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John Roberts’ effort to gut the Voting Rights Act is complete

John Roberts’ effort to gut the Voting Rights Act is complete

Chief Justice John Roberts attends the State of the Union address on February 7, 2023.

“The Supreme Court’s decision Wednesday rolling back protections for Black and Latino voters marks another dramatic turn in the long-fought effort by conservative justices to reverse measures vital to overcoming America’s legacy of race discrimination.

The decision also marks a defining moment for the court under Chief Justice John Roberts, who declared soon after joining the bench in 2005, “the way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”

Three years ago, the justices by the same 6-3 vote as Wednesday ended racial affirmative action in higher education admissions. The newest decision, which follows a series of rulings led by Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito restricting the reach of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, will reverberate deeper.

Taken as a whole, the pattern would mean fewer chances for minority voters to elect candidates of their choosing. That, in turn, would mean fewer opportunities for the voice of Blacks, Latinos, Native Americans and other minorities in government.

The gravity of such consequences and the entrenched divisions among the justices were clear as the opinion was announced from the courtroom bench.

Joan Biskupic.jpg

CNN's chief supreme court analyst reacts to bombshell ruling

1:52

As Roberts first revealed that the case of Louisiana v. Callais would be delivered, he said Alito had the majority opinion. Roberts, whose seniority gives him the assignment power, had turned the case over to a colleague with whom he has long worked on racial issues.

Belying the historic nature of the decision, Alito began in his usual dry tone, detailing the lower court action in the long running Louisiana case, which began with redistricting after the 2020 census. He related the intricacies of the VRA’s disputed Section 2 that prohibits discrimination and recounted the evolution of standards for assessing when Black and other minority voters may succeed in a challenge to district maps that dilute their voting power.

Such dilution can arise, for example, from legislative “cracking” and “packing” methods – that is, dispersing or concentrating Black voters among districts to weaken their overall voting power.

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No longer would challengers be able to point to the effects of vote dilution, Alito said. Rather, they would have to show that state legislators likely had discriminatory purpose or, as Alito spelled out in his opinion, that “circumstances give rise to a strong inference that intentional discrimination occurred.”

Alito’s bench statement and written opinion on behalf of the six conservative justices leaned heavily on the view of Roberts’ 2013 decision in Shelby County v. Holder that voting safeguards enshrined in 1965 were no longer essential to America.

Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts listens to President Donald Trump's State of the Union address in January 2018.

“(V)ast social change has occurred throughout the country and particularly in the South…” Alito wrote. Adapting a line from Roberts’ 2013 decision, he added: “As this Court has recognized, ‘things have changed dramatically’ in the decades since the passage of the Voting Rights Act.”

When Justice Elena Kagan, who sits next to Alito on the elevated bench, then spoke for the three dissenting liberals, she referred explicitly and emphatically to Shelby County and the line of cases eviscerating voting rights protections.

“This court’s project to destroy the Voting Rights Act is now complete,” she declared. Of the act, she said, “It was born of the literal blood of Union soldiers and civil rights marchers.”

As both Roberts and Alito looked out at spectators expressionless, Kagan said, “For over a decade, this court has set its sights on the Voting Rights Act.”

Indeed, Wednesday’s decision may have been inevitable, given the transformed bench since Roberts took control over two decades ago. Four new conservative justices have joined, three of whom were appointed by President Donald Trump during his first term.

Now the Roberts Court’s goal notably aligns with Trump’s own efforts to curtail voting-rights protections and influence the upcoming midterm elections. Officials in some Republican-dominated states, including Florida, were immediately poised Wednesday to take advantage of the ruling and redraw their maps.

And with what Kagan described as the court’s “made-up and impossible-to-meet evidentiary standards,” she warned that the decision “greenlights districting plans” that would disadvantage minorities nationwide.

George W. Bush nominees work in tandem

Roberts has led the court to end race-based policies in public schools, in higher education and, most sweepingly, in voting laws. With a few exceptions, he has been in sync with Alito, who joined the bench in January 2006, four months after Roberts.

Both men were appointed by President George W. Bush, and while they differ temperamentally and in regard for institutional appearances, they are more often than not together.

