Abbott v. Lulac
Case Overview
Texas drew a 2025 congressional map that a three-judge federal panel found violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which bars maps that dilute minority voting power. Latinos make up roughly 40 percent of the Texas population but held meaningful electoral influence in only 2 of 38 congressional districts under the challenged map. The Supreme Court stayed the lower court's remedy in November 2025 while it considers the recurring question in Texas redistricting litigation: can a state redraw its maps under legal pressure while engineering the same outcome in a different form?
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The Application
Latinos comprise 40% of Texas's population but held meaningful electoral influence in only 2 of 38 congressional districts under the challenged 2025 map, indicating systematic vote dilution that violates Section 2. The question is whether remedying this violation requires substantive changes in minority voting power or whether formal compliance through geometrically different districts that produce equivalent dilution satisfies the statute.
The Conclusion
The Supreme Court stayed the lower court's remedy in November 2025 while reviewing this recurring tension in Texas redistricting: whether a state's ability to re-engineer vote dilution through alternative gerrymandering techniques defeats Section 2's remedial purposes or whether courts may enforce substantive voting equality despite technical map redrawals.
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