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In It to Win It

(12,767 posts)
Fri May 8, 2026, 12:43 PM 7 hrs ago

The glaring error in the Virginia Supreme Court's gerrymandering decision - Ian Millhiser

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Vox

The case is about whether early voting nullifies Virginia’s power to amend its constitution

Scott turns on the provision of the Virginia Constitution that governs the state’s constitutional amendments. Briefly, in order to amend the constitution, the state legislature must vote to propose an amendment. Then, “after the next general election of members of the House of Delegates” is held, the legislature must again vote to approve the same amendment.

After that amendment is approved twice, by two subsequent legislatures, it is then submitted to the voters for their approval. If a majority of the voters approve of the amendment, it becomes part of the state constitution.

The majority of the state Supreme Court, however, claims that the more recent amendment is invalid because, when the state legislature first proposed this amendment in October 2025, it did so after early voting had already begun in the state. This is a problem, they claim, because it means that “1.3 million or so Virginians” had already cast their ballots before the amendment was proposed, and thus they were denied their opportunity to express support or disapproval of the proposed amendment when they cast their vote for state lawmakers.

In essence, the majority argues that Virginia voters who opposed the amendment were disenfranchised because they were denied an opportunity to vote for lawmakers who oppose it in the 2025 state legislative elections.

But there’s a pretty glaring problem with this disenfranchisement argument: The amendment was submitted to the voters in a referendum. Virginia voters were, in fact, given an opportunity to cast an up or down vote on the redistricting amendment. And a majority of them voted to approve it.

It’s my birthday this weekend so I’m off today. But Ian said everything I could have said about this BULLSHIT decision out of Virginia.

ElieNYC (@elienyc.bsky.social) 2026-05-08T16:35:06.463Z

The Virginia Supreme Court buried itself in dictionaries and missed the obvious www.vox.com/politics/488...

Ian Millhiser (@imillhiser.bsky.social) 2026-05-08T16:17:53.072Z
11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
The glaring error in the Virginia Supreme Court's gerrymandering decision - Ian Millhiser (Original Post) In It to Win It 7 hrs ago OP
k/r Dawson Leery 7 hrs ago #1
K/R Jarqui 7 hrs ago #2
46 page ruling of Va supreme court dweller 6 hrs ago #3
So what remedy can be applied to fix their error? infullview 5 hrs ago #4
None. They have the final word. In It to Win It 5 hrs ago #5
And Louisiana is doing just that. judesedit 5 hrs ago #6
Yes. It seems like a very biased decision. I assume the 4 judges who voted to undo the new maps are conservatives? LymphocyteLover 5 hrs ago #7
VA has a l̶i̶b̶e̶r̶a̶l̶ conservative majority so a̶l̶l̶none of them wouldn̶t̶ likely be SSJVegeta 5 hrs ago #11
Ard any of these justices up for election this year? Crowman2009 5 hrs ago #8
No. They are "elected" by the legislature In It to Win It 5 hrs ago #10
Well i can actually see a valid appeal being accepted in federal court over proper interpretation of the law SSJVegeta 5 hrs ago #9

LymphocyteLover

(10,065 posts)
7. Yes. It seems like a very biased decision. I assume the 4 judges who voted to undo the new maps are conservatives?
Fri May 8, 2026, 02:59 PM
5 hrs ago

SSJVegeta

(3,023 posts)
11. VA has a l̶i̶b̶e̶r̶a̶l̶ conservative majority so a̶l̶l̶none of them wouldn̶t̶ likely be
Fri May 8, 2026, 03:22 PM
5 hrs ago

Meaning: You are correct

SSJVegeta

(3,023 posts)
9. Well i can actually see a valid appeal being accepted in federal court over proper interpretation of the law
Fri May 8, 2026, 03:21 PM
5 hrs ago
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