Opponents of the map will argue the court was simply correcting a procedural defect — that this was a technical legal matter, not an attack on voters. But that framing misses the point entirely. When a court waits for 3 million people to cast ballots and then voids the election, the procedural defect becomes a democratic one. The harm is not to a statute but to the rights of voters and democracy.
In the last few days, we have seen the consequences of this reckless act. A furious Virginia public is now considering alternative solutions — such as adding justices, ignoring the ruling or restructuring the court entirely. Just as the conservative Supreme Court majority predicted, the result of pulling the rug out from under voters is democratic instability.
Reading the opinion, it is clear that the Virginia Supreme Court majority knew this was a potential weakness. It noted that lawyers backing the redraw had argued to the court before the election that state precedent required the election to move forward while litigation was taking place. The majority points to concessions at oral argument — by the lawyer arguing to uphold the election — that the court was free to discard its results.
The problem with this line of reasoning is that it ignores the rights of voters and the impact on election integrity and democratic stability. This is not an ordinary private dispute among parties to a contract, where one side can waive its rights to make future legal arguments. The harm articulated by Chief Justice Roberts is to the entire system of elections and the voters who participate in them.
No matter what the parties to the case argued, the Virginia court had an independent obligation to safeguard the rights of voters. Regardless of what any lawyer said, the court's paramount responsibility was to the due process rights of 3 million Virginians.
The system failed those voters. I was one of those voters. The system failed me.
Sitting on this side of a case, I have learned the intense impact disenfranchisement has on someone who seeks to be an engaged citizen. It is demoralizing to have done everything right — to show up, to vote — only to have a court strip that away in favor of rules and technicalities that disregarded the voters entirely.
I am still working through what specific reforms I support for the Virginia court system. But I know this: the court failed voters and democracy, and Virginia must take meaningful steps to ensure it never happens again. Those 3 million voters — and every voter who comes after them — deserve nothing less.