NewsSupreme Court confronts another challenge to the Voting Rights Act

Supreme Court confronts another challenge to the Voting Rights Act

The Supreme Court heard arguments in a case Monday involving Louisiana's congressional redistricting after the 2020 Census. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

The Supreme Court heard arguments in a case Monday involving Louisiana’s congressional redistricting after the 2020 Census.

Win McNamee/Getty Images

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Win McNamee/Getty Images

Race and politics were front and center at the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday as the justices took up a voting rights case involving Louisiana’s congressional redistricting after the 2020 Census. The case is nearly identical to a case the Supreme Court ruled on two years ago from Alabama, though the outcome could make it more difficult for minorities to prevail in redistricting cases.

Louisiana’s population is roughly 30% Black, but after the 2020 Census, the state legislature drew new congressional district lines that provided for only one majority-Black district in a state that has six congressional seats. That’s the same thing Alabama did after the Census, only to be slapped down by the Supreme Court two years ago when a narrow court majority ruled that the state had illegally diluted the Black vote in violation of the Voting Rights Act.

There is one difference between the Alabama and Louisiana cases: Alabama didn’t create a second majority-Black district until ordered to do so by the Supreme Court. In Louisiana, the state legislature, after losing before multiple courts, saw the handwriting on the wall and drew a new map that provided for a second majority-Black district. But that new district was challenged by a group of Louisiana citizens identifying themselves as “non-African American” voters. They lost in the lower courts and appealed to the Supreme Court, which heard arguments in the case Monday.

State Solicitor General Benjamin Aguiñaga told the justices that Louisiana’s legislature, faced with the prospect of federal judges drawing new district lines for congressional seats, bit the bullet and drew the new map with a second majority-minority district.

Aguiñaga noted that the alternative map would have put key Republicans in jeopardy, including House Speaker Mike Johnson and House Majority Leader Steve Scalise.

“It’s an election year. We’re talking about the speaker of the House. No rational state gambles with those high-stakes seats in that situation,” Aguiñaga said.

Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote the court’s opinion in the Alabama case requiring a second majority-Black district, seemed skeptical about the Louisiana map because it created less compact districts than were drawn in Alabama.

“You think the drawing of this district was not predominantly based on race?” he asked, adding, “It’s a snake that runs from one end of the state to the other … I mean, how is that compact?”

Lawyer Stuart Naifeh, representing the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, replied that the original map proposed by civil rights groups was indeed more compact, but that the groups ultimately agreed to the legislature’s compromise map, which protected incumbents.

Supposing, asked Justice Amy Coney Barrett, there was no incumbency justification here from the legislature. “What if they …

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