he Supreme Court heard oral arguments on Wednesday in Alexander v. South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP, a case that could help decide which party controls the House of Representatives in 2024, along with the future of minority representation and voting rights litigation in the South.

In 2018, Joe Cunningham became the first Democrat in nearly 40 years to win South Carolinaā€™s 1st congressional district, which is centered around Charleston.

Two years later, Republican Nancy Mace defeated Cunningham by one point. But that victory was too close for comfort for Republicans.

When South Carolinaā€™s GOP-controlled state legislature redrew the stateā€™s congressional districts in 2021, a GOP state senator from the area said he wanted to ā€œgive the district a stronger Republican lean.ā€ Republicans accomplished that goal by moving nearly 30,000 Black voters in Charleston County (62 percent of the countyā€™s total Black population) from the swing 1st district to the safely Democratic seat of longtime Rep. James Clyburn, one of the most powerful House Democrats. (ProPublica reported that Clyburn worked with Republicans to add more Black voters to his district to shore it up; he has denied this and filed a brief in support of civil rights groups.)

In 2022, Mace won re-election by 14 points. Last week she made headlines by becoming one of eight House Republicans who voted to oust House Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

Civil rights groups, led by the South Carolina NAACP, challenged the GOPā€™s map and in January a three-judge panel struck down the district as a ā€œstark racial gerrymander.ā€ Republicans promptly appealed to the Supreme Court.

South Carolina said the district drawn for Mace was motivated by politics, not race. ā€œDistrict 1 is not a racial gerrymander,ā€ said John Gore, an attorney at Jones Day who represented South Carolina. (Gore was head of the Justice Departmentā€™s Civil Rights Division under Donald Trump and one of the driving forces behind the Trump administrationā€™s failed effort to add a question about citizenship to the 2020 census, pushing the bogus argument that it was needed to better enforce the Voting Rights Act.) His argument in the Alexander case could be used to justify nearly any instance of racial gerrymandering, making it next to impossible to strike down maps that discriminate against voters of color.

The courtā€™s conservative majority appeared sympathetic to South Carolinaā€™s defense that it was difficult to disentangle race and politics. Chief Justice John Roberts told Leah Aden, senior counsel for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, that civil rights groups faced a ā€œhigh burdenā€ and ā€œyouā€™re trying to carry it without any direct evidence, with no alternative map, with no odd shaped districts.ā€ A ruling vacating South Carolinaā€™s map based on what he termed ā€œcircumstantial evidence,ā€ Roberts said, ā€œwould be breaking new ground in our voting rights jurisprudence.ā€

The Roberts Court has already made it very difficult to strike down gerrymandered maps, ruling that partisan gerrymandering cannot be challenged in federal court, and has reliably sided with Republicans in voting rights disputes. As Justice Elena Kagan noted, the Courtā€™s 2019 decision in Rucho v. Common Cause preventing federal courts from invalidating partisan gerrymandering gave states like South Carolina a green-light to enact racial gerrymanders but claim they were simply done for partisan reasons.

One surprising exception to the Courtā€™s hostility to voting rights came last summer, when it invalidated Alabamaā€™s congressional map because it did not include a second majority-Black district in a state that is 27 percent Black. The new seat ordered by the courts is expected to elect a new Black member of Congress from Alabama and boost Democratsā€™ chances of retaking the House. These developments have raised hopes that the conservative majority may be open to policing racially gerrymandered maps in a new way.

In Alabama and South Carolina, Republicans pursued different strategies to dilute Black voting strength. Republicans in Alabama simply ignored Black political power by refusing to draw a second majority-Black district. In South Carolina, ā€œBlack voters were used as political puzzle pieces in the state legislatureā€™s attempt to ensure and insulate the legislative majority partyā€™s power,ā€ says Mitchell Brown, senior voting rights counsel at the Southern Coalition for Social Justice.

In Alabama, Republicans didnā€™t consider race enough. In South Carolina, they considered race too much. In that sense, civil rights groups are making an argument often used by Republicansā€”that race should not be the driving force in drawing political linesā€”to argue against racial gerrymandering.

ā€œState legislators are free to consider a broad array of factors in the design of a legislative district, including partisanship, but they may not use race as a predominant factor and may not use partisanship as a proxy for race,ā€ the three-judge panel wrote in South Carolina.

The Supreme Court similarly ruled in 2017 in Cooper v. Harris that a district is likely unconstitutional if ā€œrace was the predominant factor motivating the legislatureā€™s decision to place a significant number of voters within or without a particular district.ā€

ā€œNo party disputes Cooperā€™s basic legal rule that absent a compelling interest, race cannot predominate in line drawing, even as a means to achieve a partisan goal,ā€ said Aden.

But in the Alexander case oral arguments, the Courtā€™s conservative majority seemed to suggest that its recent decision striking down racial gerrymandering in Alabama may be a one-off.

