The NAACP has filed a lawsuit against Texas, alleging that the stateâs redrawing of its congressional maps is an act of racial gerrymandering. The organization points to a push back against the voting power of Black people in Texas and says it is a violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act.
âWe now see just how far extremist leaders are willing to go to push African Americans back toward a time when we were denied full personhood and equal rights,â Texas NAACP president Gary Bledsoe said in a statement, according to The Guardian. âWe call on Texans of every background to recognize the dangers of this moment. Our democracy depends on ensuring that every person is counted fully, valued equally and represented fairly. We are prepared to fight this injustice at every level. Our future depends on it.â
Texas passed a redrawn map that’s expected to increase Republican representation in Congress
Texas Republicans passed the new map on Aug. 23. It’s expected to fill five more congressional seats with Republican representatives. On their end, Democrats are a minority that doesnât have much power to counter Republicans.Â
The NAACP said the goal is to limit representation of Black communities in the state ahead of the midterm elections in 2026: âThe state of Texas is only 40% white, but white voters control over 73% of the stateâs congressional seats,â NAACP CEO and president Derrick Johnson said. âItâs quite obvious that Texasâs effort to redistrict mid-decade, before next yearâs midterm elections, is racially motivated. The stateâs intent here is to reduce the members of Congress who represent Black communities, and that, in and of itself, is unconstitutional.â
The League of United Latin American Citizens has also filed a lawsuit, alleging it âeviscerates minoritiesâ opportunity to elect their candidates of choice in four key areas of the state.â
The Supreme Court will soon vote on some of the tenets of the Voting Rights Act
The court is set to hear an argument of Louisiana v Callais, during which they will decide if the âuse of racially identifying voter data to prevent voters of color from being able to select a candidate of their choice is actually an act of racial discrimination,â according to The Guardian.
This means the Supreme Court will vote on whether to uphold a key section of the Voting Rights Act. If they decide not to uphold it, Republican lawmakers will be able to redraw maps to their advantage.
The NAACP urged states like California and New York to âact immediately by redistricting and passing new, lawful and constitutional electoral mapsâ ahead of the midterms.
