The Supreme Court granted an emergency Republican application to reinstate a disputed election map in Louisiana late in the day on June 28, a move that allows the map to remain in place for the next elections.
Attorney Marc Elias, whose law firm represents some of the voters challenging the map, was disappointed by the high court’s ruling.
“We will not give up,” he wrote on Twitter. “The fight for voting rights and fair districts continues.”
Election law expert J. Christian Adams, a former U.S. Department of Justice civil rights attorney who now heads the Public Interest Legal Foundation, an election integrity group, welcomed the Supreme Court’s order.
“Looks like the Court is ready to fix some bad redistricting law,” Adams told The Epoch Times by email.
In the ruling, the high court also stayed two lower court rulings that found that the redrawn congressional district boundaries in the map probably violated the federal Voting Rights Act (VRA) by diluting the power of black voters.
Section 2 of the VRA “prohibits voting practices or procedures that discriminate on the basis of race, color, or membership” in a large language minority group, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
In that case, 14 states are urging the Supreme Court to reject a lower court’s ruling that a new congressional electoral map approved by Alabama’s Legislature in 2021 be returned to state lawmakers for redrafting because it supposedly disadvantages black voters, as The Epoch Times previously reported. Alabama’s delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives currently consists of six Republicans and one Democrat.
In the case at hand, the map was approved by Louisiana state lawmakers in March after they overrode Democratic Gov. John Bel Edwards’s veto. According to a CNN summary, the map kept Republicans’ advantage in five of the Pelican State’s six congressional districts. This left only the 2nd district, which runs all the way from New Orleans to Baton Rouge, as the state’s only majority-black district and the sole district to favor Democrats. Reportedly, 33 percent of all Louisianans are black.
Those suing to block the map claimed in their lawsuit that the map maximizes “political power for white citizens” by concentrating black voters in one congressional district, while placing other black voters in five other districts where their numbers are too small to elect candidates they supposedly prefer.
The emergency application to revive the electoral map was filed with Justice Samuel Alito, who referred the case to the full court.
The court’s liberal members—Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan—dissented from the new decision but didn’t provide reasons explaining why.
Ardoin couldn’t be reached by press time for comment.