Overview
- Justices hear arguments Oct. 15 on whether Louisiana’s intentional creation of a second majority‑minority district violates the Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendments and whether race‑conscious line‑drawing is permissible.
- Louisiana reversed course to argue that race‑based redistricting is unconstitutional and urged strict limits on Section 2, with the Trump administration’s Justice Department filing in support.
- A federal judge in 2022 found the state’s original map likely diluted Black voting power, the legislature drew a second majority‑Black district in 2024, and a three‑judge panel later ruled 2–1 that the remedy relied too heavily on race.
- Analysts and advocacy reports warn that curtailing Section 2 could eliminate many minority‑opportunity districts, potentially shifting up to 19 U.S. House seats and reducing Black and Hispanic caucus membership.
- The case returns for a rare reargument before a 6–3 conservative Court, with observers viewing Justice Brett Kavanaugh as pivotal and a ruling expected by the end of June.