Wajahat Ali
VIDEO:
July 1, 2026
#SupremeCourt
Is birthright citizenship the Supreme Court's next major constitutional battle? Waj is joined by legal analyst Elie Mystal to examine the legal arguments surrounding the 14th Amendment, recent Supreme Court decisions, and what future rulings could mean for citizenship, executive power, and constitutional law. In this episode, they discuss:
• The constitutional basis for birthright citizenship
• Recent Supreme Court rulings and legal trends
• Executive power and immigration
• The future of the 14th Amendment
• What these developments could mean for the United States
Watch now and join the conversation.
#SupremeCourt
Birthright Citizenship Lives to Die Another Day
The Supreme Court’s decision upholding birthright citizenship is a victory that may contain the seeds of a future defeat.
PHOTO: Supporters of birthright citizenship rally outside the US Supreme Court on April 1, 2026. (Mehmet Eser / Anadolu via Getty Images)
The battle over birthright citizenship is over. The war against birthright citizenship is just beginning.
That is the essential lesson of today’s Supreme Court ruling in Trump v. Barbara, the case involving Donald Trump’s Executive Order No. 14160, which denied citizenship to children born to temporary immigrants and children whose parents are in the country without authorization.
The ruling is a victory, to the extent that upholding a bedrock principle hard-coded into the Constitution for more than 150 years is what passes for a “win” these days. But the ruling was far closer than it should have been. There were a number of dissents, and when you read those dissents, the ruling looks less like the final word and more like the prologue to what will be a long and ugly attempt to write xenophobia and bigotry back into the Constitution.
The case hinged on two objections to Trump’s executive order: that it violated federal statute and that it violated the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment.
On the statutory claim, Trump lost 6–3. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the majority, and his 30-page opinion (in a ruling that clocked in at 194 pages) was almost perfunctory. At the risk of oversimplifying it, Roberts said that birthright citizenship (as enshrined both in federal law and the Constitution) means what we’ve always thought it meant: that all children born here are citizens here. He was joined by justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson, and Amy Coney Barret. He was also joined, in part, by alleged attempted rapist Brett Kavanaugh.
Kavanaugh only joined Roberts’s interpretation of federal law. On the more important constitutional question—whether the Citizenship Clause of the 14th Amendment demands that all persons born in the United States are citizens—Kavanaugh split off, making the vote 5–t4. In a concurrence, he said that the Citizenship Clause does not apply to children whose parents are living here in violation of US law. His view was echoed by dissents from justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch.
The fact that the foundational principle of American citizenship, something said clearly and plainly in the Constitution, survived by only the slimmest of majorities over the strenuous objections of two-thirds of the Republican supermajority should not be cause for celebration. It is a cause for deep concern. Trump tried to change the definition of citizenship by executive fiat in clear opposition to the text of the 14th Amendment, and he almost got away with it. This time. And we know there will almost certainly be a next time; the Supreme Court loves to give Trump multiple bites at the apple whenever he is trying to graft bigotry onto the Constitution.
As has happened in the past, the dissents laid out the road map for how Trump or future bigots might get around the Citizenship Clause. Trump tried to take out both children of people with temporary status (like people on work visas) and children of people without proper status (like people who have overstayed travel visas or crossed the border in secret), and that appears to have been his mistake. The dissenters have different arguments for why the children of people who have temporary status should be denied rights than for why children whose parents are out of status (or never had status) should be denied those rights. It’s possible, even likely, that if Trump attacks these two groups separately, he’ll squeak his way to five votes on one or both fronts.
Clarence Thomas’s wild dissent is the one that most directly took on the issue of the children of people here temporarily. The thrust of his argument is that temporary visitors are not properly “domiciled” in the United States, and thus their children cannot be citizens. What does “domiciled” mean? Well, according to noted dictionary-enthusiast Thomas, it doesn’t mean what Merriam-Webster says it means. Instead, Thomas claims that people are “domiciled” where they’re from, not where they live. Thomas says that such immigrants still “owe allegiance” to their home countries. Indeed, no matter how long a noncitizen lives in the United States, Thomas says, they are always domiciled somewhere else.
