by Black Enterprise
Could 11, 2026
The Supreme Courtroom has diluted the integrity of the Voting Rights Act
Written by Dr. Russ Wigginton
The Supreme Courtroom’s choice in Louisiana v. Callais successfully renders Part 2 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA) a “lifeless letter” by requiring proof of intentional racial discrimination. This ruling mirrors the 2013 Shelby County erosion and threatens as much as 15 Black-held Home seats. Dr. Russ Wigginton argues that, as in 1966, the response have to be large civic mobilization.
On April 29, the Supreme Courtroom of the USA did what it has been looking for to do for over a decade. It diluted the integrity of the Voting Rights Act with out technically saying so.
How does Louisiana v. Callais change the Voting Rights Act?
In a 6-3 choice written by Justice Samuel Alito in Louisiana v. Callais, the Courtroom successfully rendered Part 2 of the VRA all however a lifeless letter, requiring proof of intentional racial discrimination, a typical Congress by no means wrote into the regulation, and that’s almost not possible for plaintiffs to fulfill. Justice Kagan’s dissent pulled no punches: “At the moment’s choice renders Part 2 all however a lifeless letter. Within the States nonetheless marked by residential segregation and racially polarized voting, minority voters can now be cracked out of the electoral course of.”
The ruling might spark off a scramble by Republicans to redraw majority-minority congressional districts, particularly within the South, costing many seats held by Blacks and representing Blacks. One evaluation discovered that the gerrymandering unleashed by Wednesday’s choice might result in white candidates successful 15 Home seats at present held by Black members of Congress, a degree of racial retaliation not seen for the reason that finish of Reconstruction.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and others should have recognized this present day would come. Not this particular date, however this particular resistance.
The Historic Precedent: The 1966 “Coalition of Conscience”
In 1965, King led the march from Selma to Montgomery not as symbolism, however as a method. He understood that the poll was the non-negotiable instrument of self-determination, the one software that would convert ethical authority into legislative energy. The Voting Rights Act, signed that August, was the direct results of bloodshed on the Edmund Pettus Bridge. King didn’t cease there. By 1966, he was constructing what he known as a “coalition of conscience,” registering voters throughout the South, coaching neighborhood organizers, and insisting that the motion’s subsequent chapter needed to be gained on the precinct, not simply the pulpit.
It labored. The 1966 midterm elections noticed report Black voter turnout within the South, shifting the partisan panorama in ways in which had appeared unimaginable simply two years prior. Black voters in Alabama, Georgia, and Mississippi translated their newly protected franchise into metropolis council seats, judgeships, and congressional illustration. The act didn’t simply shield a proper — it restructured energy.
What as we speak’s Courtroom has accomplished is reopen the wound these voters bled to shut 60 years in the past.
The Erosion of the VRA (2013–2026)
The erosion didn’t start as we speak. It started in 2013, when Shelby County v. Holder struck down the VRA’s preclearance provisions. After falling for many years following the VRA’s enactment, the racial turnout hole started to extend once more, particularly in counties as soon as lined by preclearance. At the moment’s Callais choice isn’t an outlier. It’s the fruits.
However historical past additionally tells us what comes subsequent.
Technique for Motion: Out-Organizing the Gerrymander
When the regulation retreats, the folks should advance. The reply to a Courtroom that picks voters over democracy is a motion that out-organizes the gerrymander. Voter registration drives. Civic training in each faculty, church, and barbershop. Ranked-choice advocacy. Turnout operations that make suppression irrelevant by means of sheer numbers. The 1966 mannequin nonetheless works, not as a result of it’s nostalgic, however as a result of it’s true: when enfranchised residents of each race, background, and ZIP code present up, the map adjustments.
Janai Nelson of the NAACP Authorized Protection Fund stated the choice would permit states to “discriminate with impunity.” She is correct. However impunity isn’t immunity from organized, relentless civic participation.
Dr. King requested us, “The place will we go from right here?” The reply, 60 years later, is identical: to the polls, to the precincts, to the folks. The poll stays the battlefield. And we’ve not but misplaced the battle.

Dr. Russ Wigginton serves because the President of the Nationwide Civil Rights Museum. He assumed this position in August 2021 and brings huge expertise in training, fundraising, operations, and neighborhood engagement. Previous to assuming this position, Russ served because the Chief Postsecondary Affect Officer for Tennessee State Collaborative on Reforming Schooling (SCORE), the place he led the group’s work for postsecondary entry, retention, and completion.














