A U.S. Supreme Court ruling that struck down Louisiana’s map with two Black-majority congressional districts has triggered an immediate scramble over redistricting in several Republican-led states, while voting-rights groups race to limit disruption ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. The 6-3 decision in Louisiana v. Callais further narrowed the Voting Rights Act by making it harder to challenge maps based on discriminatory effects rather than proving intentional discrimination, a shift critics say will weaken protections for voters of color nationwide.
Louisiana moved first. Governor Jeff Landry suspended the state’s U.S. House primary, which had been set for May 16, and said lawmakers would draw a new map after the court invalidated the current one. Reuters and AP reported that early voting had already begun or ballots had already been prepared, intensifying concerns about voter confusion and election administration. GOP officials have indicated they do not plan to count House votes from the interrupted primary.
The ruling is also emboldening Republicans elsewhere. National coverage says pressure is building in states such as Tennessee, Georgia, South Carolina and Alabama to revisit district lines, while Florida Republicans have already cited the decision in advancing a congressional plan aimed at boosting GOP seats. Analysts warn the decision could accelerate a fresh round of partisan and racial gerrymandering, especially in Southern states where majority-Black districts have been central to Voting Rights Act litigation.
Voting-rights advocates and Black voters defending Louisiana’s current map have urged courts to block any rushed changes, arguing that canceling ongoing elections after ballots are in the field would be unnecessary and destabilizing. Election law experts say redrawing maps this late would force officials to recode millions of voters, reopen candidate processes and rework election plans under intense time pressure. The result, they warn, is that voters and election administrators are being caught in the middle of an escalating political arms race over congressional power.



















