WATCH: Democrat Rep. OUTRAGED After SCOTUS Blocks Race-Based Gerrymandering, Calls Ruling “Sad”
Democrats have spent years presenting themselves as defenders of democratic institutions. That message becomes significantly harder to sustain when party leaders openly criticize constitutional rulings simply because those rulings disrupt their political strategy.
That contradiction was on full display during a recent interview on MSNOW when Rep. Susan DelBene reacted to the Supreme Court’s decision to block Louisiana’s race-based congressional map.
DelBene called the ruling a “sad day for democracy.”
The statement was revealing—not simply because of its rhetoric, but because of what the underlying case actually involved.
The Supreme Court stepped in after concerns that Louisiana’s congressional map relied too heavily on race when drawing district boundaries. The broader constitutional question is straightforward: should states be allowed to sort voters by race when determining political representation?
For many Democrats, the answer appears to be yes—at least when doing so benefits their electoral prospects.
During the interview, DelBene attempted to shift the conversation away from the constitutional concerns surrounding the map itself. Instead, she argued that courts should not be involved in decisions like this and suggested Congress should rewrite voting laws.
That argument ignores the basic function of the judiciary.
Courts exist to determine whether government actions comply with constitutional protections. When legislatures create policies that potentially violate equal protection principles, judicial review is not activism—it is a core constitutional responsibility.
DelBene also accused Republicans of attempting to “rig the system” because they are allegedly losing support nationwide.
That argument became even more contradictory when MSNOW raised the possibility of Democrats aggressively redrawing congressional districts in states like California to offset Republican redistricting efforts in states such as Texas.
DelBene did not reject the idea.
Instead, the conversation reflected a broader problem that has increasingly defined modern redistricting battles: many politicians oppose gerrymandering only when the opposing party benefits from it.
That is not a serious institutional position, but a transactional one.
Republicans have also engaged in aggressive redistricting efforts, and that deserves scrutiny.
But Democrats weaken their own credibility when they frame themselves as moral defenders of democracy while openly supporting race-conscious map drawing when it helps preserve political power.
Mike Johnson responded to the controversy by arguing that states should pursue constitutional district maps.
That should not be controversial.
Americans can have legitimate debates over independent redistricting commissions, partisan map drawing, and election reform. Those are complicated policy questions.
While many Americans, myself included, recognize that redistricting is often a necessary evil because no system will ever be completely free of political influence, one reality remains clear: there is a major difference between how Republicans and Democrats are approaching it.
Republicans typically pursue redistricting in states where voters have already delivered a clear ideological mandate.
Take Texas, for example, a reliably Republican state where GOP lawmakers are redrawing maps in a state that consistently votes red at both the statewide and federal level.
Democrats, however, have increasingly pushed far more aggressive redistricting efforts in competitive states where representation is far more divided. Virginia is a clear example. It remains one of the country’s most contested states.
Republican candidates continue to win statewide races, and elections are often decided by narrow margins.
When Democrats attempt to redraw maps in a state where nearly half the electorate regularly votes Republican, they are not simply protecting political interests—they are actively trying to dilute the representation of millions of voters.
For years, Democrats framed Republican redistricting as an attack on democracy while quietly benefiting from their own structural advantages. The recent legal battles simply exposed what has been happening for a long time.
What should be far less complicated is whether race should be the primary factor in determining political representation.
Democrats frequently claim America must move beyond racial discrimination. Defending race-based district maps for short-term political gain moves the country in the opposite direction.
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