The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments Wednesday in a Louisiana redistricting case that could determine the future of race-based congressional maps.
During the proceedings, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson drew criticism after making a comparison between black voters and disabled individuals while questioning attorneys about voting access, as reported by The Gateway Pundit.

The case, State of Louisiana v. Phillip Callais—along with the related Press Robinson v. Phillip Callais—centers on whether Louisiana lawmakers violated the Voting Rights Act by redrawing its congressional map to include a second “majority-minority” district.
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The map was created after federal judges ruled the state needed more black representation in Congress.
President Donald Trump’s Department of Justice, represented by Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Harmeet Dhillon and Solicitor General John Sauer, argued that race-based congressional districts violate the Constitution’s equal protection clause.
“Today at SCOTUS, the [DOJ Civil Rights Division] told the Justices that Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act cannot constitutionally require race-predominant districting,” Dhillon wrote on X last month.
Today at SCOTUS, the @CivilRights told the Justices that Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act cannot constitutionally require race-predominant districting! pic.twitter.com/6uWrzNs9Eq
— AAGHarmeetDhillon (@AAGDhillon) September 25, 2025
During questioning, Justice Jackson invoked the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) to draw an analogy between black voters and disabled individuals.
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“They don’t have equal access to the voting system. They’re disabled,” Jackson said. The remark was made in the context of whether certain voters face systemic barriers to electing candidates of their choice.
Ketanji Brown Jackson literally and directly compares black people not electing their preferred candidates to disabled people not being able to enter buildings
"They don't have equal access to the voting system. They're disabled." pic.twitter.com/aCJXeBwHTl— Breitbart News (@BreitbartNews) October 15, 2025
The Louisiana case challenges the long-standing use of race as a central factor in redistricting decisions. The state’s original congressional map contained one majority-black district out of six, but after a series of federal court rulings, legislators added a second.
State officials appealed, arguing that the change relied solely on racial composition rather than race-neutral principles.
The Department of Justice’s brief outlined several key points:
Plaintiffs must prove that a proposed majority-minority district is “superior” to the existing map under race-neutral standards rather than assuming discrimination without evidence.
Race and political affiliation must be separated in voting analyses to prevent partisan voting patterns from being mischaracterized as racial discrimination.
Current conditions, such as high minority voter turnout and record levels of black representation in Congress, undermine claims of systemic suppression.
Dhillon’s filing also referenced the 2013 Supreme Court decision Shelby County v. Holder, which found that outdated federal oversight provisions of the Voting Rights Act were unconstitutional.
The government’s position is that similar reasoning should now apply to redistricting cases that use race as a deciding factor.
Justice Jackson’s remarks quickly drew attention online, with critics arguing that her comparison trivialized both racial and disability issues.
The Court’s decision, expected later this term, could have significant implications for how states draw their congressional districts and how courts evaluate claims of racial bias in voting laws.
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The best way to eliminate racial discrimination is to stop discriminating using race.
A lot of people won’t like what I am about to write.
I watch a lot of police bodycam videos on YT, one thing I noticed is that blacks are the most openly racist group in the US today. Not only are they racist against other races, but they believe all black people should stick together regardless of wrongdoing.
Looking at voting patterns, they appear to always vote for the candidate of their race when one is on the ballot. Unless that black candidate is a Republican.
I believe they have been taught to be this way in our schools.
Is there any community more gaslit than the black community? First, they were convinced to support the party that had enslaved them and fought a war to keep them enslaved, the same party that fought tooth and nail to refuse them civil rights. All for a few dollars.
Then through the takeover of the education system that same party went on to further destroy them. Using mass media and the schools they have made them hateful and distrustful. They have taught them many outlandish things about history, most blacks have no idea which party freed them and fought for them to have civil rights.
The history of the USA and slavery is a positive story that should be celebrated. Our nation in less than 100 years of existence ended a practice that had existed for 10,000 years. A practice that was used by every race and civilization that had ever existed throughout time. Now the party that did that is demonized and hated by the black community. Even though Trump was able to gain more support than any other R in modern times it was still only 20%.
With the takeover of mass media, the Democrats have destroyed morality and decency in our society. They have instilled the worst possible behaviors in the black community, but not just in that community, but all of society.
No enemy has ever done as much damage to this country as the Democratic Party hath wrought. May God open their eyes and cleanse their souls, and in that process save the USA.