**FILE** The Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. (Ja'Mon Jackson/The Washington Informer)

The Supreme Court is hearing arguments Wednesday in a case that could decide the future of voting rights in America.ย 

At the heart of Louisiana v. Callais is whether Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which bars racial discrimination in voting, remains constitutional. The outcome could strip away one of the last remaining protections for Black voters since the Civil Rights Movement and embolden efforts already underway in states like North Carolina, where Republicans are pushing new gerrymandered maps that would silence voters and cement partisan control.

Republican lawmakers in North Carolina have been accused of betraying the very communities they were elected to serve. Their proposed maps would diminish the influence of Black, Latino, and other minority voters while strengthening GOP power. 

โ€œRigging the maps to go along with Trumpโ€™s scheme to hold onto power represents a new low for North Carolina Republicans, who have already spent cycles redrawing the maps to lock themselves into power,โ€ Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee President Heather Williams said. โ€œThe GOPโ€™s willingness to silence voters is an extreme betrayal of the North Carolinians who elected them to serve. The DLCC has supported North Carolina Democrats for cycles as theyโ€™ve worked to protect voters from the disastrous GOP agenda, and we stand behind them as they stand up against this attack on democracy.โ€

The timing of North Carolinaโ€™s redistricting push is no coincidence. 

As the Supreme Court hears the Callais case, Louisianaโ€™s attorney general and solicitor general are arguing that the stateโ€™s intentional creation of a second majority-Black congressional district violates the Constitutionโ€™s Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. They claim the Constitution โ€œsees neither Black voters nor white voters; it sees only American voters,โ€ a statement that voting rights advocates say erases the historical and ongoing racial discrimination that made the Voting Rights Act necessary in the first place.

Chief Justice John Roberts, who wrote the 2023 opinion upholding Section 2, now appears less certain. Observers warn that if Roberts or Justice Brett Kavanaugh changes course, the decision could dismantle Section 2 entirely and allow states to draw maps that silence minority voters with impunity. The Center for American Progress warned that such a ruling could eliminate up to 19 congressional seats protected by the Voting Rights Act and displace nearly one-third of the Congressional Black Caucus.

Lakeisha Steele of FairVote called the erosion of the Voting Rights Act โ€œa negation of the work of those who fought and died for the right to vote.โ€ 

She recounted her familyโ€™s experiences in Mississippi under Jim Crow, where poll taxes and intimidation barred Black citizens from voting, and warned that the current assault on the Act threatens to undo generations of struggle for equality.

Meanwhile, the DLCC has launched DemsOnRedistricting.com to fund efforts across battleground states to fight back against the GOPโ€™s gerrymanders. For Democrats, the battle is not just about maps or elections but about the very foundation of democracy. 

โ€œThe question now is whether America will remain a representative democracy and who will be allowed to participate in it,โ€ Steele said. โ€œThe future of our representative democracy depends on it.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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