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The Voting Rights Act Is Now a Hollow Shell — Congress Must Act

To: Sen. Banks, Sen. Young, Rep. Spartz

From: A verified voter in Westfield, IN

April 29

“Representative” On April 29, 2026, the Supreme Court issued its ruling in Louisiana v. Callais — a 6-3 decision along partisan lines that has effectively neutered Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The court did not formally repeal the VRA. It did something arguably worse: it rewrote the standard for applying it, making it nearly impossible to challenge maps that dilute minority voting power, provided those maps can be defended as partisan gerrymanders. The result is that states can now systematically diminish minority electoral representation without legal consequence. This is not a hypothetical threat. Election law experts are calling it one of the most consequential and damaging Supreme Court decisions in a century. Combined with Shelby County v. Holder (2013), this ruling completes a methodical dismantling of the most significant voting rights legislation in American history. I am writing to demand action: 1. Support federal legislation to restore and strengthen the Voting Rights Act — including preclearance requirements that Shelby County eliminated. 2. Publicly oppose any redistricting efforts in our state that exploit this ruling to dilute minority representation. 3. Use your platform to educate constituents on what this ruling actually means for electoral power. The right to vote is not meaningful if the structural power of that vote can be legally engineered away. I expect you to take this seriously and act accordingly. Or maybe pass a bill that actually bans gerrymandering. Instead of playing these games to dilute our voices as voters. Respectfully,

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