
GOP bullish on dismantling Voting Rights Act
The Supreme Court could become the arbiter of Republicans' efforts, with a major Louisiana redistricting battle set for rehearing next term and other battles bubbling up in the lower courts.
The conservative-majority high court has already eviscerated significant parts of the VRA, but the new legal fronts could reshape decades-long precedent of legal battles over political power.
'There are clouds around, and a lot of them are circling the Supreme Court at the moment,' said Adriel Cepeda Derieux, the deputy director of the American Civil Liberties Union's (ACLU) Voting Rights Project.
With Democrats viewing the law as under siege from federal court rulings, a group of Democratic senators reintroduced a bill Tuesday that would restore and expand protections of the VRA.
The legislation would reimpose the VRA's requirement struck down in 2013 by the Supreme Court that jurisdictions with a history of discriminatory practices receive federal approval before changing their voting laws; prevent voters from being purged from voter rolls if they haven't voted recently; and add protections for poll workers against threats and intimidation.
'Voting rights are preservative of all other rights,' Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) said at a press conference announcing the bill's reintroduction. 'The democracy is the very house in which we live. It is the framework in which we get to fight for the things that we care about.'
But the bill faces long odds in a Republican-controlled Congress and could face constitutional challenges, if ever enacted.
Meanwhile, Republicans have set their sights on weakening the VRA by preventing voters and private groups from enforcing it.
The GOP effort would cut off the ACLU and other prominent players that have long leveraged the law to challenge maps and voting practices, leaving lawsuits to the attorney general.
'Private litigants have been key to bringing these claims over the history of the Voting Rights Act's existence,' Cardozo Law School professor Wilfred Codrington said. 'And, in fact, all the cases that are sort of monumental cases include many private litigants. So, that is a big thing.'
The push to eliminate a private right of action under the VRA has been met with mixed results so far. But Republicans feel encouraged by recent signals from some of the Supreme Court's conservative justices.
Joined by Justice Clarence Thomas, Justice Neil Gorsuch in 2021 publicly questioned whether private parties could sue under Section 2 — the VRA's most prominent remaining provision — which prevents states from discriminating against voters because of their race or color.
'Our cases have assumed — without deciding — that the Voting Rights Act of 1965 furnishes an implied cause of action under §2,' Gorsuch wrote.
'Lower courts have treated this as an open question,' he stressed.
Since then, Republicans have found success in one federal appeals court.
In 2023, the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed private groups can't bring Section 2 claims, turning away the Arkansas NAACP's claims that Arkansas's state House map packed and cracked Black voters.
It effectively blocked private enforcement in the seven states covered by the 8th Circuit: Arkansas, Iowa, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota.
The case was never appealed to the Supreme Court, but two recent decisions by the 8th Circuit are inching the issue closer to the justices.
Native American tribes headed to the Supreme Court's emergency docket this month after the 8th Circuit ruled the tribes couldn't challenge North Dakota's state Legislature map.
Last week, the justices lifted the ruling. Thomas and Gorsuch publicly dissented alongside a third conservative justice, Samuel Alito. No justice explained their reasoning, but the case could return to the justices.
It's not only Section 2. On Monday, an 8th Circuit panel unanimously ruled a lesser-known provision of the VRA — Section 208, which allows blind and disabled voters to receive help voting from a person they choose — also can't be privately enforced. The decision rejected a challenge to an Arkansas voting law.
Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin (R) celebrated the ruling, saying in a statement it 'means that officials can continue to enforce Arkansas's laws and voters can have confidence in our elections.'
The question over private enforcement may be irrelevant, depending on other cases that raise whether Section 2 can survive at all. Republican states have increasingly argued race-based redistricting is no longer constitutional after progress made in recent decades.
But voting rights advocates said they were hopeful that what remains of the VRA will have more endurance than some fear.
