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‘An Onslaught on Black Political Power’: The South’s Redistricting Battle After Calais

May 20, 2026

The Supreme Court's ruling in Louisiana v. Calais has triggered a widespread rollback of Black voting power across the South by dramatically weakening Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The decision now requires plaintiffs challenging discriminatory maps to prove intentional racial discrimination rather than simply demonstrating that redistricting dilutes minority voting strength—a nearly impossible evidentiary standard to meet.

Who is affected

  • Black voters across the South, particularly in Louisiana and Alabama
  • 42,000 Louisiana voters who had already cast ballots before the election was suspended
  • Communities represented by two majority-Black congressional districts in Louisiana (now reduced to one)
  • Voters in 191 currently Democrat-held Southern state legislative districts that could be redrawn, including 127 Black-majority districts
  • Residents affected by city councils, school boards, county boards of supervisors, and boards of elections at the local level
  • Plaintiffs in Alabama voting rights cases
  • Davante Lewis, Louisiana Public Service Commissioner
  • Organizations including Southern Coalition for Social Justice, Fair Fight Action, Black Voters Matter Fund, Southern Poverty Law Center, and Alabama Values

What action is being taken

  • State legislators across the South are calling emergency redistricting sessions
  • Louisiana's state senate has passed a new congressional map reducing Black representation from two majority-Black districts to one
  • Louisiana legislators have directed staff not to include racial makeup information in redistricting analysis
  • Plaintiffs in Alabama are seeking a temporary restraining order to keep the court-drawn map in place
  • The Alabama case is being sent back to the district court to reconsider in light of Calais
  • Black voters are mobilizing, comprising 34% of Louisiana's early vote since the ruling (compared to a typical 25%)

Why it matters

  • This ruling represents one of the most concentrated assaults on Black political power since Reconstruction, fundamentally altering the legal framework that has protected minority voting rights for nearly six decades. By requiring proof of intentional discrimination—essentially demanding "smoking gun evidence" of legislators openly admitting racial bias—the Court has made it nearly impossible to challenge maps that dilute Black voting power, even when the discriminatory effect is clear. The consequences extend far beyond congressional representation to affect local governmental bodies like city councils, school boards, and county boards that make decisions impacting daily life. Fair Fight Action estimates this could secure 19 Republican House seats directly and potentially cement one-party control of the U.S. House for a generation. The ruling also continues a historical pattern where advances in Black political participation trigger systematic efforts to suppress that power, echoing post-Reconstruction tactics like poll taxes and literacy tests that used "colorblind" language to achieve discriminatory ends.

What's next

  • Alabama's case will return to the district court to be reconsidered in light of Calais, with plaintiffs arguing their 14th Amendment intentional discrimination claim should remain viable despite the ruling. Louisiana will proceed with elections under the new congressional map that reduces Black representation. No explicit next steps stated in the article regarding other states' redistricting efforts or potential legislative or advocacy responses beyond ongoing legal challenges.

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint

‘An Onslaught on Black Political Power’: The South’s Redistricting Battle After Calais