When Roberts held prominent roles in the Ronald Reagan and then George H.W. Bush administrations in the 1980s and 1990s, he advocated for a limited interpretation of the Voting Rights Act. In memos from the time, Roberts demonstrated that he believed federal protections for Black, Hispanic and other minority voters from the 1960s civil rights era were no longer warranted.

In this January 1983 photo, President Ronald Reagan greets John Roberts during a photo opportunity with members of the White House Counsel's Office in the Oval Office in Washington, DC.

Only since becoming chief justice has he been able to carry through on his vision. It was a vision Alito wove throughout Wednesday’s opinion.

He included several references to the landmark Shelby County decision. In that 2013 case, the majority dismantled a part of the Voting Rights Act that required states with a history of discrimination to obtain Justice Department approval before changing their election procedures.

Alito joined him in 2013 and earlier, in a 2006 case, when Roberts wrote, “It is a sordid business, this divvying us up by race.” (Alito was the only justice to sign that opinion, a partial dissent and concurrence, in a Texas redistricting dispute.)

It was in a 2007 school integration controversy when Roberts wrote, “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”

Alito, along with other conservatives, joined the chief justice there, as well as in 2023 when Roberts led the court to end racial affirmative action. Alito made a brief reference to that Harvard case Wednesday, too.

Midterms looming

Most crucial for the nation’s history of race discrimination, Wednesday’s action further diminishes the iconic 1965 Voting Rights Act, a law that brought the franchise to Black voters and other racial minorities who’d been kept from the polls.

The VRA was passed only after the “Bloody Sunday” attack on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma. During that March 7, 1965, encounter, sheriff’s deputies beat civil rights marchers as they tried to cross the bridge.

What Dr. King told John Lewis after Bloody Sunday

1:23

With such history, this area of the law has long produced sharply divided opinions, and there were earlier signs that the justices were struggling with the Louisiana controversy.

The Louisiana case had first been argued two years ago, but then the justices called for reargument, foreshadowing that the conservatives might be headed for a substantial ruling affecting voting rights not only in Louisiana but across the nation.

A lower federal court had found Louisiana legislators likely violated Section 2 and ordered a second Black-majority district created. (Previously, only one of the six Louisiana congressional districts had a Black majority.)

A group of White residents then challenged the redrawn map, arguing that the common Section 2 remedy amounted to a breach of the Constitution’s equality guarantee. The group pointed to the high court’s broader trend of disfavoring race-based programs.

The justices had slightly departed from that pattern in a 2023 redistricting case from Alabama, when they said that the use of race was not only permissible but might be required, to compensate for a prior discriminatory map. That will now be seen as a one-off.

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court did not explicitly go as far as the White challengers wanted, to outlaw any consideration of race to remedy an allegedly biased map. Still, in the highly partisan world of redistricting, it will be difficult for any challenger to produce evidence that a district was drawn not for any political reasons but based specifically to dilute Black or Latino voting power.

The Alito majority picked up from a 2021 ruling he had written in the Arizona case of Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee. There, the same six-justice majority limited the Voting Right Act Section 2 coverage for certain electoral practices that did not involve redistricting. The court upheld requirements that ballots cast at the wrong precinct be discarded and that criminalized the third-party collection of absentee ballots (such as were sometimes used in remote tribal areas of the state).

Alito pointed to the decision as another precedent paving the way for view of VRA liability only when a practice is motivated by a discriminatory purpose.

Kagan did not quarrel with the assertion but rather used it to reinforce her argument that the conservative majority had been strategically building to this moment – a moment that she said conflicted with the essential goal of the Voting Rights Act.

“Even after the Fifteenth Amendment banned racial discrimination in voting, state officials routinely deprived African Americans of their voting rights,” she recounted.

“Through a seemingly boundless array of mechanisms – most of them facially race-neutral and among them the drawing of district lines – States either prevented Black citizens from casting ballots or ensured that their votes would count for next to nothing,” Kagan wrote.

“The Voting Rights Act was meant as the corrective,” she added.

Roberts in 2013 and Alito on Wednesday acknowledged the legacy surrounding the Voting Rights Act. But as happened in the 2013 milestone, Alito and the others in the majority deployed that success to brush aside the remaining effects of racial bias.

“‘(O)ur Nation has made great strides’ in eliminating racial discrimination in voting,” Alito wrote Wednesday, citing Roberts in 2013. “And if, as a result of this progress, it is hard to find pertinent evidence relating to intentional present-day voting discrimination, that is cause for celebration.”

