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A Broken Supreme Court Jeopardizes Voting Rights

A Broken Supreme Court Jeopardizes Voting Rights

The Supreme Court's latest assault on voting rights has prompted renewed calls for structural reform of the nation's highest court, including from a Santa Barbara letter writer who argues the justices have "abandoned any pretext of impartiality."

Court's 6-3 Decision Weakens Voting Rights Act

In a devastating 6-3 decision issued April 29, the Supreme Court ruled in Louisiana v. Callais that Louisiana's congressional map was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. The decision effectively nullified Section 2 of the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act, which prohibits voting practices that discriminate based on race or color.

According to the Brennan Center for Justice, the ruling "significantly reworked" the 40-year-old legal framework established in Thornburg v. Gingles, making it "much harder for voters of color to win cases filed under Section 2 of the Voting Right Act."

California Senator Alex Padilla condemned the ruling during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, telling colleagues the decision marked "the latest chapter in the majority's now completed demolition of the Voting Rights Act."

Immediate Electoral Chaos Follows

The Supreme Court took the unusual step of immediately finalizing its judgment on May 4, bypassing the normal 32-day waiting period. This allowed Louisiana to suspend its May 16 congressional primaries — even after more than 100,000 voters had already cast early ballots.

The decision triggered a "frenzied race" among Southern states to redraw congressional maps before the 2026 midterm elections. Tennessee passed new maps within days that eliminated the state's sole Democratic congressional seat. Alabama and South Carolina called special legislative sessions to consider new maps.

Santa Barbara Calls for Court Reform

In a letter to the Santa Barbara Independent published May 5, local resident W. Michael Hackett argued the court's conservative supermajority "has abandoned any pretext of impartiality" and "is acting as an activist appendage to an ultra-right Trump agenda."

Hackett called for three specific reforms: 18-year term limits for Supreme Court justices, expansion of the court by two seats to remedy "prior seat denials," and "strictly enforceable ethics rules on gifts and financial conflicts of interest."

His proposals align with growing momentum in Congress for court reform. Multiple bills have been introduced in the House seeking 18-year term limits, including the Reform of Bench Eligibility (ROBE) Act introduced by Rep. Johnny Olszewski and the Supreme Court Term Limits and Regular Appointments Act of 2025.

California Voting Rights at Risk

The Callais decision poses particular threats to California, where hundreds of local governments have adopted district-based voting systems under the state's Voting Rights Act. Legal experts warn that California's law, which "permits, and effectively encourages, consideration of race in map drawing," could face new constitutional challenges.

The Brennan Center warns that without congressional action, "the United States could witness the biggest contraction in Black political representation since the post-Reconstruction backlash."

What Comes Next

Public polling shows broad support for Supreme Court reform. A Strength In Numbers poll found 65% of Americans support term limits for justices, while another survey showed bipartisan support including 85% of Democrats, 76% of independents, and 67% of Republicans.

However, constitutional amendments require approval from two-thirds of both houses of Congress and ratification by three-quarters of states — a deliberately high bar that has been cleared only 27 times in U.S. history.

As Santa Barbara's Hackett concluded in his letter: "When the people can no longer trust the highest court to protect their most sacred right to vote, we cannot simply sit by."

Reported by 805.life

Researched and written drawing on primary sources. Additional reporting: Santa Barbara Independent.

Additional Reporting

Santa Barbara Independent

Published

May 5, 2026

Reported and written by 805.life

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