Thomas’s interpretation makes no logical sense, and most people will be able to see how obtuse his argument is if they just consider their own lives. Most likely, you do not live in the same house you grew up in. Many of you don’t live in the same state you grew up in. And some of you might only be living where you are on a temporary basis—maybe, you know, you rent. Maybe you’re only there for a job and plan to leave the moment a better employment opportunity comes along. Maybe you’re like me and consider your entire miserable habitation “temporary” until the glorious day you have enough money and few enough children to move to Hawaii.
Are you not “domiciled” where you live? Of course you are domiciled where you live, work, and raise your family. And the same must be true of immigrants. A person from, say, Mexico, living in Arizona pursuant to a valid work visa must be domiciled in Arizona and can’t possibly be understood to be domiciled anywhere else.
Trump could not convince Roberts and Barrett to adopt Thomas’s stunted and logically unworkable view of domicile, but future administrations might. If future federal legislation defines domicile incredibly narrowly—you’re only domiciled in the US if you own property here, for instance—it could be used to restrict the scope of birthright citizenship, and Thomas’s dissent will have prepared the way.
As for the children of people who are undocumented, the dissenters had to come up with a different way to deny them rights. The “domiciled” issue doesn’t work here. That’s because there are many people who came to the US without proper authorization but have every intention to stay. These are not people who are “just visiting”; they are people who have built their whole lives here—and, more important, their children know no other country than this one. What to do with them?
Thomas and Alito, of course, argue that we should kick these children out. Their parents came here without documentation and, well, sucks to suck. But Kavanaugh’s concurrence provides the more likely roadmap to attack them—because he agrees with Thomas that such children should not have a constitutional right to citizenship. Kavanaugh, with access to the special Ouija board that allows Republicans to commune with people who have been dead for hundreds of years, claims that the authors of the 14th Amendment never intended for the children of undocumented people to be granted citizenship. He says that those authors “could not have fully anticipated” the current era’s “significant illegal immigration”—and that the influx of immigrants without proper authorization has so significantly changed the legal landscape since 1868 (when the 14th Amendment was ratified) and 1898 (when the Supreme Court last upheld the promise of birthright citizenship) that a new exception to the 14th Amendment must be recognized. That exception should exclude from citizenship the children of undocumented immigrants.
Kavanaugh’s contention that people of earlier generations did not understand the dangers of granting citizenship to the children of certain immigrants is easily one of the dumbest things written by a Supreme Court justice, and I just read Clarence Thomas’s dissent in this case. The 1870s was a period of massive immigration to the United States, mainly of northern European white people fleeing famine. The 1890s, when the last birthright case was decided, was smack-dab in the middle of the “great arrival,” the period when America was buffeted by a wave of immigrants from eastern and especially southern Europe (including, eventually, Sam Alito’s forebears). Indeed, the xenophobes of that time were so concerned about immigration that they passed various laws excluding certain people from the country (like the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882). The generation of people who ratified birthright citizenship and upheld it at the Supreme Court were well aware of immigration, and many of them disliked it (at least as it pertained to non-white people). They had every opportunity to create a special exception to deny citizenship to the children of people who weren’t authorized to come here—and yet they didn’t.
Still, that misreading of history doesn’t stop Kavanaugh from offering a solution to an invented problem: Kavanaugh says that all Trump has to do is change the federal law granting birthright citizenship, and the 14th Amendment’s protection of birthright citizenship magically disappears. He writes: “An exception for those born in the United States to foreign parents unlawfully or temporarily in the country is consistent…with the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Roberts and Amy Coney Barrett (who did not write) rejected Kavanaugh’s view. But resting an entire conception of human rights on the narrow shoulders of one or two Republican justices is a mistake this country has made before.
From where I sit, birthright citizenship is now poised to replace abortion as the litmus test for future Republican judicial appointments, with Barbara replacing Roe as the case Republicans insist must be overturned.