Cepeda Derieux pointed to the Supreme Court's 2023 ruling in Allen v. Milligan, in which the court found a Republican-drawn map in Alabama likely violated the VRA in weakening Black voters' political power. He said this reinforced the constitutionality of Section 2, and the same legal reasoning was used in other cases to redraw maps in Louisiana and Mississippi.
'There's also cause for great hope,' he said. 'As recently as two years ago, the Supreme Court … really upheld the heart of what remains of the Voting Rights Act.'
Mark Gaber, the senior director of redistricting for the Campaign Legal Center, argued that those trying to further limit the law's purview have shown an 'overzealousness' that has hurt them, leading to the Milligan case in which the court's majority gave a 'full-throated reaffirmation' of the law's constitutionality.
He believes some read too much immediately into Justice Brett Kavanaugh's concurrence that the country may reach a point where the VRA's time has passed.
'They're pushing the private right of action theory … and various other theories to chip away at it. And we'll find out, but I don't think what Justice Kavanaugh was saying is, 'Tomorrow, bring me a case that questions this,'' Gaber said.
The questions have returned as the Supreme Court considers the newest phase of the redistricting battle in Louisiana. The state's Republican leaders seek to uphold their new congressional map that adds a second majority-Black district.
The state is in an awkward position. Louisiana begrudgingly added the second district because a lower court ruled a design with only one likely violated the VRA. But in separate litigation, Louisiana has taken legal positions that would undermine that lower ruling — that private groups can't enforce Section 2 and the provision is unconstitutional as applied to the state.
The Supreme Court was set to decide the case this summer. But without explanation, the justices ordered the case be reargued next term.
Codrington said he wasn't optimistic and believes the court wants to still use the case 'to do something big.'
'I think the court was particularly worried about dealing a major blow to the VRA at that time when lots of other institutional changes were happening through the Supreme Court,' Codrington said.
The Supreme Court has yet to announce what legal question it will consider when the case is reargued, meaning the scope of the case remains unclear. But Thomas, at least, is ready to rein in Section 2.
'I am hopeful that this Court will soon realize that the conflict its §2 jurisprudence has sown with the Constitution is too severe to ignore,' Thomas wrote in a solo opinion last month.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


American Press
21 minutes ago
- American Press
25 states file legal brief defending Trump ban on youth sex change procedures
On Monday, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill joined 24 other Republican attorneys general in backing President Donald Trump's executive order aimed at halting federal funding for sex change procedures on minors, marking the state's latest push in a broader legal fight over transgender care. Three days earlier, Massachusetts filed a brief joined by 19 states challenging the same executive order. The states argue the order is unconstitutional, discriminatory, and violates the Spending Clause by tying federal health funds to ideological conditions. The Massachusetts-led brief contends that the order jeopardizes care for transgender youth, strips states of medical decision-making authority, and undermines long-standing Medicaid protections. The suit seeks a declaratory judgment and permanent injunction against implementation. The attorneys general defending the Trump order, led by Alabama's Steve Marshall, filed amicus briefs in the 4th and 9th U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals, supporting Trump's order and urging the courts to overturn preliminary injunctions issued earlier this year in lawsuits out of Washington and Maryland. The Alabama-led briefs argue that continuing to fund such procedures violates both medical ethics and constitutional principles. 'Even though President Trump is in office, common sense and constitutional principles are under constant assault by radical leftist groups like the ACLU,' said Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall, who is leading the coalition. Marshall accused the ACLU of pushing courts to 'force taxpayers to fund sex-change procedures on children.' Murrill, who has been an outspoken critic of so-called 'gender-affirming' care for minors, did not release a separate public statement, but her participation in the brief underscores Louisiana's alignment with a growing number of Republican-led states that seek to limit access to such treatments. In recent years, Louisiana's Legislature has passed bans on puberty blockers and hormone treatments for minors. According to the coalition's legal filings, the brief draws on findings from Alabama's discovery in a now-dismissed challenge to its own ban on 'gender-affirming' care, where Marshall's office claimed to uncover a coordinated effort to remove age restrictions from national medical guidelines — a move he described as politically motivated rather than science-based. The Alabama-led team argues that federal funding for 'gender-affirming' care is based on 'discredited standards' and that such medical interventions for minors have irreversible consequences. 'The evidence says otherwise,' Marshall said. 'These harmful interventions have lasting consequences for vulnerable children.' The Alabama-led brief was filed in both the 9th Circuit and 4th Circuit federal courts of appeal. Louisiana was joined by attorneys general from Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia, and Wyoming in addition to Louisiana. The filings are part of a broader conservative legal strategy seeking to bolster state laws banning so-called 'gender-affirming' care while reinforcing Trump-era federal policy that frames such care as medically unnecessary and ideologically driven.