How the Voting Rights Decision May Block the Rise of Young Black Leaders - The New York Times

How the Voting Rights Decision May Block the Rise of Young Black Leaders

The Supreme Court’s decision to strike down a Louisiana voting map could hinder the rise of young Black leaders in the South. This ruling, which weakens the Voting Rights Act, may lead to redistricting that diminishes the influence of Black Democrats and their ability to secure political office. The decision could also impact state legislative districts and local bodies, potentially disrupting the pipeline of Black political talent.







Black Democrats in the South already face steep challenges when seeking political office. But the Supreme Court’s ruling could be felt for a generation.


Evan Turnage, wearing his own campaign T-shirt, talks with voters.
Evan Turnage, a former congressional aide, recently challenged the veteran Democratic lawmaker Bennie Thompson in a Mississippi district vulnerable to being redrawn.Rory Doyle for The New York Times

Evan Turnage left a job on Capitol Hill and returned home to Mississippi to run for Congress. It didn’t pan out; he lost a Democratic primary in March against a popular incumbent. But by crisscrossing the region and building name recognition, he thought he had laid groundwork that could pay off later.

Next time, though, he could face an even more formidable hurdle: His district, long drawn to have a majority-Black constituency, could be redrawn to become practically impossible for a Black Democrat to win.

Across the South, Republican officials are ready to quickly redraw legislative districts, seizing upon the Supreme Court decision on Wednesday that struck down a voting map in Louisiana and further weakened the landmark Voting Rights Act, which for decades helped usher in generations of Black leaders.

Critics of the decision expect that any reconfiguration will not only endanger Black incumbents, some of whom have held office for decades, but also threaten a rising generation of Black Democrats in the South, who already have few avenues for ascending in politics.

“It’s going to mean for a lot of people that they leave politics altogether, because there aren’t districts that make sense,” said Mr. Turnage, 34, who ran in Mississippi’s Second Congressional District, which is regarded as vulnerable to redistricting. “It’s definitely going to be devastating.”

Republicans have solidified their control in many Southern states, claiming virtually all statewide elected offices and building supermajorities in several legislatures. The congressional districts carved out for majority-Black representation have become rare and coveted platforms, lifting Black leaders to prominence in the Democratic Party and the broader political arena.

“This case has the potential to essentially stop Black political representation from advancing in the way that we know it,” said Emmitt Y. Riley III, a politics professor at Sewanee, the University of the South.

In recent years, frustration has stewed among some younger Black Democrats over older lawmakers who have held onto seats, even as some have reached their 80s and seen their health decline.

Still, there was a recognition that a generational handoff was inevitable and rapidly approaching.

Black members of the U.S. House of Representatives

Number of Black representatives in office by election cycle

Voting Rights Act signed

1965

10

20

30

40

50

60

Newly elected

Already in office

1870

1900

’20

’40

’60

’80

2000

’20

The court’s decision has the potential to upend that transition. Strategists and political analysts have warned it could deny that rising political talent the opportunity to win seats in Congress, much less wield the influence of their predecessors.

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The decision could reach deeper into the government, because it could also apply to state legislative districts and local bodies, including city councils and county boards, where the Voting Rights Act has influenced how maps are drawn.

“What do the next 10 years look like if we disrupt the pipeline?” asked Glynda C. Carr, the president and chief executive of Higher Heights for America, a political action committee that supports progressive women of color running for elected office.

Other career paths could be at risk, including staff positions and internships that often set up young adults for careers in government and public service. Research has indicated that elected officials of color, particularly in Congress, tend to have staffs — and aides in senior roles — that are more demographically reflective of the broader population.

“None of us working on Capitol Hill would have gotten there without that foot in the door,” said Representative Shomari Figures of Alabama, a 40-year-old former congressional and White House aide, who was elected as a Democrat in 2024 to a newly drawn majority-minority districtcreated after a long legal fight that reached the Supreme Court.

In the majority opinion, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. cast the ruling as limited in scope and upholding the central tenets of the Voting Rights Act. But he said that Louisiana had violated the Constitution’s equal protection clause when it created a second majority-Black district to comply with the Voting Rights Act.

