The U.S. Supreme Court appears ready to reconsider how Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act is applied, a key civil rights law that bars voting rules that deny or limit the right to vote based on race. For decades, Section 2 has been the main tool used to challenge redistricting maps that weaken minority voting strength. Now, the Court is weighing a difficult question: how should judges review maps when race and party affiliation are closely linked?
The case arises from Louisiana’s redistricting after the 2020 Census. Although the state is about one-third Black and has six congressional districts, its 2022 map included only one majority-Black district. Black voters sued, arguing the map diluted their voting power. A federal court agreed and ordered the state to add a second majority-Black district, finding the legal criteria were satisfied. Lawmakers complied in 2024. But white voters then challenged the new map, claiming it was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander that violated the Equal Protection Clause. A lower court sided with them, sending the dispute to the Supreme Court.
At the heart of the debate is whether a state can defend a map by saying it was drawn for partisan, not racial, reasons—even if it has clear racial effects. Supporters argue courts should not block “legitimate partisan objectives.” Critics warn that where race and party overlap, such reasoning could allow racial vote dilution disguised as politics.
The justices signaled they may seek a middle path—preserving Section 2 but narrowing how it works. They questioned whether courts can reliably separate decisions made “because of” race from those driven by party strategy.
The ruling could reshape congressional maps nationwide and affect the balance of power in the U.S. House in 2026. With Section 2 now the main enforcement tool after earlier limits on federal oversight, any change may redefine how race, politics, and representation interact in American democracy.