After overturning Roe v. Wade and erasing the constitutional right to obtain an abortion last term, the Supreme Court begins its new term this week poised to weaken legal protections against discrimination. Make no mistake: Five people, a bare majority on the court, will fundamentally reshape our society throughout the next nine months.
On Tuesday, the second day of the term, the court will hear a case that will define the power of the Voting Rights Act to prevent racially discriminatory redistricting plans. After the 2020 census, Alabama, like all other states, drew new legislative district lines. State lawmakers drew the lines for the House of Representatives so that only one of the seven districts would be a majority-Black district, even though Black people make up 27% of the state’s population.
Five people, a bare majority on the court, will fundamentally reshape our society throughout the next nine months.
Registered voters, the Alabama chapter of the NAACP, and others challenged this redistricting plan as illegally diluting the power of Black voters. Essentially, they successfully argued in a lower federal court that the plan packed many of the Black voters into one district and dispersed the other Black voters throughout the other six districts. The legal problem is that such a plan prevents Black voters from being able to elect the candidate of their choosing in all but one district. This amounts to vote dilution, a violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. In January, a three-judge panel of trial court judges — two appointed by President Donald Trump and one appointed by President Bill Clinton — concluded there was very likely a violation of the Voting Rights Act and told state lawmakers to redraw the district lines to create two majority-Black districts.
But just weeks later, five conservative Supreme Court justices, over the objections of the three liberal justices and Chief Justice John Roberts, put that decision on hold until the high court could hear the case. The conservative majority of the court allowed Alabama to prepare for midterm elections using district lines that have already been declared a substantially likely violation of federal law — a chilling sign for voting rights under this court.
The Alabama case isn’t the only one dealing with discriminatory redistricting and voting rights. Before next summer, in what could be the most impactful case of the term, the justices will decide whether to accept an extremist doctrine known as the “independent state legislature” theory. This argument says that only state lawmakers, not state court judges, have the final word on issues related to federal elections, including redistricting.