For a generation, the drive to overturn Roe v. Wade was the calling card of every Republican Senate or presidential candidate who told their voters they must be elected so they could appoint and confirm Republican justices. But the Republicans have won on abortion. They are the dog that caught the car. In the years since Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, Republicans have been kind of flailing around, searching for their next Supreme Court wedge issue. The most likely issue for them to pivot to was thought to be LGBTQ+ rights, but it doesn’t quite work for Republicans because they’re already winning. They already have all the justices they need to smash LGBTQ+ rights (and, indeed, in a different decision today, the Republican justices continued their crusade to erase trans people from legal existence).
Unlike on LGBTQ+ issues, the Republicans lost on birthright. But they can tell their people that they’re only “one vote away.” They can tell them they just need one more mouthbreathing xenophobic justice who will allow them functionally revoke the first part of the 14th Amendment.
Democrats, meanwhile, are likely to treat this bare win in Barbara just like they treated Roe: as a settled victory that requires no more legislation or defense. They are likely to throw Barbara back in the face of court reformers—as if a 5-4 ruling that the 14th Amendment means what it says is some kind of enduring victory—and media pundits are likely to use Barbara as an example of the court “standing up to Trump,” even though the dissents literally told Trump what to do next to accomplish his unconstitutional goals.
We can already see this playing out. Earlier today, Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer was claiming victory, declaring in a statement: “No matter how much President Trump tries to steal citizenship from people…the Supreme Court confirmed today that those born in America are American.” My brother, read the dissents please. They don’t say “no matter how much Trump tries,” they say “Trump should try again.”
Republicans will use Barbara as a rallying cry, Democrats will use it as an excuse to do nothing.
It took Republicans 49 years to overturn Roe. If Democrats refuse to treat court reform as the number-one priority, Barbara won’t last nearly as long. This is not the last time birthright citizenship will rest on a knife’s edge, and next time it might well fall under the axe.
As long as Republicans are allowed to control the Supreme Court, every human right enjoyed by any American is temporary. That is the moral of Trump v. Barbara.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
July 1, 2026
Letters from an American
June 30, 2026 Trump signed an executive order, on his first day in office, declaring that there was no birthright citizenship, The ACLU and others sued the administration, The Fourteenth Amendment established birthright citizenship, After the Civil War former Confederates denied Black Southerners basic rights, The Republican Congress passed a civil rights bill in 1866 but President Andrew Johnson vetoed it, When Congress wrote the 14th Amendment, it acknowledged that the Constitution had already established citizenship for all persons born or naturalized in the US, The 14th Amendment was challenged in the late 19th century, but the Supreme Court upheld it in 1898, After that, It seemed the law was settled, After Trump issued his executive order, judges all sided against him, and today the current court upheld birthright citizenship, But many have said that the Supreme Court should never have even taken the case, And four of the nine current Supreme Court justices appear to be willing to rewrite the Constitution, MAGA is pressing the administration to step up immigration enforcement in response.
Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack...
You can also find me at:
Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson...
Instagram:
YouTube: / @heathercoxrichardson
Get full access to Letters from an American at:
heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
https://heathercoxrichardson.substack...
In Issue No. 11, Hammer & Hope turns a critical eye on the United States’ 250th birthday. Robin D. G. Kelley examines Black radicals’ relationship to the Declaration of Independence. Nancy MacLean shows how the Trump administration’s racist crusade is designed to tear down the last vestiges of the civil rights movement’s signal achievement: the Civil Rights Act of 1964. And Brian Jones explains that the teaching of Black history is “a record of struggles to achieve genuine equality and justice” — and so a fundamental threat not only to the current administration but to any authoritarian project.
These stories and others represent our mission to bring our readers the best thinking and writing from the left. If you believe in this work and want to help pay the writers, editors, and artists who make it possible, become a member today.
As the world receives its first trillionaire — a white man born in South Africa who amplified calls for a pogrom against immigrants in Belfast the same week as his company’s IPO — our current oligarchy feels much like a realization of the contradiction that defined America’s birth. We are besieged by a ruling class focused on maintaining white power.
