Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

General Discussion

Showing Original Post only (View all)

JustKay

(167 posts)
Sat May 2, 2026, 01:55 PM May 2

My letter to Chief Justice John Roberts. His address is enclosed. You should write him too! [View all]

Chief Justice John Roberts
Supreme Court of the United States
1 First Street, NE
Washington, DC 20543

Dear Chief Justice Roberts,

I am writing in response to the Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais, which I believe will stand as a defining—and deeply troubling—moment in your tenure.

By narrowing the practical reach of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the Court has made it significantly harder to challenge maps that dilute minority voting power. Requiring proof of intent rather than confronting discriminatory effects does not neutralize injustice—it insulates it. As this Court has demonstrated, history has repeatedly shown that discrimination rarely announces itself openly, and legal standards that depend on proving intent risk rendering civil rights protections hollow.

The purpose of the Voting Rights Act was not to create a race-neutral abstraction, but to remedy specific, well-documented patterns of disenfranchisement. Treating all groups as equally vulnerable to vote dilution disregards the very history the law was designed to confront.

The Court has long claimed to be guided by precedent, restraint, and fidelity to the Constitution. This decision calls those commitments into question. When legal reasoning produces outcomes that predictably and intentionally weaken the political voice of historically marginalized communities, it is reasonable to ask whether the Court is fulfilling its role as a guardian of equal protection.

You are well aware that the legitimacy of the Court rests not only on its authority, but on public confidence that its decisions are grounded in principle rather than outcome-driven reasoning. Decisions like this erode that confidence.

This decision places the Court in the role of validating systemic inequality in American elections. History will remember that.


28 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Excellent letter. sinkingfeeling May 2 #1
Oh my. What a well stated and powerful letter. I am not able to articulate as well. I would happily though, undersign Ninga May 2 #2
Great letter, bad recipient. I'll bet Roberts knows or has heard every one of your points. He may even agree with some Fil1957 May 2 #3
Agreed! JustKay May 2 #4
Good on you! Fil1957 May 2 #5
In reality........ popsdenver May 2 #6
I agree, but.... JustKay May 2 #10
No question, popsdenver May 2 #12
Well done! City Lights May 2 #7
"Requiring proof of intent rather than confronting discriminatory effects does not neutralize injustice--it insulates it. Martin Eden May 2 #8
"POtuS" Seinan Sensei Sunday #22
Lovely letter. Very well argued and convincing. ihaveaquestion May 2 #9
Jim Crow, 2.0 perdita9 May 2 #11
I would change the last sentence: lastlib May 2 #13
John Roberts is a white supremacist and won't care mountain grammy May 2 #14
This letter should be copied and sent to any law school and/or university no_hypocrisy May 2 #15
Damn, wish I could write this well. Great letter vapor2 May 2 #16
You should have taped a $20 bill to the bottom of the letter 70sEraVet May 2 #17
This is the new Taney Court suilebhan May 2 #18
Wow. Impressive. Joinfortmill May 2 #19
Really well done. I shall try to limit how much of it I unintentionally plagaize as I write him tonight. FadedMullet May 2 #20
He has broken his oath to his country on many occasions. tavernier May 2 #21
Brilliant Letter! stage left Sunday #23
Excellent letter. Roberts will burn it to heat his office. n/t aggiesal Sunday #24
Wonderful letter, however, Roberts is a closet zealot and does not care dlk Sunday #25
Incredibly succinct Ruby the Liberal Sunday #26
Writing letters like that is a good exercise. MineralMan Sunday #27
MaddowBlog-Why John Roberts' defense of the Supreme Court was so wildly unpersuasive LetMyPeopleVote Thursday #28
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»My letter to Chief Justic...