Daijiworld Media Network – Washington
Washington, May 5: The US Supreme Court has allowed its recent ruling limiting a key provision of the Voting Rights Act to take effect earlier than usual, a move that could enable Republicans in Louisiana to redraw congressional boundaries ahead of the November elections.
Typically, the court waits about a month before finalising decisions to allow the losing side time to seek a rehearing. However, in this case, the justices permitted immediate implementation following an emergency request from voters who had prevailed in the case, arguing that additional time was needed to create new electoral maps.

The decision was issued without a signed opinion. In a concurring note, Justice Samuel Alito said Louisiana should not be required to use a map already found unconstitutional, adding that there remains sufficient time for the state legislature to adopt a revised map.
Opposing the move, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson warned that the court’s actions could create confusion. In her dissent, she said the decision has “spawned chaos” in Louisiana and criticised the departure from standard procedure, suggesting it may give the impression of partiality.
Black voters who lost the case had urged the court to delay implementation until after the election, noting that the primary voting process had already begun and expressing concern over potential loss of representation in Congress.
Following the ruling, Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry has already postponed the May primary to allow time for lawmakers to approve a new congressional map. That decision is currently facing a separate legal challenge.
Before the ruling can be fully enforced, a lower court must determine how to apply the Supreme Court’s decision to the state’s electoral process.
State officials indicated that the timing of the court’s action would not significantly affect their ability to prepare a new map or conduct elections this year.
The development adds a new dimension to the ongoing legal and political battle over voting rights and electoral representation in the United States.