THE FUTURE OF VOTING RIGHTS HANGS IN BALANCE

A quiet courtroom in Washington now holds the power to redraw America’s political future. The Supreme Court’s pending decision in Louisiana v. Callais could gut Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act — the very clause that has, for decades, protected minority communities from having their votes diluted through gerrymandering.

If the Court sides with Louisiana’s Republican leaders, analysts warn the GOP could gain up to twenty House seats by redrawing maps across southern states. Civil rights groups call it a “slow-motion erasure” of fair representation; Republicans argue it’s a long-overdue return to race-neutral mapmaking. The stakes reach far beyond party lines — the ruling could decide who controls Congress for the next decade and redefine what “equal representation” means in modern America.

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