Justice Alito wrote that “vast social change,” particularly in the South, meant that giving such weight to racial considerations — including past discrimination and “present-day disparities” — was no longer necessary. Yet he also couched the decision as an update to the Voting Rights Act’s framework, not a dismantling of it.

But critics said that, in effect, the court’s decision gutted the law.

And an analysis by The New York Times from last year identified as many as a dozen majority-minority House districts across the South that Democrats could lose to redistricting if the law was severely diminished.

Activists and political observers argued that many prominent Southern lawmakers represented not only the interests of their districts in Washington, but also the experiences, values and priorities of people who do not have much voice otherwise. Now these lawmakers are at risk.

Those lawmakers could include Representative Bennie Thompson, once a small-town mayor in Mississippi, who has emerged as a high-profile opponent of President Trump, and Representative James Clyburn of South Carolina, who has been one of the highest-ranking House Democrats for decades. 

“That sort of specific viewpoint really matters,” said Mr. Turnage, who served as a senior aide to Senators Chuck Schumer of New York and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. “Having that voice in the room, I can tell you, does shape how your caucus or how the entire body thinks about certain issues.”

National Democrats have viewed some parts of the Southeast, like Georgia and North Carolina, as ripe for investment, thanks to population growth and increasing racial and ethnic diversity. Those factors played a role in Georgia’s transformation over the past decade from a Republican stronghold to a swing state. 

Some Black candidates in Georgia have won in majority-white districts, like Representative Lucy McBath, who ousted a Republican incumbent in the Atlanta suburbs in 2018. Raphael Warnock of Georgia built an old-fashioned coalition of Black and white voters to win in the Senate. And political analysts believe some Black lawmakers, like those in and around Atlanta, are likely to be safe from redistricting efforts.

Yet elsewhere in the region, particularly in the Deep South, many expect an already forbidding political landscape to become even tougher.

Anthony Daniels, the Democratic minority leader in the Alabama House of Representatives, listed legislators and local elected officials he thought could be credible candidates to run state agencies or hold statewide office.

But, he said, their chances of attaining those positions are diminished in Alabama, where Democrats struggle to be competitive and racism remains a major barrier.

“I have some of the best minds in the state,” he said. But, he added, it can seem as though that talent has “no chance of being noticed.” Mr. Daniels suggested that even with sustained and incremental focus, it could take years, maybe even a generation, to yield results.

“You’ve got to build out a way to engage voters,” he said, “and to build out your pipeline from the city council to the school board, to the county commission, to the mayor’s office and to the legislature.”

Many Black politicians said they would now draw upon a certain strain of optimism threaded throughout Southern history — one that is jaded by experience but also buoyant.

Mr. Turnage finds solace in the example of his grandparents, who were born in the 1920s and could not vote until they were in their 40s. They were able to support Black congressmen, like Mr. Thompson and his predecessor, Mike Espy, and vote for President Barack Obama.

Mr. Turnage has not made any specific decisions about his future in politics. But he said that he, for one, was not retreating from public service. 

“I’m in it,” he said. “I’m in the fight.” 

How the Voting Rights Decision May Block the Rise of Young Black Leaders - The New York Times

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

What does it mean to be Black in America now? Henry Louis Gates Jr. explains

 

‘A devastating blow’: major civil rights group calls supreme court ruling on voting case ‘a major setback for our nation’ – live

‘A devastating blow’: major civil rights group calls supreme court ruling on voting case ‘a major setback for our nation’ – live

NAACP decries 6-3 decision that ruled Louisiana must redraw its congressional map, a landmark case that guts major section of Voting Rights Act

Activists and participants gather in front of the supreme court during re-argument of Louisiana v. Callais in October.
Activists and participants gather in front of the supreme court during re-argument of Louisiana v. Callais in October. Photograph: Jemal Countess/Getty Images for Legal Defense Fund


Meanwhile, Derrick Johnson, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the nation’s oldest civil rights group, said the high court’s decision in Louisiana v Callais delivers “a devastating blow to what remains of the Voting Rights Act”.

The ruling is “a license for corrupt politicians who want to rig the system by silencing entire communities,” Johnson said in a statement today.

He went on:

The Supreme Court betrayed Black voters, they betrayed America, and they betrayed our democracy.