And they are using every tool at their disposal to try to do so. They want the antidiscrimination measures of the past 60 years shredded. They want an end to Black voting rights. They want an end to abortion and women’s control of their own bodies. They want an end to immigration. They want war and bloodshed. They revel in racism. They are the culmination of 250 years of white supremacy and violence.
They represent one tradition in the United States. But there is another, found in 250 years of resistance, rebellion, and refusal. One that continues today — because it must. And why? Frederick Douglass made it plain: “There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices, more shocking and bloody, than are the people of these United States, at this very hour.
“Go where you may, search where you will, roam through all the monarchies and despotisms of the old world, travel through South America, search out every abuse, and when you have found the last, lay your facts by the side of the everyday practices of this nation, and you will say with me, that, for revolting barbarity and shameless hypocrisy, America reigns without a rival.”
In this issue Robin D. G. Kelley gives voice to Black women and men revolutionaries like David Walker, who asked white readers in his 1829 pamphlet, Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World: “Do you understand your own language? Hear your language, proclaimed to the world, July 4th, 1776. … Compare your own language … extracted from your Declaration of Independence, with your cruelties and murders inflicted by your cruel and unmerciful fathers and yourselves on our fathers and on us — men who have never given your fathers or you the least provocation!!!!!!” He urged white people to read the text with greater care, especially the passage asserting that it is both the right and the duty of oppressed people “to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.”
For centuries communities have been organizing to safeguard themselves from authoritarian control and violence. That work continues today, even without the celebration it is due. The true inheritance of this 250-year experiment is the unwavering will of the people.
Our thanks to the people and organizations who made it possible for us to publish Issue No. 11:
Billy Brennan, Dana Castillo, Erin Crum, Vicky Fontenelle, Jaime Fuller, Kris Leja, Will Tavlin, Eamon Whalen, Allyson Winburn, Critical Minded, and the Economic Hardship Reporting Project.
HAMMER & HOPE & YOU
PLEASE DONATE MONTHLY
Hammer & Hope is free to read. Sign up for our mailing list, follow us on Instagram, and click here to download this article.
https://hammerandhope.org/article/supreme-court-black-voters
No. 11
Summer 2026
The Supreme Court Blesses the Destruction of Black Electoral Power
The court’s conservative supermajority has gutted what remained of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
With its decision in Louisiana v. Callais, the U.S. Supreme Court’s right-wing supermajority dealt a fatal blow to the Voting Rights Act of 1965, clearing the way for a reversal of Black electoral power the likes of which we have not experienced in our lifetimes and from which we are not likely to recover anytime soon. Widely recognized as the crowning achievement of the civil rights movement, the law was designed to enforce the U.S. Constitution’s guarantee under the 15th Amendment that no government can deny or abridge the right to vote on the basis of “race, color, or previous condition of servitude.” Generations of Black people struggled and sacrificed — some with their lives — in the face of Jim Crow terror to finally achieve protections for voting rights that were already guaranteed under the Constitution.
Since its enactment, the law has been used to challenge and often eliminate restrictions on voting used by states across the South during the Jim Crow era to lock in a white supremacist hierarchy based on racial caste. It achieved nothing short of a political transformation. Just one year after the Voting Rights Act was passed, the percentage of Black registered voters had risen from 11 percent a decade earlier to 51 percent in Alabama and from 27 percent to 72 percent in Tennessee over the same time period. There were six Black members of the House of Representatives and no Black senators when the law was enacted. That grew to 21 as of the start of Congress’s new term in 1985 and 63 by 2025, along with five Black U.S. senators. The expansion of Black representation in local political offices was even more dramatic. The Supreme Court decision in Callais not only forecloses future progress; it threatens to impose the conditions of a pre–civil rights past.
I learned a long time ago that one of the best ways to understand what the Supreme Court has decided in a case is to read the dissent. The dissent in Callais, written by Justice Elena Kagan and joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, plainly explains how the Supreme Court eviscerated what remained of the Voting Rights Act, leaving one of its central provisions — Section 2, known as the “sword” of the law because of its enforcement powers — “all but a dead letter.”