Civil rights groups have asked the Supreme Court to issue a decision by January 1, 2024, so that new lines could take effect for the 2024 election if the lower court decision is upheld.

  • MooseBoys@lemmy.world
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    the district drawn was motivated by politics, not by race

    If this argument is allowed, then the entire 14th Amendment can be circumvented using any attribute with high correlation to the targeted class. Donā€™t want to serve black people? Just say you only serve people with a skin albedo above 0.2 - itā€™s about aesthetics, not race! Donā€™t wan to employ women? Just make short hair a requirement for the job.

    • BeautifulMind ā™¾ļø@lemmy.world
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      If this argument is allowed, then the entire 14th Amendment can be circumvented using any attribute with high correlation to the targeted class by lying about your intention

      Fixed it for you

      • MooseBoys@lemmy.world
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        Except thatā€™s not the issue. You can be truthful about a non-discriminatory intention and still be discriminatory. For example, neglecting wheelchair ramps because theyā€™re too expensive is still discriminatory. Even if the redistricting was more politically motivated than racially, which it very well could have been, the end result was disenfranchisement of an overwhelmingly black population.

        • BeautifulMind ā™¾ļø@lemmy.world
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          Isnā€™t it? If the 14th can be circumvented by contriving a non-discriminatory-seeming pretext for the purpose, racial discrimination could be de facto legal for states if SCOTUS overlooks it with a nod and a wink by pretending that the pretext isnā€™t a pretext and doesnā€™t produce that outcome on purpose.

          Maybe Iā€™m missing the point, but to me this feels a bit like like arguing that when they said the Civil War was about ā€œstatesā€™ rightsā€, that it wasnā€™t about slavery.

          • MooseBoys@lemmy.world
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            The difference is that ā€œ14A can be circumvented by lying about intentā€ is a weaker concern than correlative discrimination. It implies that as long as someone is being honest, they would not run afoul of non-discrimination laws. My point is that even honest and legitimate non-racially-motivated intents can still be discriminatory.

            • BeautifulMind ā™¾ļø@lemmy.world
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              Thanks, thatā€™s a useful distinction.

              My thought here is that it shouldnā€™t make a difference if theyā€™re honest vs. lying about intent if the point to 14Aā€™s equal protection clause is prevention of discrimination- after all, lying about intent is easy to do and hard to test

  • randon31415@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Democrats have the house in the bag. They barely lost in a midterm year, and then the republicans showed everyone what they would do if given the chance to govern. It is the senate that democrats are going to loose in 2024 thus keeping the trifecta out of reach for another 2 years.

    • Telorand@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      As someone put it recently, Millennials and Gen Z have to turn out to vote, so that politicians start trying to court us with the issues we care about, instead of Boomers and Gen X, who are a reliable bloc but dying off.

      • Wogi@lemmy.world
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        Iā€™ve been hearing the same thing for 20 years. ā€œThereā€™s more of us than them! We just gotta get people our age to vote!ā€

        The system has been catastrophically rigged against us. The largest block of voters is between 18 and 40, overwhelmingly vote Democrat, and have delivered the popular vote to the Democrats for 7 out of the last 8 presidential elections, but the Republicans still won 4 of them.

        • Telorand@reddthat.com
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          The largest block of voters is between 18 and 40

          Yes, but they havenā€™t been showing up to vote until the last several elections. Texas is a great example: large number of young voters who didnā€™t fucking bother to show up, and they got stuck with Ted Cruz and Greg Abbott again.

          Youā€™ve been hearing about it for the last 20 years, sure, but nobody has taken it seriously until recently.

          And that doesnā€™t mean weā€™ll win every election, because not everyone in our cohort is on the Left, but it does mean we could easily have a meaningful majority in two voting cycles if people voted like their future depended on it.

        • spaceghoti@lemmy.oneOP
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          No, Gen X has largely followed our Boomer parents. We were mostly locked out of power, but too many of us bought what the Boomers were selling in the hope that weā€™d get to share in their fortune.

        • ripcord@kbin.social
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          Is the @ing a Twitter thing or something? I see people doing this occasionally but not often.

          • rhythmisaprancer@kbin.social
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            Kbin automatically populates the reply box with these, but I think most of us (like you) delete them. I do not know if Lemmy instances do this also.

              • rhythmisaprancer@kbin.social
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                Wow, thatā€™s really interesting. Maybe a setting difference? Screenshot of youā€™re interested in my view. I deleted all the @s because of the reason you asked about.

                • ripcord@kbin.social
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                  Under Settings, Iā€™m guessing itā€™s ā€œadd mention tagsā€ under ā€œWritingā€. I definitely never turned that off (but it is off).

          • swab148@startrek.website
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            It was a twitter thing, kinda got ported to Mastodon, maybe thatā€™s why youā€™re seeing it in the fediverse.