This ruling is a major setback for our nation and threatens to erode the hard-won victories we’ve fought, bled, and died for. But the people still can fight back. Our democracy is crying for help.

James Comey surrenders amid justice department charges over social media post

Former FBI director James Comey on Wednesday surrendered to law enforcement at federal court in the Eastern District of Virginia, according to CNN, citing a source familiar.

His hearing was set to begin at 1pm EST. Trump’s justice department filed has charged Comey with making threats against the president, stemming from a picture he posted on Instagram while on vacation last year in which sea shells were arranged to say “86 47”.

Comey said in a video message on Substack on Tuesday that he is “still innocent”.

Michael Sainato

Earlier today, Kevin Warsh, Trump’s pick to lead the Federal Reserve, cleared a key procedural hurdle on Wednesday, opening the way for him to succeed Jerome Powell next month amid the White House’s unprecedented efforts to exert control over the world’s most powerful central bank.

Warsh’s nomination was approved in a 13 to 11 vote, strictly along party lines with Republicans supporting the nomination, setting up a confirmation vote in the US Senate in the coming days.

All 13 Republicans on ​the panel voted in support of Warsh after Thom Tillis, a North Carolina senator, dropped his opposition following the Department of Justice’s ​decision on Friday to end a criminal investigation into Powell that Tillis viewed as a threat to the ⁠Fed’s political independence.

The panel’s 11 Democrats, who say they doubt Warsh’s promise to set policy without regard to the president’s wishes, ​voted against him.

In a statement before the vote, Elizabeth Warren, a Democratic senator and ranking member of the Senate’s banking committee, repeated her concern that Warsh will be a “sock puppet” for Trump.

Republican lawmakers are celebrating the ruling. Here’s a few reactions:

“Great news,” Utah senator Mike Lee said on X. “Race-based gerrymanders have no place in our country.”

“Huge,” senator John Cornyn of Texas cheered.

'A democracy diminished': Pelosi urges Congress to act after supreme court voting decision

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called the supreme court’s ruling in Louisiana v Callais a “new blow” against the “sacred right to vote”.

“The consequences will be felt across the country: fewer voices heard, fewer communities represented and a democracy diminished,” Pelosi said.

She urged Congress to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights act, which would modernize the Voting Rights Act of 1965 but has been repeatedly blocked by Republicans.

“Congress must urgently pass the John R Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act to restore the full strength of the Voting Rights Act before this latest blow becomes fatal,” Pelosi.

The Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, said the “Supreme Court just turned its back on one of the most sacred promises in American democracy—the promise that every voice counts”.

Democratic senator Chris Coons said the supreme court’s ruling in Louisiana v Callais“has told the nation that some voices and votes are worth less than others”.

He wrote in a thread on X:

Generations of Americans marched, served, protested, and died for the promise of our democracy. Today, the Supreme Court continues its steady march to forget that sacrifice and undo that promise.

By restricting Americans’ ability to choose candidates that represent their communities, the Supreme Court has told the nation that some voices and votes are worth less than others.

The Voting Rights Act was a declaration that our democracy belongs to all of us. I still believe in the promise of our democracy, and I will keep fighting to make it real and to make sure your voice and vote matter.

Hegseth attacks Democrat for calling war on Iran 'a quagmire'

Pete Hegseth further defended the Iran war in fiery remarks to Congress, insisting that the unpopular conflict is not a quagmire.

You call it a quagmire, handing propaganda to our enemies? Shame on you for that statement,” Hegseth told Democrat John Garamendi, claiming that that language “undermines the mission”.

Garamendi had said Trump’s war strategy was one of “astounding incompetence”, describing it as a “serious self-inflicted wound to America” and highlighting the thousands of civilians and 13 US service members killed.

The blocking of the strait of Hormuz was “foreseeable”, he added, telling the defense secretary:

You have been lying to the American public about this war from day one, and so has the president.

He noted that the Iranian regime is intact, along with Iran’s missile and drone systems, and that the war has strengthened Iran’s coordination with China, Russia and North Korea. Trump is “stuck in a quagmire” of another war in the Middle East, Garamendi said.

Hegseth lambasted Garamendi’s statement as “reckless”. “Your hatred for President Trump blinds you,” he said.

