2026-05-05T18:45:18.483Z / 美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)
作者:约翰·弗里策
1小时17分钟前发布
发布时间:2026年5月5日美国东部时间下午2:45
最高法院 投票权 最高法院大法官 人权
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最高法院大法官塞缪尔·阿利托与凯坦吉·布朗·杰克逊。
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距离11月的大选还有很长一段时间,但最高法院的耐心已经所剩无几。
周一晚间,三名保守派大法官与自由派大法官凯坦吉·布朗·杰克逊之间爆发激烈交锋,凸显了投票权案件中日益凸显的紧张局势:如今最高法院的待审案件大量涉及选举,将对中期选举产生深远影响。
杰克逊指责最高法院为了影响11月的选举,放弃了自身的“原则”。
塞缪尔·阿利托大法官予以回击,称这一指责“极具侮辱性”。这位保守派大法官表示,杰克逊的异议意见提出了“微不足道”且“毫无根据”的论点。
这场围绕路易斯安那州国会选区地图的技术性争议的激烈来回,正值最高法院同时处理其他可能影响今年选举的上诉案件——更不用说预计今夏和秋季将涌现的大量紧急诉讼。
“为避免出现偏袒的表象,我们可以像往常一样选择置身事外,不发表任何立场,”杰克逊在周一措辞严厉的异议意见中写道,“但如今,最高法院选择了相反的道路。它不仅已经对法律作出了裁决,如今还采取措施影响法律的实施。”
“最高法院违反了什么原则?”阿利托在一份协同意见中回击道,该意见得到了保守派大法官克拉伦斯·托马斯和尼尔·戈萨奇的联署,“难道是‘我们永远不应采取任何可能被不合理地批评为党派性的行动’这一原则?”
在最高法院内部,这些言论异常尖锐,但这只是幕后紧张关系公开化的最新一例。
相关报道 1月23日,反堕胎活动人士参加在华盛顿特区举行的年度生命游行集会。凯文·迪奇/盖蒂图片社 最高法院可能迫使特朗普就米非司酮问题表态 阅读时长:6分钟
最高法院资深自由派大法官索尼娅·索托马约尔上月罕见公开道歉,此前她曾暗示布雷特·卡瓦诺大法官的优渥成长背景影响了他去年处理一起紧急移民案件的方式。就在一天前,杰克逊花了一个多小时抨击保守派多数派对快速审理案件的处理方式。
更多选举相关裁决即将出炉
数十年来,最高法院一直告诫各级法院切勿在选举临近时临时修改选举规则。源自2006年最高法院判决的“珀塞尔原则”警告联邦法院,应避免对现状作出后期改动。
但在未来几周内,最高法院将对共和党推动取消政党与候选人协调支出上限的提案作出裁决——这一裁决可能使共和党受益,抵消民主党通常在小额捐款方面的优势。
最高法院还将在6月前裁定各州是否可以接收选举日之后寄达的邮寄选票——这起案件的起因是唐纳德·特朗普总统毫无根据地宣称邮寄投票存在大规模舞弊。今年3月,最高法院在口头辩论中暗示准备在这起上诉案中支持共和党。
更紧迫的是,大法官们被要求迅速就阿拉巴马州的一项请求作出裁决:该请求要求推翻下级法院的判决,即禁止该州在2030年前重新绘制国会选区地图。
这个以“黄hammer州”为别称的阿拉巴马州提出上述请求,正值上周一项具有里程碑意义的6票对3票判决削弱了1965年《选举权法案》的一项关键条款。该法案旨在根除重新划分选区及其他投票行为中的歧视现象。
这一判决同样遭到了最高法院自由派的强烈反对。大法官埃琳娜·卡根在为同僚撰写的意见中表示,该裁决是保守派多数派“现已完成的摧毁《选举权法案》行动的最新一章”。
该判决引发了多个南方州的混乱抢跑,它们以几乎必然会减少国会少数族裔议员数量的方式重新划分选区,以利于共和党。
这也引发了阿利托与杰克逊之间的尖刻交锋。
避免选举陷入混乱?
