A Supreme Court ruling limiting a central protection of the Voting Rights Act has triggered a new rush to redraw congressional maps, with Republican-led Southern states moving first and Democrats looking for ways to respond before the midterm elections.
The immediate fight began with Louisiana, where the court’s conservative majority struck down a congressional map that included two Black-majority districts. The justices ruled that race played too large a role in drawing the map, reshaping how Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act can be used to challenge district lines that dilute minority voting power.
The stakes are unusually direct: Republicans are defending a narrow House majority, and even a small number of newly favorable districts could matter. Fox News reported that as many as a dozen House seats may be in play in the latest round of mapmaking, while other analyses cited in the source material point to wider potential effects on districts represented by Black members of Congress.
Why Louisiana moved first
Louisiana is at the center of the case because its map was the one before the court. After the ruling, the Supreme Court allowed its decision to take effect immediately rather than waiting for the usual period before opinions become official. That cleared the way for state lawmakers to begin work on a new congressional plan.
Republican Gov. Jeff Landry delayed the state’s U.S. House primary elections, saying the move would give lawmakers time to pass what he called a “fair and lawful congressional map.” Republicans in the state are seeking to erase one or both of the two Black-majority House districts, both represented by Democrats. Democrats have filed lawsuits seeking to block the effort.
The ruling does not simply affect Louisiana. Alabama lawmakers began meeting this week on redistricting that could eliminate one or both of the state’s two Democratic-leaning U.S. House districts, though any new Alabama map would need Supreme Court approval because the state is currently barred by the high court from redistricting until 2030. Tennessee lawmakers also opened a special session to pursue a new map that could remove the state’s only Democratic-held seat.
How the ruling changes the legal terrain
For decades, Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act has allowed challenges to election rules and maps that weaken minority voters’ ability to elect preferred candidates. The ruling narrows that path by emphasizing constitutional limits on race-conscious districting and by making it harder to sustain claims based on discriminatory results alone.
Justice Samuel Alito, writing for the majority, called the Louisiana map an unconstitutional gerrymander. The court’s liberal justices dissented. Justice Elena Kagan wrote that the decision leaves the Voting Rights Act “all but a dead letter,” warning that minority voting power could now be diluted with fewer legal remedies.
Supporters of the ruling say it prevents states from sorting voters by race. Critics say it sharply weakens one of the main federal tools used to protect Black representation in Congress, particularly in Southern states with large Black populations.
Both parties are escalating
President Donald Trump has urged Republican-controlled states to redraw maps before the midterms, arguing after the ruling that state legislatures should act. In Florida, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a new congressional map that could add four more right-leaning seats by eliminating districts currently held by Democrats.
Democrats are also preparing countermeasures. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said he is sending Rep. Joe Morelle to meet with New York Gov. Kathy Hochul and state lawmakers about possible mid-decade redistricting. New York currently prohibits mid-decade redistricting, but legislation has been introduced to amend the state constitution and allow an off-cycle redraw.
The fight follows an earlier round of partisan mapmaking that began after Trump pushed Texas Republicans to redraw their congressional districts. California Democrats later backed a ballot measure that temporarily shifted mapmaking power away from the state’s nonpartisan commission, a move expected to create more Democratic-leaning districts. Missouri, Ohio and North Carolina have also drawn new maps, while Virginia voters approved a redistricting plan that remains tied up in legal challenges.
Not every state is moving on the same timetable. South Carolina officials have indicated a special session is unlikely, and Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp has said the ruling will not affect this year’s elections there, though changes could come before 2028.
The next pressure points are state legislative sessions, court challenges and election deadlines. The Supreme Court ruling has opened the door to faster map changes, but which maps survive legal review — and how many seats actually shift — remains unsettled.
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