Hello! You’ve probably been seeing all our wafer-thin shadow-docket rulings with long dissents attached and saying, Well, after reading this, I know why these rulings are wrong, but why are they right? That’s fair. As a little treat, because we are feeling generous, we will explain our thinking on the Voting Rights Act in Louisiana v. Callais!
How do I know if a state congressional map is drawn correctly?
A congressional district should look unlike any shape you’ve ever seen on Earth. Some kind of strange lizard, but a lizard undergoing a painful transformation into something Other. It should look like the mouth of a creature opening up to devour you. It should look like it’s giving you the finger. And, most important, the district should be red all over. That’s the color a map turns when it’s healthy.
If there are any blue patches, blue stripes, or even little blue dots, that’s a sign your map is sick. You must work quickly to rectify that until the whole map turns a nice, healthy red—or, failing that, mostly red with just one safely contained blue area. It’s what the Founders would have wanted. Especially Elbridge Gerry.
How can I tell if my election is fair?
What’s fair? Fair is when your wife, Ginni, looks at the outcome of the election and it makes her happy. If you look at your polling results and you think, Gee, this won’t please Ginni, then you need to do something different to your map!
Remember, the will of the voters is to elect a Republican. We can say that objectively as nonpartisan jurists! All districts should be constituted so that you are given every possible chance to be represented by a Republican. Knowing he has a nice, healthy cushion will encourage that Republican to try things he might otherwise not feel comfortable doing, like shooting a dog just to feel something, or skipping every vote to focus on doing more things with his stocks.
Okay, but what about the Voting Rights Act?
Thank goodness we have gotten rid of that unconstitutional nightmare! It’s ridiculous to suggest that some people might be treated differently—protected by law to make certain their voices can be heard at the polls, say—simply because of the color of their skin. That’s racist! No. We’re implementing Dr. King’s dream, a dream where everyone, Black and white, old and young, male and (as long as the Nineteenth Amendment holds) female, gets to vote for Republicans together.
What about if it’s really close to an election and changing the map would cause chaos? You know, the Purcell principle?
Good point! If voters don’t know what the rules of the election are, or if candidates don’t know where to campaign, or if election officials don’t have time to update the rolls, this can disenfranchise people and alter the outcome of the election! We want to avoid this, unless we feel at least 98 percent sure it would result in a Republican victory.
What about Alabama, though? That lower court had me fully convinced that this map was unconstitutionally discriminatory, under the Fourteenth Amendment.
We understand your confusion! To clarify: The only “unconstitutional discrimination” is discrimination against white people.