To illustrate the effects of the decision, Kagan suggests that we imagine a hypothetical circle-shaped, single-county district in a rectangle-shaped state. The circle’s population, thanks to historical patterns of racial segregation, is 90 percent Black. The surrounding rectangle is 90 percent white. Voting is racially polarized, with Black residents voting overwhelmingly for Democratic candidates and white ones voting for Republicans. Those who reside in the circle elect representatives that no one in the remaining rectangle would put in office. Under these conditions, the circle’s Black community is able to elect a representative of its choice year after year. Kagan then asks us to imagine that the state legislature decides to eliminate the political power of the circle. It splits the circle into six equal slices and distributes the Black voters to six new, solidly white congressional districts. With the state’s Black voters dispersed into predominantly white districts, they cannot elect a representative of their choice. “Election after election, Black citizens’ votes are, by every practical measure, wasted,” Kagan wrote.
As the dissent points out, “That is racial vote dilution in its most classic form. A minority community that is cohesive in its geography and politics alike, and faces continued adversity from racial division, is split — ‘cracked’ is the usual term — so that it loses all its electoral influence.” Black people can still cast a vote, but will never be able to elect a candidate that represents their political beliefs in the same way that the white population can. As Kagan explains, “Their votes matter less than others’ do; they translate into less political voice.” The votes of individual Black people are worth less than — and are therefore unequal to — the votes of whites. That is a violation of the 15th Amendment — exactly the sort of constitutional violation that the Voting Rights Act was meant to remedy.
Indeed, in drafting Section 2 of the law, Congress focused explicitly on whether electoral practices “would result in minority citizens having less opportunity than non-minority citizens to choose their political representatives,” Kagan wrote in her dissent. Under Jim Crow, Southern states had put in place seemingly race-neutral barriers to political participation — literacy tests, poll taxes, confusing registration processes that were selectively enforced — that had the effect of systematically disenfranchising Black voters. Section 2 was designed to correct that even in the absence of evidence of intentional, purposeful discrimination to subvert the Black vote. Results were what mattered.
Kagan’s hypothetical example is a fair description of the issues in Callais. In 2022, in response to the most recent census, the Louisiana legislature redrew the state’s congressional district map, allotting only one of the state’s six congressional districts as a majority Black district. Because Black voters make up one-third, not one-sixth, of Louisiana’s population, voters and civil rights advocates sued, alleging that the map violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. A federal district court thought that the plaintiffs were likely to win if the case made its way through the court system, and an appeals court agreed; Louisiana was ordered to draw a new map, or at least consider doing so, before the case continued its legal journey in 2024. The state legislature’s new map created a second district in which Black voters were the majority.
This map was then challenged by a group of plaintiffs describing themselves as “non-African-American voters,” who claimed that the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause had been violated because voters were allocated to districts based on race. A federal district court panel ruled that the second “majority-minority” district was illegally gerrymandered. The Supreme Court paused the effect of that decision until after the 2024 election and agreed to hear an appeal from voting rights advocates, who argued that a new map drawn on the basis of the lower court decision would “crack” the second majority-minority district, scattering Black voters to majority-white districts and diluting their political power. As Kagan argued in the Callais dissent, they would still be able to vote, but because they could not elect their candidate of choice, their votes would count for less, which is a constitutional violation.
The case for overturning the lower court ruling and keeping a second Black-majority district relied on Congress’s clearly stated intentions. In 1982, when the Voting Rights Act was amended, Congress was explicit that the test of alleged violations was the effect of election laws and processes, not the intent of officials overseeing them. If the effect of a congressional district map was to diminish Black political power, that was a constitutional violation. The rationale for this was widely understood and accepted at the time, even by many Republicans: Legislators and public officials don’t typically make openly racist pronouncements to justify changes to voting that diminish and eliminate Black political power. On the contrary, these changes usually come with race-neutral justifications. Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act was designed to judge the racist effects of electoral practices on Black voters.