Time Magazine
22 minutes ago
- Time Magazine
GOP-Led House Panel Subpoenas Epstein Files and Testimony From Clintons
The Republican-led House Oversight Committee subpoenaed the Justice Department on Tuesday for files related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, despite resistance from House GOP leadership and growing unease within the Trump Administration over the political and legal implications of such disclosures. The subpoena calls for the Justice Department to turn over all investigative materials related to Epstein's decades-long sex trafficking operation, with victims' identities redacted. The Committee also issued a broad array of subpoenas for deposition testimony from high-profile figures across both Democratic and Republican administrations—among them former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former FBI Directors James Comey and Robert Mueller, and six former U.S. attorneys general, including Merrick Garland and William Barr. The latest activity from the Committee follows Justice Department officials interviewing Epstein's former associate Ghislaine Maxwell, and then Maxwell being moved to a minimum-security facility in Texas. "While the Department undertakes efforts to uncover and publicly disclose additional information related to Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell's cases, it is imperative that Congress conduct oversight of the federal government's enforcement of sex trafficking laws generally and specifically its handling of the investigation and prosecution of Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell," Rep. James Comer, the Oversight Chair, wrote in a subpoena to Attorney General Pam Bondi. The subpoenas come nearly two weeks after one of the panel's subcommittees voted to compel the Justice Department to release the files, just before the House left for its summer recess. House Speaker Mike Johnson publicly resisted the effort, arguing the Administration needs 'room to act' before Congress intervenes. But the committee's decision to subpoena the Justice Department shows that interest in the Epstein files remains high among Republicans, even as President Donald Trump has repeatedly tried to move past the Justice Department's decision not to release a full accounting of the investigation. A July memo from the Justice Department stated that Epstein died by suicide and that no 'client list' of abusers had been recovered—a conclusion that has only deepened suspicion among conspiracy-minded conservatives and Democrats alike. Democrats first pushed to subpoena the Justice Department for its files on Epstein, and were joined by three Republicans to initiate the subpoena in July. The Justice Department will have until Aug. 19 to hand over the requested records. The committee is also requesting that the former government officials appear for depositions between August and October, concluding with Hillary Clinton on Oct. 9 and Bill Clinton on Oct. 14. While former Presidents have often been subpoenaed, none have ever appeared before lawmakers under compulsion. Clinton's association with Epstein has been publicly known for years and included travel on his plane after he left office, according to court records. The Wall Street Journal reported last month that a book assembled for Epstein's 50th birthday in 2003 included a message from Clinton, as well as Trump and others. Both Clinton and Trump were listed as 'friends' in the book. Trump has denied writing the letter and sued the Wall Street Journal. A spokesperson for Clinton said in 2019 that he cut off ties with Epstein prior to his 2019 arrest and was unaware of Epstein's alleged crimes.


