Dennis W Cox
11.3K posts


Some Democrats are already looking ahead to 2028 — and a bold ticket featuring Kamala Harris and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is sparking serious debate. 👀
Could this duo deliver a landslide victory… or divide voters even more? 🤔
What do YOU think — would you support this Democratic ticket? 👇
A: YES 💙
B: NO 🚫
Don’t stay quiet — drop your vote and explain why! 💬

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A day after the Supreme Court further gutted the Voting Rights Act, GOP-led states are eying changes to boost the GOP’s gerrymandering effort at the expense of voters of color, while voting rights groups are trying to limit the impact of the ruling on this year’s midterms. cnn.it/48APJ6C

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Let's call the SCOTUS decision what it is: racist gerrymandering. Republican extremists are trying to choose which votes in our country matter.
But this decision won't break us. From the Civil Rights Movement to today, Americans have organized, marched, and fought to expand access to the ballot. We’ve fought against voter suppression before and we will continue to do so.
FOX 10 Phoenix@FOX10Phoenix
Experts warn that a new 6-3 Supreme Court decision could change the makeup of Arizona's political maps. FOX 10's Jacob Luthi learns how it could specifically affect districts with large Hispanic populations. fox10phoenix.com/video/fmc-er7n…
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Today's Supreme Court decision is a direct assault on the promise of the Voting Rights Act. It risks disenfranchising millions of Americans along racial lines and weakening the very foundation of our democracy.
Democracy is not self-sustaining. We must build, preserve, and defend it together.
Here in New York City, we will always lead a government of, by, and for the people — all of the people.
The Associated Press@AP
BREAKING: The Supreme Court struck down a majority Black congressional district in Louisiana, weakening a landmark voting rights law’s protections against discrimination in redistricting. apnews.com/article/suprem…
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Yesterday, the Supreme Court's conservative majority did something that voting rights advocates have feared for years: they weakened Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, one of the last major pillars of 60 years of civil rights progress.
Section 2 was how we ensured Black, Latino, and other minority communities had a real shot at electing representatives who reflect their priorities. Now, to challenge a discriminatory map, you have to prove intentional discrimination. That is an almost impossible bar to clear.
The Congressional Black Caucus could lose 30% of its membership as a direct result. Within hours of the decision, Republicans in Florida, Louisiana, Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia, and Mississippi are already having conversations about redrawing maps.
Partisan gerrymandering was already out of control. This decision just took the guardrails off completely.
We have to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and establish independent redistricting commissions nationwide, and we need to do it now.
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