In 1965, the United States took a decisive step toward democracy with the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. At the time, Black political representation was not just limited — it was nearly nonexistent. African Americans made up more than 10 percent of the population but held less than 2 percent of seats in Congress and none in the United States Senate.
The Voting Rights Act changed that trajectory. By dismantling formal barriers to voting, it opened the door for Black political participation — and over time, representation. That progress was neither immediate nor inevitable, but it was real.
It was in this context that the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies was founded in 1970 — to support the growth of Black political leadership and ensure that increased representation translated into meaningful policy outcomes. More than five decades later, that mission remains urgent.
The gains since 1965 are significant. Black representation in the House has grown from fewer than 10 members to more than 60 today, reaching roughly 14 percent — finally approaching parity with the Black share of the U.S. population. But it took nearly 60 years to reach this point, underscoring a critical truth: representation requires sustained protection and intentional policy.
Even now, the progress is incomplete. In the Senate, Black representation remains far below population share. With a record five Black senators, African Americans hold only about 5 percent of seats — less than half of what proportional representation would require. Structural realities of the Senate aside, the result is clear: Black political voice remains constrained at the highest levels of government.
And today, even these gains are under threat.
Recent Supreme Court decisions have weakened key provisions of the Voting Rights Act, reducing federal oversight and making it more difficult to challenge discriminatory voting practices. At the same time, partisan gerrymandering is embraced by both parties while regulation designed to ensure Black representation is being dismantled and this could prove dangerous to Black representation. The result is a system increasingly driven by political advantage rather than fair representation.
Efforts to address this are not new. Since 2013, lawmakers have introduced the Coretta Scott King Mid-Decade Redistricting Prohibition Act, legislation designed to limit mid-cycle partisan redistricting and preserve key voter protections established under the Voting Rights Act.
Gerrymandering is often discussed as a partisan tactic, but it has broader structural consequences. When districts are drawn to maximize political control, they can dilute the voting power of communities of color — even without explicitly referencing race. For Black communities, whose political gains have often depended on fair districting, the erosion of these protections is particularly consequential.
This is not simply about who wins elections. It is about how policy is shaped and whose interests are represented in decisions that affect economic opportunity, education, healthcare, and wealth. Representation alone does not guarantee equity — but without it, inequity is almost certain.
The current moment demands clarity. The expansion of Black political representation over the past half-century was the result of deliberate policy choices, sustained advocacy, and legal enforcement. As those protections weaken, the risk is not just stagnation — it is regression.
At the Joint Center, we view this as a critical inflection point. Our role has always been to monitor, analyze, and support Black representation — not as an end in itself, but as a foundation for broader economic and social progress. That work is more important now than it has been in decades.
We will continue to track representation trends, assess the impact of redistricting and legal changes, and provide data-driven analysis to inform policymakers and advocates. The goal is clear: to ensure that the gains of the past are protected and that the path toward equitable representation remains open.
Nearly sixty years after the Voting Rights Act, Black Americans have come closer than ever to achieving representation in Congress that reflects their share of the population. But progress at this level is not self-sustaining. Without strong protections and continued commitment, it can be reversed.
The work of building a representative democracy is ongoing. And in this moment, it is clear that the work must continue.

