The US Supreme Court limited the use of the Voting Rights Act to create predominantly Black or Hispanic election districts in a major constitutional ruling that buttresses Republican efforts to keep control of the House in this year’s midterms and beyond.
Voting 6-3 along ideological lines, the justices rejected a Louisiana congressional map that was drawn with a second majority-Black district after a lower court found an earlier map to be discriminatory.
The Supreme Court ruling undercuts what had been the most significant remaining part of the Voting Rights Act, a law passed in 1965 to address rampant discrimination against Black voters. The justices had already significantly weakened the law twice since 2013.

Fed Chair Pick Kevin Warsh Wins Key Senate Committee Vote
09:48

BONUS: Pershing Square Founder & CEO Bill Ackman Talks Public IPO
16:51

GM Warns ‘Across the Board’ Inflation to Put a Damper on Profit
18:07