Time Magazine
22 minutes ago
- Time Magazine
Trump Says He 'Probably' Won't Run For President Again
President Donald Trump said he would 'probably' not run for president again after his second term in an interview with CNBC on Tuesday. The remark came in response to a question from the hosts of 'Squawk Box' about whether he would run for a third term, which the Constitution forbids, to which Trump replied: 'No. Probably not. I'd like to run. I have the best poll numbers I've ever had. You know why? Because people love the tariffs.' Trump was immediately fact-checked by host Joe Kernen, who pushed back that Trump has the best poll numbers among Republicans, not the general public. Trump responded that he had 'a lot of fake polls.' In late July, TIME reported that Trump's poll numbers had hit new lows, with a Gallup poll showing his approval ratings at 37% among U.S. adults. His support has dropped significantly among Independents, who cited the budget, Ukraine and foreign trade. His standing with Republicans had remained in the high 80s, though, steady throughout his second term. Trump's comments come after he has teased running for a third term throughout the first six months of his second. In some interviews, he has refused to rule out the possibility of running again, despite the 22nd Amendment of the U.S. Constitution only allowing presidents to serve two terms in office. 'A lot of people want me to do it,' Trump said in a March interview with NBC News. He added that 'there are methods which you could do it.' Many of Trump's supporters have been encouraged by the idea and have taken to chanting 'four more years' at his events. In April, the Trump Organization began selling 'Trump 2028' caps on its merchandising website, as well as t-shirts that say 'Trump 2028 (Rewrite the Rules),' In other interviews, however, Trump has denied he would seek a third term. In an April 22 interview with TIME, Trump said: 'I'd rather not discuss that now, but as you know, there are some loopholes that have been discussed that are well known. But I don't believe in loopholes.' In a May NBC interview, he added that he would rather look to other leaders in the party, including his Vice President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. The phone interview with CNBC covered Trump's tariffs, import taxes, Trump's decision to replace Fed Chair Jerome Powell, and the recent jobs report that led to Trump firing the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Threats of 250% pharma tariffs Trump said that in addition to his plans to roll out tariffs on semiconductors and chips—the announcement of which he said will come 'within the next week or so'—he also wants to eventually roll out a massive tariff on pharmaceuticals to boost domestic production. 'On pharmaceuticals, we'll be putting an initially small tariff on pharmaceuticals, but in one year, one and a half years, maximum, it's going to go to 150% and then it's going to go to 250% because we want pharmaceuticals made in our country,' Trump said, threatening the highest rate thus far on the product. This news comes after a May Executive Order from Trump that directed the U.S. Department of Health and Services, led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies to reduce drug prices, which he doubled down on in late July after he sent letters to 17 drugmakers calling on them to commit to steps to lower U.S. drug prices by Sept. 29. Leaders in the pharmaceutical industry have warned, though, that these large levies will drive up drug prices. NATO leaders 'do whatever I want' Trump told CNBC hosts that the leaders of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) 'do whatever I want.' Tensions have risen as NATO attempts to work towards a ceasefire in Russia and Ukraine, telling NBC in July that the U.S. would work through the organization to help give weapons to Ukraine. Read More: The Trump Era of Flattery Diplomacy is Here In the same interview, Trump threatened the European Union with 35% tariffs if it failed to live up to a pledge to invest some $600 billion in the U.S., and also threatened India with higher tariffs, citing their buying of Russian oil. India, he says, has 'not been a good trading partner.' Trump had criticized India's buying of Russian oil on Truth Social on Monday, claiming he would 'substantially' raise tariffs as a result. 'They're fueling the war machine. And if they're going to do that, then I'm not going to be happy,' Trump said of India in the CNBC interview Tuesday. Jobs report was 'rigged' Last week, Trump directed his Administration to fire Erika McEntarfer, head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, following a report that showed that the U.S. added fewer jobs in July than many economists had expected, which indicated to economists that job growth stalled in the aftermath of several of Trump's controversial economic policies, including his volatile tariff policies. 'It's a highly political situation. It's totally rigged. Smart people know it. People with common sense know it,' Trump told CNBC, though host Kernan pushed back, telling Trump that this was a 'big leap' to call the report 'rigged.' 'Critics are going to say, 'Hey, he's picking a guy or a gal that's going to give him the numbers that he wants.' So it undermines confidence in the system to some extent,' Kernan told the President. Still, Trump defended his move. 'She's a very nice woman, but when they say that nobody was involved, that it wasn't political, give me a break.'