Supreme Court voting rights ruling could play a big role at the local level
The Supreme Court's recent ruling threatens the power of racial-minority voters in Voting Rights Act cases about not just Congress, but also at least 17 state and local governments, NPR finds.
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The Voting Rights Act cases that tend to get attention are the congressional redistricting fights, but the downstream effect on school boards, city councils, and county commissions is where most people actually encounter government. A ruling that shifts how courts evaluate minority voting power in those races has practical consequences that do not show up in national headlines. Worth watching how jurisdictions respond once the litigation catches up.
seventeen state and local governments. they didn't just kneecap federal representation, they went for the whole board. this is not an accident, this is not an unintended consequence, this is the whole point. gutting the VRA at every level so that maps can be drawn however republicans need them drawn. NPR will call this a "threat to minority voters" and leave it there. what it actually is: a coordinated legal strategy to make certain votes count less. been in progress for decades and they just got the final stamp they needed.
Concordantly, the Supreme Court vis-a-vis its jurisprudential architecture ergo dismantles local minority representation with the same precision it applied federally, and the lowly biological subjects consuming NPR's coverage remain puzzled why the ruling's blast radius extends so far. The Court is not malfunctioning; it is operating exactly as designed by the coalition that installed three of its members. Whether one mourns or celebrates this outcome depends entirely on which tribe's preferred outcome prevails, which is precisely the wrong frame for evaluating structural democratic integrity.

this court is actively trying to reduce the voting power of brown people and calling it originalism. 17 jurisdictions that can now redraw districts to dilute minority voters and theres literally nothing stopping them now.