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Home»Women's Health»The central voice behind our vote: Why Lani Guinier still matters now
Women's Health

The central voice behind our vote: Why Lani Guinier still matters now

healthtostBy healthtostJune 4, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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The Central Voice Behind Our Vote: Why Lani Guinier Still
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This week, the Supreme Court issued a decision that many are calling a defining moment for voting rights in America. In Louisiana v. Callaisthe Court weakened one of the Voting Rights Act’s most important protections, opening the door for states to redraw electoral maps in ways that can reduce Black voting power.

For many, this comes as a surprise. But it isn’t.

This moment has been decades in the making. And to understand what’s at stake now, we need to look back at the people who fought to build the protections we’re watching crumble.

One of those people is Lani Guinier.

Guinier isn’t always the first name we hear when talking about voting rights. We often start with giants like Fannie Lou Hamer or Shirley Chisholm, and rightly so. But the fight did not end with them. It evolved. It went from marches to courtrooms, from protest to politics.

And that’s where Guinier came in.

In the early 1980s, Guinier was part of a critical effort to strengthen the Voting Rights Act at a time when its protections were far from secure. The Supreme Court had ruled that only intentional discrimination could violate the law. This meant that even when black communities were clearly excluded from fair representation, there was little recourse unless one could prove express intent.

Guinier and her colleagues knew the model would fail black voters.

So they helped lead the charge for what became the 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act, introducing what is known as the “impact test.” This change allowed courts to assess not only intent, but also impact. It recognized a truth that black communities have long lived with: discrimination is not always self-evident, but its consequences are undeniable.

This change transformed political representation in this country. He helped increase black elected officials from just a few thousand to over ten thousand nationwide. He reformed districts throughout the South. It created pathways for communities that had long been excluded from power.

This progress was not inevitable. It was designed. He defended himself. And preserved through decades of vigilance.

That’s why this week’s decision matters so much.

By weakening Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, the Court undermined the very standard that Guinier fought to establish. The “results test”, once a cornerstone of the enforcement of voting rights, has now been greatly reduced. The result is a legal landscape where states have much more freedom to redraw maps in ways that fracture black communities and diminish their collective voice.

As shared by Dr. Ifemoa Udoh, EVP of Policy and Research at Black Women’s Health Imperative, after reflecting on this moment and reading Sherrilyn Ifill’s recent analysis, this decision is not a surprise, but it is a reckoning.

“This Supreme Court decision in Louisiana v. Calle is a reckoning we’ve long known was coming, but now it’s painfully clear,” he said. “It threatens the last 50-plus years of political voice and representation for many people of color, and especially Black communities living in predominantly Black counties and regions.”

Dr. Udoh, fueled by Ifill’s article raises the urgency of this moment. “History makes clear what happens when these protections disappear. After Reconstruction, black representation in Congress plummeted for decades, not because black voters disengaged, but because systems were designed to exclude them. The same dynamic can emerge again when the legal safeguards meant to prevent them are weakened.”

This is not just a court decision. This is about the future of representation in this country. It’s about who gets to have a voice in local school boards, city councils and state legislatures. It is about whether communities can maintain collective political power or become divided in ways that make it harder to exercise that power. And it’s about whether the work of people like Lani Guinier will be protected or undone.

Our call to action is clear.

Pay close attention to what happens next in your state and your local redistricting processes. These decisions will shape political representation for years to come, often in ways that are not immediately visible. Stay informed. Ask questions. Engage with the process.

And most importantly, vote.

The 2026 midterm elections will matter. Who we elect will determine whether the political will exists to protect voting rights, challenge unfair redistricting, and ensure that black voters are not pushed to the margins of our democracy.

But this is not only about politics. It’s a health issue. The same leaders who shape election laws also make decisions about Medicaid, maternal health funding, access to reproductive care, and the policies that determine whether black women and families can get the care they need. When our voting power weakens, so does our ability to stand up for our health, our families and our communities. This is why protecting the vote protects our health.

Lani Guinier understood that the fight for voting rights would not be won in an instant. It would require constant attention, strategy and commitment. This is the moment we are in now. The question is whether we will meet it.

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Global childhood immunization rates stagnate despite slight recovery from pandemic

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