Supreme Court sides against Black voters in blow to landmark civil rights law
The Supreme Court on April 29 threw out a congressional map in Louisiana that had been drawn to protect the voting power of Black residents, a decision that undercuts a landmark civil rights law.
An ideologically divided court sided 6-3 with the Trump administration and with the non-Black voters who challenged the map as relying too heavily on race to sort voters – and it did so just three years after upholding the 1965 Voting Rights Act’s vote dilution protections for racial minorities.
Writing for the conservative majority, Justice Samuel Alito called the map an “unconstitutional gerrymander) that violates the constitutional rights of the non-Black voters who challenged it.

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