1. United States
  2. Calif.
  3. Letter

Proportional Representation- One way to fight for voting rights!

To: Sen. Padilla, Sen. Schiff, Rep. DeSaulnier

From: A verified voter in Concord, CA

May 6

PLEASE READ AND SHARE WITH YOUR FELLOW MEMBERS OF THE SENATE AND THE HOUSE!The best response to the Supreme Court’s Callais ruling: proportional representation Changing election policy in this way would help guard against racial discrimination while preserving the hard-won gains of the Voting Rights Act. Supporters attend an election night event for Kamala Harris at Howard University on Nov. 5, 2024, in Washington, D.C.Pedro Ugarte / AFP via Getty Images May. 2, 2026, 6:00 AM EDT By Michael Latner, Guy-Uriel E. Charles and Luis Fuentes-Rohwer The day after the Supreme Court gutted Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act in Louisiana v. Callais, Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry issued an executive order purporting to halt the state’s House primaries so that the elections would be conducted in redrawn districts. Already, legislatures in several southern states have begun planning to dismantle districts that have protected voters of color from racial voting discrimination for generations. Democratic-controlled state legislatures face a question: protect voters of color and their incumbent representatives, or maximize partisan advantage with more counter-strike gerrymanders of their own? Play ‘Demolition’: SCOTUS guts Voting Rights Act, undercuts minority power, fuels redistricting warsAPRIL 30, 2026 / 14:27 There’s actually a clear option for voting rights policy that would guard against racial discrimination while preserving the hard-won gains of the Voting Rights Act: proportional representation. By amending the Uniform Congressional District Act, Congress could neutralize the gerrymandering arms race and restore equality of opportunity to our democratic process. We suggest amending the law to make three fundamental changes to how members of the House of Representatives are elected. By amending the Uniform Congressional District Act, Congress could neutralize the gerrymandering arms race and restore equality of opportunity to our democratic process. First, states with more than one seat should elect members of Congress using multi-seat districts. Second, states should use some form of list ballot structure, where voters choose either a single candidate (as happens now) or a “party list” vote (like the straight-ticket voting used in six states). Third, states should allocate seats to party lists using a fair allocation formula to ensure that votes have equal weight in determining representation. This type of system minimizes the state’s role in selecting winners and losers. While any method of registering voter preferences requires some state administration, the current system of single-seat districts allows the government — not the voters — to determine the primary basis of representation. Additionally, this approach would achieve better representation for voters of color. It would preserve the protections provided by the Section 2 framework of the Voting Rights Act (VRA), with additional benefits. Under a single-seat “first past the post” system, the state is forced to arbitrate competing claims for representation among various racial groups. By contrast, our proposal shifts this power to the citizens, allowing voters to identify and organize their own electoral communities. Play Supreme Court strikes down Louisiana redistricting mapAPRIL 30, 2026 / 14:27 Under a list system, candidates running for office can choose to run together on a list, and seats are allocated to lists. This allows voters to pool their voting strength, such that every vote counts toward representation: Even if one’s top candidate fails to earn enough votes to be elected on their own, a vote still counts toward the list and the election of candidates from the voter’s preferred group of candidates. Moreover, the list system ensures minority representation. In a three-seat election, any list receiving 25% of voter support is guaranteed a seat. List systems allow voters to exercise greater agency than does our single-seat, winner-take-all system. By grouping themselves on the basis of the identity that they find salient, voters determine which groups are entitled to representation. Voters of color are free to determine which aspects of their identity matter most to them. Under the Section 2 framework, voters of color are not entitled to representation as political minorities or based on their other identities even though the framework incentivizes a politics of racial-group identity. Electing representatives throughout the United States via multi-seat list systems, the type used in the majority of other democracies, including Brazil, Norway and South Africa, would also improve substantive representation. List systems facilitate the emergence of different types of coalitions, which can make for more fluid and dynamic politics.

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