May 8, 2026

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Campaign Against the Supreme Court

Her dissent in Louisiana v. Callais captures the mindset of a left that is determined to destroy the Supreme Court in order to save it.

The call is coming from inside the house.

The Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais has made progressives even more determined to delegitimize the Supreme Court, and Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is among them.

In a dissent involving a post-decision procedural question, Jackson accused the majority of acting out of pure partisanship. Her opinion said the Court “unshackles itself” from all constraint and “dives into the fray” (meaning the partisan fray). In its jurisprudence, “principles give way to power.” It is acting with an “abandon” that is “unwarranted and unwise.”

These harsh charges occasioned a stinging and well-deserved rebuttal from Justice Samuel Alito, but, merits aside, the tenor and substance of the Jackson dissent capture the mindset of a left that is increasingly determined to destroy the Supreme Court in order to save it.

The technical matter under dispute was whether the Supreme Court would wait 32 days to finalize its decision in Louisiana v. Callais. This is the usual practice under Rule 45.3 of the Court; the idea is to allow the losing party time to file a petition for rehearing. But the rule is flexible, a default “unless the Court or a Justice shortens or extends the time.”

The winning side in the case asked to get the decision finalized quickly, since time is of the essence. With the state’s scheduled May 16 primaries rapidly approaching (they’ve now been delayed), Louisiana wants to redraw its maps in keeping with the Court’s decision.

Jackson’s dissent quotes a 2019 decision of the Court in Rucho v. Common Cause for the proposition that courts should not “risk assuming political … responsibility for a [partisan map-drawing] process that often produces ill will and distrust.”

But this was a warning against courts involving themselves in minute questions of partisan gerrymandering. Here, the Court has set out a bright-line principle that district lines can’t be race-based but otherwise said that the political authorities are welcome to gerrymander or not.

Jackson also slaps the Court for creating “chaos in the State of Louisiana.” This is quite rich, given the history.

When Louisiana created a congressional map after the 2020 census with just one majority-minority district, it got sued for not sufficiently taking race into account; a judge ordered it to make a second minority district. When Louisiana complied by manufacturing a monstrosity of a district stretching 250 miles to randomly scoop up black voters, it got sued again — this time, for taking race too much into account — and the case made it to the Supreme Court.

It is a sign of how weak the Jackson dissent is that none of the other progressives joined it, not even Sonia Sotomayor.

It certainly would have been much better if this case had been decided sooner, but Alito drops a suggestive footnote in his rejoinder to Jackson. He notes that the constitutional question was “argued and conferenced nearly seven months ago.” This implies that the case was effectively decided right after oral arguments in October of last year and that the dissenters slow-walked it.

Now, Jackson wants more delay — it serves the partisan interests of Democrats to preserve unconstitutional race-based congressional districts as long as possible.

The reaction to Louisiana v. Callais has been so incandescent on the left because it believes that unless black voters have black representatives, they are disenfranchised. But this is not how representative democracy works. Were white voters in Georgia disenfranchised in the 2022 Senate race when two African-American candidates, Democrat Raphael Warnock and Republican Herschel Walker, ran against each other? Were the voting rights of Christians in New York City crimped in 2025 because a Muslim man won the mayoral election?

All indications are that a commitment to some version of Court-packing will be orthodoxy among 2028 Democratic presidential candidates. They will seek to make the highly isolated and wholly unpersuasive Justice Jackson part of a new Court majority imposed by political fiat.

© 2026 by King Features Syndicate

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