Back at Pete Hegseth’s hearing at the House armed services committee earlier, the defense secretary got into a heated exchange with ranking member Adam Smith when he was asked how the government plans to end the nuclear threat from Iran.

“It is worth noting that every president prior to this one, including President Trump in his first term, also prevented Iran from getting a nuclear weapon without actually having to go to war in Iran,” Smith said.

He then asked Hegseth why the United States attacked Iran in February if the operation last summer had successfully “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear program, as Donald Trumpclaimed, and questioned if there was an imminent threat that made the war necessary.

When Hegseth repeated that claim that Iran’s nuclear facilities were “obliterated” underground, Smith chimed in: “You just said 60 days ago … the nuclear weapon was an imminent threat. Now you’re saying that it was completely obliterated.”

Hegseth said Iran’s nuclear ambitions had not been eliminated but argued that its nuclear program had been.

US senator for Georgia Reverend Raphael Warnock said the decision “further ravaged” the Voting Rights Act and left the country “at a crossroads where politicians are picking their voters”.

Today’s Supreme Court decision marks a profound defeat for American democracy and will pave the way for partisan politicians to pick their voters,” the Democrat said in a statement.

“Clearly, we are straying further from the core voting principles that helped create the diverse body that people see representing them today. We must restore the Voting Rights Act and ban gerrymandering. Our democracy is on the line.”

US representative Troy Carter, whose predominately black congressional district encompasses New Orleans, said in a statement:

This ruling is about far more than lines on a map — it’s about whether Black Louisianians will have a meaningful opportunity to make their voices heard.

Carter said the consequences of the high court’s decision will be “immediate and severe” and that Louisiana’s two majority-black congressional districts are now at risk of being dismantled.

Without the protections of the Voting Rights Act, there is no evidence to suggest that Black voters in our state will be able to elect candidates of their choice.

This decision will embolden efforts to dismantle majority-Black districts and fracture communities that have finally begun to see themselves reflected in their government. This isn’t just about federal representation. This decision will also impact state and local governments, impacting Black representation in state capitols and city council chambers across the country. It sends a dangerous signal that the progress we have made can be undone under the guise of legal theory.

The mayor of New Orleans, Helena Moreno, a Democrat who represents the largest city in Louisiana’s other predominantly black congressional district, said the supreme court’s ruling was “a step backward”.

For decades, the Voting Rights Act has served as a critical safeguard to ensure every voice, especially those historically marginalized, has a meaningful opportunity to be heard.

Striking down a district that reflected diversity suppresses voices and weakens our democracy. We should be working to expand representation, not roll it back.

Lauren Groh-Wargo, executive director of Fair Fight Action, a Georgia-based voting rights group founded by Democrat and former US representative Stacey Abrams, said the supreme court’s decision “guts” voting rights protection while “pretending to uphold it”.

She said the court rewrote the law to require a showing of intentional discrimination. That’s after Congress in the early 1980s specifically rewrote the Voting Rights Act to overturn an earlier supreme court decision in an Alabama case that tried to do the same thing.

At the time, Chief Justice John Roberts was a justice department attorney advocating for a showing of intentional discrimination.

She said:

It allows states, counties and cities to shield their discriminatory maps by claiming they are advancing their own partisan interests, ignoring that race and party are highly correlated in places across the country, particularly the South.

Indeed, the ruling could open the door for Republican-led states to eliminate Black and Latino electoral districts that tend to favor Democrats and affect the balance of power in Congress. Donald Trump has already sparked a nationwide redistricting battle to boost the GOP’s chances.

'A devastating blow': NAACP says supreme court ruling is 'a major setback for our nation'

Meanwhile, Derrick Johnson, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), the nation’s oldest civil rights group, said the high court’s decision in Louisiana v Callais delivers “a devastating blow to what remains of the Voting Rights Act”.

The ruling is “a license for corrupt politicians who want to rig the system by silencing entire communities,” Johnson said in a statement today.

He went on:

The Supreme Court betrayed Black voters, they betrayed America, and they betrayed our democracy.

This ruling is a major setback for our nation and threatens to erode the hard-won victories we’ve fought, bled, and died for. But the people still can fight back. Our democracy is crying for help."

A devastating blow’: major civil rights group calls supreme court ruling on voting case ‘a major setback for our nation’ – live