      • Lemdee@lemmy.world
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        Millennials and Gen Z have to turn out to vote

        And we are, as the midterms showed and why Republicans are so scared of elections now.

  • Zerlyna@lemmy.world
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    This shit makes me wish everyplace was just a grid and you vote on who lives in your square.

    • rhythmisaprancer@kbin.social
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      I actually live in a part of the US where there is very much a tangible grid, where the land was divided into sections (1 square miles/640 acres). Some of this is worked out to where one section is public land, the next is private, and so on, creating a checkerboard appearance on maps.

      Anyway, the problem with divvying up this ā€˜gridā€™ is that population levels here are quite low (like two hours to the next fuel stop and town low) and I would be curious how that not entirely unpopulated, but not very populated area would be handled responsibly. Size of grid sections? Shape?

    • Lemdee@lemmy.world
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      Sounds like a weird version of a political compass but with real world effects instead of terrible memes.

  • Psythik@lemm.ee
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    I have ADHD and canā€™t comprehend this wall of text no matter how many times I re-read it; can you please post a summary?

    • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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      The crux of the case is the fourth paragraph. Quoting just that portion I will condense it further below:

      When South Carolinaā€™s GOP-controlled state legislature redrew the stateā€™s congressional districts in 2021, a GOP state senator from the area said he wanted to ā€œgive the district a stronger Republican lean.ā€ Republicans accomplished that goal by moving nearly 30,000 Black voters in Charleston County (62 percent of the countyā€™s total Black population) from the swing 1st district to the safely Democratic seat of longtime Rep. James Clyburn, one of the most powerful House Democrats. (ProPublica reported that Clyburn worked with Republicans to add more Black voters to his district to shore it up; he has denied this and filed a brief in support of civil rights groups.)

      Basically, South Carolina redrew its congressional districts in 2021, and in doing so moved 30k Black voters from the 1st Congressional District, Charleston County (purple enough to be blue from time to time) to the adjoining 6th Congressional district of Rep. Jim Clyburn (a Black man).

      They did so in order that these Black peopleā€™s votes would be diverted in the future to a Black Democrat rep already in office and thus not hurt Republicans who want to grab the much more powerful ā€“ and politically volatile ā€“ Charleston County.

      The rest of the article is primarily history, circumstance, and legal commentary on that core situation. It really doesnā€™t make a lot of sense as written unless you know Rep. Clyburn is a person of color, how purple Charleston is for an otherwise blood red state, and how openly racist the whole thing was and is.

      EDITED TO ADD links with maps

        • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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          Every time I see ETA I think ā€œwhy are they putting an estimated time of arrival on that?ā€ So I donā€™t. Thank you for letting me know I was unknowingly setting a good example. It might be my very first, lol.

      • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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        Wait, but didnā€™t the court already decide this? They smacked down Louisiana once, and when they half-hearted followed the order they smacked Louisiana again. How is this any different?

        • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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          Yes. But thatā€™s them, lol.

          South Carolina Republicans do not care about what the courts say, especially in another state. If the SC GOP were asked about why they do not heed Louisianaā€™s rebuke by the courts, Iā€™m pretty sure the justification would involve something like this: just because Louisiana has failed ā€“ so far ā€“ does not mean Louisiana shouldnā€™t try again (they will) nor that the South Carolina GOP isnā€™t also entitled to as many tries as they want for themselves.

          They donā€™t care about the courts: the courts are there to manipulate, and the laws are for other people. Itā€™s about winning, and grabbing power by any means possible, not just now but into the future.

          So much so that this South Carolina redistricting took place AFTER Nancy ā€œI donā€™t actually know what a scarlet letter meansā€ Mace had ALREADY won the seat: she won, but as the article above explains, the GOP was not content with the very small margin by which she won. The GOP has always had to fight hard for Charleston; I guess they finally got tired of it. Time to redistrict!

  • BeautifulMind ā™¾ļø@lemmy.world
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    This Supreme Court case could decide control of Congress in 2024

    Let no one forget that there is a scenario in which Congress decides who will be president. If neither major partyā€™s presidential candidate receives an outright majority (270) of electoral college votes, the question is thrown to the house, where state delegations vote as a bloc (each state having one vote). In this scenario, the Senate will conduct a similar process to elect a vice-president.

    And oh, boy is there room for fuckery in the process. If the house or senate do not choose a candidate (which has happened), order of succession becomes a factor in the procedures. If the House doesnā€™t produce a president and the Senate doesnā€™t provide a vice-president, Speaker of the House and President Pro Tempore of the Senate are first in line for president and vice-president, so there are pathways for either of them to become president.

    (The ā€˜no labelsā€™ ticket, if it draws votes from both candidates, could throw the question to congress and if the GOP wins the House even with the narrowest of majorities it will likely win a contingent election by virtue of controlling more state delegations)