In Callais, the Supreme Court majority turned a half century of legislative and legal precedent upside down. The six justices in the majority looked away from history and inserted their own judgment, exchanging the law as written and rewritten by Congress for the law as they wanted it. In the place of an effects test to determine violations of the law, they imposed an intent test. It no longer matters how a change to the state’s maps affects Black voters. Now the only actionable proof of a constitutional violation is to show that the change was motivated by an identifiable individual or individuals driven by racist animus. This will make it all but impossible to prove Voting Rights Act claims going forward.
To make matters worse, the court’s conservative majority has ruled over the past decade that gerrymandering for partisan advantage is perfectly acceptable. Voting rights plaintiffs alleging discrimination must now not only prove that a redistricting plan was motivated by open racism; they also must exclude the possibility that the plan grew out of acceptable nonracial motives, including partisan advantage. Returning to Justice Kagan’s hypothetical circle-within-a-rectangle example, it simply isn’t possible to satisfy both the needs of Black voters for a consolidated majority-Black district and the political motivations for carving up the district. Preserving Republican power in states that the party controls — now a perfectly legitimate justification for extreme gerrymandering — requires diminishing Democratic political power in those states. If Black voters overwhelmingly vote Democratic, they will consistently be on the outs, and anyone raising a voting rights discrimination claim arising from those circumstances is destined to lose.
Much as it has done before, the Supreme Court changed the rules of the game that prevailed for half a century to allow Republicans to lock in a white-majoritarian partisan advantage in states that they control while blunting the tools created to challenge it. As Kagan concluded, “The Court’s decision will set back the foundational right Congress granted of racial equality in electoral opportunity.”
Callais has had an immediate impact. Within days, Republican-controlled legislatures in the South moved to eliminate Black-majority districts in their states. Before the decision was handed down, Florida had begun the process of following Texas’s gerrymandering example with new maps that will snuff out much of the remaining Black political power in the state. In Tennessee, Republicans carved up the state’s one reliably Democratic congressional district, which is centered in Memphis, one of America’s largest majority-Black cities. In Louisiana, the Supreme Court okayed a plan to call off an election that was already in progress in order to eliminate the second majority-Black district. Alabama got the Supreme Court’s blessing to reinstate a map that a lower court had determined was racially discriminatory, eliminating one of two Black-majority districts; Rep. Shomari Figures, whose election in 2024 marked the first time that Alabama had sent two Black members to the House of Representatives, will likely lose his seat. In South Carolina, the State Senate stopped short of approving a new map to eliminate the state’s only Democratic district and end Rep. James Clyburn’s 30-plus years in the House of Representatives, but Republicans will no doubt try again next year.
As shocking as it is, the Supreme Court’s decision is not surprising when considered in context. The court has long been gripped by what former Justice William Brennan called a “fear of too much justice,” one that flows from its perspective on race and racism. In Callais, as in a 2013 decision gutting a different provision of the Voting Rights Act, the conservative supermajority justified their decision by insisting that much has changed for the better in the South, including racism in voting practices.
Even putting aside the justices’ head-in-the-sand sensibilities about injustice in the South, their larger perspective on racism makes matters worse. The conservative majority subscribes to an ideology of colorblindness — the perverse idea that the way to deal with racial injustice is to ignore racism and treat everyone as though race does not matter. Conservatives have twisted Martin Luther King Jr.’s aspirational call to treat everyone equally, regardless of race, into a weapon to be used against inheritors of King’s struggle for racial justice. Colorblindness transforms any consideration of race into suspect, if not altogether illegal, behavior. This attitude is of a piece with the idea that the law — and the courts that interpret it — can address only openly expressed racist actions. The Supreme Court’s prevailing ideology privileges the perspective of the perpetrator of racial injustice, rather than its victim. As long as the perpetrator did not act with expressed intent, there is no avenue for recourse, regardless of the harm inflicted. Under the conservative majority’s framework, policies and practices that are race-neutral on their face but lead to harmful outcomes for Black people are beyond the reach of the law.
