by judges in multiple Voting Rights Act-related cases But he cautioned against predicting the size of future Republican gains None of us can even know this Cervas announced adding that there would still be limits on GOP benefits We re talking about real ceilings here With extreme gerrymandering It won t be a democracy That s because even if Section went away the Democratic-leaning voters it gave voice to would not Republican mapmakers would have to put them somewhere likely still in Democratic districts Take Tennessee where the Republican-controlled Legislature drew a ruthlessly partisan map during the last redistricting cycle That map yielded seven reliably Republican seats and one Democratic one a Voting Rights Act-compliant district in Memphis Even without the Voting Rights Act Cervas announced there is no way for Republicans to make that Memphis seat red If they scattered the city s voters among neighboring GOP-heavy districts they might make those competitive He reported particular other GOP-controlled states such as Missouri and South Carolina are in similar binds with their lone heavily Democratic seats that were drawn to comply with the voting law Others like Georgia are so politically competitive that it s likely Republicans couldn t erase a Democratic seat in one part of the state without jeopardizing one of their own Still other GOP-controlled states such as Mississippi may have an easier time eliminating their lone Democratic Voting Rights Act-mandated seat And in larger states such as North Carolina and Florida Republicans would have a freer hand to redraw the maps to favor their party without having to preserve majority-minority seats held by Democrats Members of the Congressional Black Caucus gathered after Wednesday s Supreme Court arguments and warned that a broad decision against Section which allows challenges to racially discriminatory electoral practices could lead to extreme gerrymandering by Republicans That could leave countless Black voters without real representation in Congress they announced If you take away the elements that create the opportunity for it to look like its people it won t be a democracy as we hoped it would be revealed Rep Troy Carter a Louisiana Democrat who represents much of New Orleans It will be a much weaker one and ultimately on the road to an oligarchy and not a democracy Congressional map changes might still be years away Republicans already are engaged in a fevered national mid-decade redistricting campaign because President Donald Trump wants them to maximize their number of winnable seats to stave off losing control of the House of Representatives in The incumbent president s party usually loses seats in the midterms It s unlikely that several Republican states could take advantage of loosened Voting Rights Act standards in time to help Trump s quest It s not clear when the court will issue its decision but it will almost certainly be issued by early summer of That could come after the filing deadlines for congressional races in almost all states While certain Republican-controlled states could try extraordinary measures to take advantage of a favorable ruling it s more likely that majority changes would be incorporated into maps for and beyond Still Democrats are on edge If they were to strip Section I think that s going to give license for us to see a more aggressive redistricting and that s what s been blocking them throughout the entire nation mentioned Rep Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick a Florida Democrat who represents a majority minority district in South Florida The Voting Rights Act is the bulk vital piece of civil rights measure ever enacted and continues to remain relevant in an climate where there are people across this country who want to undermine our free and fair elections particularly as it relates to communities of color House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries the first person of color to lead a major party in Congress commented in an interview with The Associated Press The main effect of any changes literally would be felt well beyond the halls of Congress declared Kareem Crayton of the Brennan Center for Justice He announced three-quarters of all Section cases concern state or local governing body offices It s the things below Congress that are closer to the people city councils county commissions school boards all of those have been the direct recipients of the work of plaintiffs who have sued to get representation that allows people to veritably engage in what we call traditional politics he announced Riccardi released from Denver Source

Similar News

Fairfax County concerned about impact of proposed cuts to homeland security funding
Fairfax County concerned about impact of proposed cuts to homeland security funding

Leaders in Fairfax County, Virginia, are seeking more information about the impact of proposed homel...

16.10.2025 0
Read More
I-5 may be shut down due to concerns over live-fire military event at Camp Pendleton
I-5 may be shut down due to concerns over live-fire military event at Camp Pendleton

Gov. Gavin Newsom's office is weighing whether to close parts of Interstate 5 beginning Friday amid ...

16.10.2025 0
Read More