Inequities are a persistent feature of U.S. elections. As our colleagues have documented, the gap in voter participation between white and Black Americans has increased since the Supreme Court, through its 2013 Shelby County v. Holder decision, removed key protections in the Voting Rights Act. One of the law’s remaining safeguards, Section 2, prohibits any electoral practice that dilutes the voting strength of a racial or ethnic group. By analyzing successful Section 2 challenges that resulted in new majority-Black districts in the 2024 election, we find that appropriate enforcement of the Voting Rights Act to address cases of race discrimination increases participation among Black registered voters and reduces the racial turnout gap.
In Alabama, Georgia, and Louisiana, courts ordered new maps to be drawn after finding that the previous district plans violated Section 2 by diluting the voting power of Black voters. These maps created a new majority-Black district in each state for the 2024 election. Notably, the remedial district plan drawn in Alabama is the first to feature two majority-Black districts in the state’s history.
The creation of majority-Black districts is crucial to giving Black Americans the equal opportunity to elect a candidate of their preference. Black voters nationally, and in these three states, have turnout rates that trail those of white voters due to a plethora of reasons, including voter ID and other restrictive laws, inaccessible polling places, high rates of incarceration, and political disaffection stemming from historical legacies of oppression and disenfranchisement.
While research from the 1990s on minority-opportunity districts did not find consistent turnout effects, more recent analysis from 2016 takes advantage of larger datasets (like state voter registration rolls) to show that Black turnout increases as the Black share of the district population increases.
Using voter registration data in Alabama, Georgia, and Louisiana for the 2024 election, we find that being drawn into a majority-Black district increased Black participation by up to six percentage points and reduced the white–Black turnout gap by two to four points.