Jan 3, 2025 Story by: Editor
ALBANY, N.Y. (NEXSTAR) — The U.S. Supreme Court is set to deliberate on a pivotal Louisiana case involving redistricting, racial gerrymandering, and federal oversight of voting laws. On Monday, New York and 19 other states submitted an amicus brief supporting Louisiana’s redistricting map while opposing Alabama’s efforts to alter the federal Voting Rights Act (VRA).
“Voters should be empowered to pick their representatives, not the other way around,” said New York Attorney General Letitia James when announcing the filing in the case, Louisiana v. Callais. “My office is co-leading this amicus brief to ensure that voters are always accurately and fairly represented at all levels of government.”
The focus of the case is Louisiana’s redistricting plan, S.B. 8, which replaced the earlier H.B. 1 after a federal court ruled H.B. 1 likely violated Section 2 of the VRA. The court determined that H.B. 1 unfairly concentrated Black voters into a single majority-Black district while diluting their representation in other areas. Section 2 of the VRA protects against racial discrimination in voting, including practices that weaken minority representation.
To address this, Louisiana implemented S.B. 8, adding a second majority-Black congressional district. However, the updated map also faced challenges. A group of “non-African American voters,” as noted by James’ office, filed a lawsuit in the Western District of Louisiana, claiming the second majority-Black district constituted racial gerrymandering and violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution.
A divided lower court sided with the plaintiffs, ruling that race had been improperly considered in the creation of S.B. 8 and deeming it unconstitutional. This decision left Louisiana caught between conflicting legal directives, according to James and her coalition of 20 states.
In their amicus brief, the attorneys general argued that the lower court’s decision infringed on states’ rights to determine their own congressional and legislative districts. They contended that Louisiana’s actions adhered to federal guidelines, which had called for changes to comply with the VRA.
The brief also opposed Alabama’s efforts to narrow the scope of Section 2. The attorneys general emphasized that the VRA’s framework has long been established and reaffirmed by precedents such as the 1986 Gingles case and the 2023 Milligan ruling. They asserted that any revisions to the VRA should come from Congress, not federal courts.
Alabama has proposed a more restrictive interpretation of Section 2, limiting it to issues like voter registration and participation barriers. The coalition warned that such a reinterpretation would upend decades of legal precedent, potentially sparking widespread lawsuits and electoral disruptions. States like New York could face costly reviews and revisions to state laws reliant on established VRA interpretations.
Attorney General James co-led the amicus brief with Washington, D.C. Attorney General Brian Schwalb. The coalition included California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawai’i, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin, alongside Louisiana and Alabama. Source: Rochester First