Bishop William Barber blasts U.S. Supreme Court VRA decision at press conference in front of the NC Legislative Building/ (video grab)
BLACKS MOBILIZE TO
COMBAT SUPREME COURT
RULING THAT CRIPPLED
VOTING RIGHTS ACT
By Cash Michaels
Contributing writer
Like an electric shock to the system, last week’s U.S. Supreme Court ruling striking down Louisiana’s voting map and effectively crippling the last vestige of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, has now energized the African-American community across the country and here in North Carolina to redouble efforts to maximize its voting power or else lose black political representation.
"Today's decision is a devastating blow to what remains of the Voting Rights Act, and a license for corrupt politicians who want to rig the system by silencing entire communities,” national NAACP President/CEO Derrick Johnson said in a statement from the civil rights organization right after the April 29th ruling.
“This ruling is a major setback for our nation and threatens to erode the hard-won victories we've fought, bled, and died for.”
“But the people still can fight back,” Johnson continued. “Our best defense and offense is the ballot box, and we're going to turn out voters for the midterm elections to make sure we can elect representatives who look out for us.”
In a 6-3 decision in the case known as Louisiana v. Callais, the conservative majority of the nation’s highest court ruled Louisiana’s second predominantly-black voting district was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander because it violated the equal protection clause of the U.S. Constitution.
For decades per Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act (VRA), state legislatures have drawn so-called “majority-minority” voting districts to allow and protect African-Americans’ ability to elect candidates of their choice, and prevent diluting their voting power.
But in the conservative majority opinion, Justice Samuel Alito said that because of “vast social change,” particularly in the South, along with greater black voter registration and participation, majority-minority voting districts were no longer necessary.
Alito continued that in order to now successfully challenge voting maps under the VRA, plaintiffs should have to present evidence of “ a strong inference” that a state “intentionally drew its districts to afford minority voters less opportunity because of their race.”
One of the court’s three liberal justices, Elena Kagan, representing the minority dissenting opinion, wrote that the conservative majority opinion now made it nearly impossible to use race as a remedy to ensure fair representation when drawing future voting maps, making maps now much harder to legally challenge.
The result is expected to be less black representation in Congress.
Reaction to the conservative majority ruling has been seismic, with Republicans, including Pres. Trump, praising it as untying the hands of state legislatures who were previously restricted in redrawing voting districts by the VRA. Two Republican states, Alabama and Tennessee, are already reportedly redrawing their maps as a result. Louisiana is also in process, and Florida did so within hours of the decision.
Rep. Richard Hudson (R-NC-9), chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee said the court’s decision “restores fairness, strengthens confidence in our elections, and ensures every voter is treated equally under the law.”
Meanwhile, Democrats and black leaders condemned the ruling, saying it will dilute black voting strength by either packing black, mostly Democratic voters into one district, or spreading them out so their numbers can’t influence tight races involving Republicans.
While at least seven states are now rushing to redistrict under the new Supreme Court ruling before the November elections. North Carolina, considered a swing state, already did in October 2025.
The Republican-led NC General Assembly, in an effort to create another seat to maintain control of Congress and claim 11 of 14 N.C. districts, redrew the First Congressional District in the northeast, historically a forty-percent black voting district currently represented by two-term incumbent Democrat Rep. Don Davis, to lean more Republican by reducing black voting strength to 32 percent.
In November, Congressman Davis will need a strong African-American and Democratic turnout to keep his seat.
“These maps are a political weapon,” said Sen. Kandie Smith then, “…and black voters are the target.” NC Republican legislative leaders maintain they did not use race to redraw the First Congressional District, only party affiliation. Gov. Stein, a Democrat, could not veto it.
If Davis loses, that will leave the 12th Congressional District in Charlotte-Mecklenburg, represented by six-term incumbent Democratic Congresswoman Alma Adams (who is also up for reelection), as the only majority-minority congressional district in the state.
African-American leaders in North Carolina joined others across the nation in sounding the alarm for what the Supreme Court VRA ruling now means, and what the community must do about it.
“As Frederick Douglass said after the Dred Scott decision, this [judicial] overreach must serve to intensify and embolden our agitation,” Bishop William Barber, president of Repairers of the Breach, said in front of the NC Legislative Building April 30th. “Today must be a catalyst for the most massive turnout of black, brown, and white voters who believe in justice and equal protection under the law.”
“The simple response to these actions must be a robust organizing campaign within our communities to maximize and utilize our voting powers to protect our political existence within this democracy,” declared civil rights Attorney Irving Joyner. “No one is going to save us if we don’t seek to save ourselves.”
“In North Carolina, we have seen the real and harmful consequences of voter suppression, and this decision will only embolden those efforts,” said NC NAACP Pres. Deborah Dicks Maxwell in a statement. “But this fight is not over. When the courts fail the people, the people must respond.”
“Our power remains at the ballot box,” Pres. Maxwell continued. “We will organize, mobilize, and turn out voters to protect our communities and elect leaders who believe in fair representation and justice. Our democracies [are] under attack, and we will not be silent.”
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SAU FILES FOR
CHAPTER 11
BANKRUPTCY
By Cash Michaels
Contributing writer
Just when many thought that St. Augustine’s University (SAU) in Raleigh was well on the road to overcoming its problems, comes word that the private Episcopalian HBCU has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to address its massive debt. Doing so, SAU’s Board of Trustees said in an announcement, is a “deliberate and strategic step to advance the University’s long-term sustainability while addressing current financial realities.”
According to the Chapter 11 filing last week in federal court, SAU had $50 million to $100 million in financial liabilities to 345 creditors, with assets between $100 million and $500 million.
SAU’s largest single debt is $14 million to the Internal Revenue Service, along with millions owed to several other federal agencies and private vendors. The school is disputing its top 20 creditors, and they have until August 25th to prove their claims.
In doing so, the Self-Help Ventures Fund, a nonprofit group that helps underserved communities with financing challenges, agreed to loan SAU millions to meet many of its obligations, provided the school cut ties with two of its board members who previously served as chairman and vice chairman.
But in the process, the school must give up its legal battle to retain its eligibility for permanent accreditation for now, the very thing it needs to remain a viable, competitive educational institution.Without accreditation, SAU cannot receive federal student financial aid.
Instead, SAU has announced that it will implement teach-out agreements for current students to finish their studies at other schools. That, along with non-degree nursing and technical certificates, along with apprenticeship programs.
The SAU Board of Trustees calls attempt to keep the school open “a new path forward” and “building a pathway toward accreditation.”
SAU’s Interim President Dr. Jennie Ward-Robinson has resigned, Dr. Verjanis A. Peoples has taken her place.
In a statement, SAU said, “SAU will work collaboratively with stakeholders, including creditors, donors, alumni, and community partners, to provide meaningful opportunities for supporters of the institution to contribute and play an active role in its continued progress and success.”
“These steps position the University to move forward with clarity and purpose, continuing its mission of preparing students academically, socially, and spiritually for leadership in a complex, diverse, and rapidly changing world.”
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