Supreme Court decisions from long before the current Roberts court reflect this tortured perspective. When the court examined the death penalty in 1987, the justices acknowledged that those convicted of capital crimes were 4.3 times more likely to be sentenced to death if the decedent was white, but they ruled that this was not proof of racial discrimination. That required evidence of some individual in the system — a prosecutor, a judge, a juror — displaying intentional racism against the defendant. More recent Supreme Court rulings have continued in this vein, most recently to prevent institutions of higher education from considering race to enhance the diversity of their student bodies. Instead, using race at all in admissions is now seen as the problem. If the conservative justices get their way, the same reasoning will apply to any issue in which there is a racial dimension: housing, environmental and climate justice, health care, employment, technology, and any other aspect of civic life.
Given all that, what’s next? People raising claims of racial discrimination in voting might try to offer evidence of intentional racism by pointing to the express statements or actions of lawmakers who are careless enough to say the quiet part out loud. Legislators can pass laws to bar partisan gerrymandering, eliminating the pretext for discrimination in voting rights gifted to Southern states by the court’s conservative majority. But people rarely proclaim publicly that they are engaging in racist behavior; sometimes they do not even think what they are doing is racist. And the political advantages to be gained, especially for Republicans, make any effort to outlaw partisan gerrymandering a long shot.
The story does not end there, though. Part of what this moment demands are efforts to increase our collective consciousness and civic engagement. Those who care about progressive change and racial justice have to understand the full extent of the damage caused by Callais and why it matters. Beyond that, we have to challenge the court’s flawed conception of race by remaining race-conscious. In part, that requires recognizing and challenging the ways that race shapes the distribution of benefits, burdens, privileges, and hardships in American society, to the disadvantage of Black and brown people. It also requires being concerned with the impact that a policy or practice is having on people’s lives, regardless of the intentions of those behind the policy. Finally, we have to build lasting, durable political coalitions that center the interests of those at the margins and on the bottom of the racial hierarchy. Those are the types of coalitions that drive social movements, which ultimately serve as engines for change.
Callais is a sober reminder of just how fragile the gains of the last half century are and that progress is always met with resistance and retrenchment. The road ahead will be long and difficult, but if we take stock of the lessons of Callais, we might be able to forge a different path forward that ultimately vindicates the promises made in the Constitution. That work — of forcing America to live up to its stated principles in its founding document — is the subject of an ongoing battle for racial justice and equality in this country. That battle is far from over.
HAMMER & HOPE
PLEASE DONATE MONTHLY
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Vincent M. Southerland is an associate professor of law at New York University School of Law, where he directs the Criminal Defense and Reentry Clinic. He also serves as the faculty director of NYU Law’s Center on Race, Inequality, and the Law, which engages in advocacy, research, and public education to advance racial justice. He is the co-editor of Race, Rights, and Redemption: The Derrick Bell Lectures on the Law and Critical Race Theory and the author of articles focused on racial justice, abolition, critical race theory, technology, and the criminal legal system.
Hammer & Hope is free to read. Sign up for our mailing list, follow us on Instagram, and click here to download this article.
How Trump Mainstreamed White Supremacy | Joy-Ann Reid
Wajahat Ali
VIDEO:
#JoyAnnReid #Trump #Politics
How did the United States arrive at this political moment? Joy-Ann Reid joins Waj to examine the political, cultural, and historical forces that have shaped the country over the past decade. Together they discuss Donald Trump's presidency, the evolution of the Republican Party, the rise of white nationalist movements, the media landscape, and what these developments could mean for the future of American democracy. In this conversation: • Trump's political legacy • White nationalism and American politics • The changing Republican Party • Media, misinformation, and polarization • What comes next for the United States Watch the full conversation and join the discussion below.
#JoyAnnReid #Trump #Politics #USPolitics #TheLeftHook #WajahatAli #Democracy #PoliticalCommentary #CurrentEvents #BreakingNews #News #WhiteNationalism #America #Media #historyexplained