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LetMyPeopleVote

(173,628 posts)
18. Here is a good explanation of this decision by Prof. Hasen of the Election Law Blog
Fri Dec 5, 2025, 10:56 AM
Friday

I have been following Prof. Hasen for a long time

Breaking: Supreme Court on 6-3 Party Line Vote, Allows Texas to Use Its Re-redistricting Maps for 2026 Congressional Elections electionlawblog.org?p=153359

Rick Hasen (@rickhasen.bsky.social) 2025-12-04T23:11:29.191Z

https://electionlawblog.org/?p=153359

The majority opinion is short and unsigned. It makes essentially two points:

The district court made two legal errors in preliminarily evaluating the merits. First, the district court should have presumed more good faith on Texas’s behalf when they drew the maps, and the failure of the plaintiffs to produce alternative maps (that could achieve the same partisan goals without as much racial sorting) was a “dispositive” or “near dispositive” reason to lose on the merits.

In looking at the other factors for granting a stay, including balancing the hardship of the parties, the Court, without naming Purcell, invokes the Purcell principle on timing. “The District Court improperly inserted itself into an active primary campaign, causing much confusion and upsetting the delicate federal-state balance in elections.”

Justice Alito, for himself and Justice Gorsuch briefly concurred to respond to two points in the dissent. It is interesting that he characterizes California’s gerrymander also as a partisan gerrymander, which seems to send a signal to the lower court in that case: “the dissent does not dispute—because it is indisputable—that the impetus for the adoption of the Texas map (like the map subsequently adopted in California) was partisan advantage pure and simple.” (Disclosure: I have filed this amicus brief in the California case).

The dissenters make a number of arguments on the merits, and on the proper deferential standard of review that is says should apply to a finding of racial predominance, but the timing point is surely right, and I fear that even more re-redistricting will be on the way, perhaps even later in the year if the Supreme Court waters down or kills Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act in the Callais case.

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Hope California redistricting gets similar consideration. Silent Type Thursday #1
I was afraid of this LetMyPeopleVote Thursday #2
Well. Then there can be no back-door complaints about California's prop 50. haele Thursday #3
And will shoot down California's. 50 Shades Of Blue Thursday #4
Fuck this court! bluestarone Thursday #5
So much for the "Purcell Principle." WestMichRad Thursday #6
Given what we saw in Tennessee hurl Thursday #7
If TX made their new R favored districts Deminpenn Thursday #14
Of course they did. If we still don't know B.See Thursday #8
So, the gerrymander war continues with more rigged districts and more voter apathy, and it wont save everyonematters Thursday #9
Deadline Legal Blog-Supreme Court sides with Texas in challenge to congressional map deemed discriminatory LetMyPeopleVote Thursday #10
They will shoot down the CA map with the same argument Blaukraut Thursday #11
At least 3 of the conservatives on the court MUST BE on a list! PuraVidaDreamin Thursday #12
They're on MY list! I won't say what 'list' that is, Jack Valentino Thursday #17
Scathing dissent from Justice Kagan: LetMyPeopleVote Thursday #13
The Trump Supreme Whorehouse doesn't disappoint. dalton99a Thursday #15
because it failed to honor "the presumption of legislative good faith" by the TEXAS legislature???!!!!!! Jack Valentino Thursday #16
Here is a good explanation of this decision by Prof. Hasen of the Election Law Blog LetMyPeopleVote Friday #18
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Supreme Court allows Texa...»Reply #18