Jim Crow lives.
Many Republicans are champing at the bit to dilute Black voters’ power after Wednesday’s Supreme Court decision in Callais v. Louisiana, in which the court’s conservative justices effectively allowed racist districts to exist unless a challenge to a district map can prove that its creators acted with racist intent.
Both before and after the ruling, Republicans — like anti-Black lawmakers in years past — showed their eagerness to use new maps to shore up conservatives’ political power. That’s particularly so in the South, where a majority of Black Americans live. There’s no credible moral justification for any of this, but that hasn’t stopped some folks from trying.
For example, Ohio state Rep. Josh Williams, a Black Republican who is running for Congress, touted the Supreme Court’s ruling on Wednesday as he denounced districts specially drawn to counter racist gerrymandering.
“I’m a black Republican who currently represents a majority-white district in the Ohio State House and is running to represent a majority-white district in Congress,” Williams wrote on X. “The idea that black Americans need special districts carved out just for them is complete nonsense. It’s a violation of the law and blatantly unconstitutional.”
Some netizens and other observers noted in response that Williams represents an extremely gerrymandered district, drawn by Ohio Republicans.