就在四个月前,在一起涉及德克萨斯州国会选区地图的案件中,最高法院多数派以“造成极大混乱,破坏选举中微妙的联邦与州平衡”为由,驳回了下级法院对该州的判决。
尽管最高法院在判决中未直接援引珀塞尔原则,但显然是在呼应法院应避免给选举进程带来不确定性的理念。
“选举临近之际,选举规则必须清晰且确定,”作为保守派一员的卡瓦诺大法官在2022年的一项判决中写道,该判决允许阿拉巴马州按照一张后来被最高法院认定可能违反《选举权法案》的地图进行投票。“司法机构后期对选举法的干预可能导致混乱,并给候选人、政党和选民等带来意想不到的不公平后果。”
但在路易斯安那州这起案件中,最高法院在邮寄选票已经寄送给选民之后才作出判决。
斯派克·李就最高法院投票权裁决发表哀悼:“这是一场攻击”
1:15 • 来源:CNN
斯派克·李就最高法院投票权裁决发表哀悼:“这是一场攻击”
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在该判决作出后,共和党籍州长杰夫·兰德里宣布该州暂停众议院席位的5月16日初选。包括佛罗里达州、阿拉巴马州和田纳西州在内的其他州已经完成或正在考虑重新划分选区地图。
“在我看来,这完全不可调和且前后矛盾,”美国公民自由联盟投票权项目副主任戴维恩·罗斯伯勒说道,他周一提起诉讼,试图阻止路易斯安那州暂停国会初选。“我不知道他们三人如何能将自己的言论与过去六年来最高法院的言论统一起来。”
这些判决催生了大量新诉讼,包括罗斯伯勒提起的这起,其中一些可能在11月前被提交至最高法院。
在周一的异议意见中,杰克逊重点指出了一个明显的矛盾:多年来一直呼吁在选举事务上保持谨慎的法院,如今却在多个州颠覆选举进程。
“还有所谓的珀塞尔原则,”她写道,“就在五个月前,我们还援引这一原则谴责联邦地区法院‘不当介入正在进行的初选活动’。”
周一阿利托与杰克逊意见中显露的紧张态度令人意外,因为这原本是一起相对低风险的案件。通常情况下,最高法院会在判决作出后32天发布“判决书”。这一程序步骤会将案件交回下级法院——在本案中,即允许特别地区法院决定路易斯安那州重新划分选区的后续步骤。
质疑路易斯安那州选区地图的一群白人选民提出了一项不同寻常(但并非闻所未闻)的请求,要求加快判决书的发布。最高法院多数派以简短的无署名命令批准了这一请求,但紧张情绪也随之公之于众。
“异议意见指责最高法院‘摆脱了’‘约束’,”阿利托在其意见的最后一句话中写道,“缺乏克制的正是异议意见的言辞。”
与此同时,敲定最高法院最终裁决的斗争在周二仍在继续。为路易斯安那州选区地图辩护的一群黑人选民提交了一项胜算渺茫的动议,敦促最高法院撤销此前的判决,重新审理此案。
Alito and Jackson’s fiery debate over the Voting Rights Act exposes Supreme Court tensions
2026-05-05T18:45:18.483Z / CNN
By
John Fritze
1 hr 17 min ago
PUBLISHED May 5, 2026, 2:45 PM ET
Supreme Court Voting rights Supreme Court justices Human rights
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Supreme Court Justices Samuel Alito and Ketanji Brown Jackson.
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The November election is still a long way off, but patience is already running thin at the Supreme Court.
An explosive exchange between three conservative justices and liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson late Monday underscored a tension that has developed in voting cases as the court runs headlong into an election-heavy docket that will have far-reaching implications for the midterms.
Jackson accused the court of rolling over its “principles” in pursuit of influencing the November election.
Justice Samuel Alito fired back, calling that “insulting.” The conservative justice said Jackson’s dissent raised “trivial” and “baseless” arguments.
The heated back-and-forth over what amounted to a technical question about Louisiana’s congressional map comes as the high court is already juggling other appeals that could have consequences for this year’s election – not to mention a flood of short-fuse litigation expected this summer and fall.
“To avoid the appearance of partiality here, we could, as per usual, opt to stay on the sidelines and take no position,” Jackson wrote in a scathing dissent on Monday. “But, today, the court chooses the opposite. Not content to have decided the law, it now takes steps to influence its implementation.”
“What principle has the court violated?” Alito fired back in a concurring opinion joined by conservative Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch. “The principle that we should never take any action that might unjustifiably be criticized as partisan?”
Within the world of the Supreme Court, those words were unusually harsh, but it’s the latest example of tension behind the curtain slipping into public view.
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Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the court’s senior liberal, issued a rare public apology last month for suggesting earlier that Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s privileged upbringing influenced his approach to an emergency immigration case last year. A day earlier, Jackson spent more than an hour lambasting the court’s conservative majority for its handling of quick-turn cases.
More election decisions incoming
For decades, the Supreme Court cautioned courts against changing the rules of an election at the last minute. The “Purcell principle,” rooted in a 2006 Supreme Court decision, warns federal courts to avoid making late changes to the status quo.
But in the coming weeks, the court will rule on a Republican push to lift caps on how much money political parties may spend in coordination with candidates – a decision that could benefit Republicans by offsetting the advantage Democrats have typically enjoyed in small-dollar donations.
The court will also decide before June whether states may receive mail ballots that arrive after Election Day – a case inspired by baseless allegations from President Donald Trump about widespread vote-by-mail fraud. In March, the court indicated during oral arguments that it was prepared to side with Republicans in that appeal.
More immediately, the justices are being asked to decide in short order what to do with a request from Alabama to throw out a lower court decision that barred that state from redrawing its congressional maps before 2030.
The Yellowhammer State made that request following a blockbuster 6-3 decision last week that gutted a key provision of the Voting Rights Act, enacted in 1965 to root out discrimination in redistricting and other voting practices.
That decision, too, drew a vigorous dissent from the court’s liberals. Justice Elena Kagan, writing for her colleagues, said that the ruling represented the “latest chapter in the majority’s now-completed demolition of the Voting Rights Act.”
The decision has sparked a chaotic rush by several Southern states to redraw their maps in a way that would benefit the Republican Party while almost certainly limiting the number of minority members of Congress.
It also prompted the snarky exchange between Alito and Jackson.
Avoiding chaos in elections?
Just four months ago, in a case about Texas’ congressional map, a majority of the justices shot down a lower court decision against the state for “causing much confusion and upsetting the delicate federal-state balance in elections.”
Though the court didn’t cite Purcell in the opinion directly, it was clearly a reference to the notion that courts should avoid injecting uncertainty into the process.
“When an election is close at hand, the rules of the road must be clear and settled,” Kavanaugh, a member of the court’s conservative wing, wrote in a 2022 decision allowing Alabama to vote on a map the court would later find likely violated the Voting Rights Act. “Late judicial tinkering with election laws can lead to disruption and to unanticipated and unfair consequences for candidates, political parties, and voters, among others.”
But in the Louisiana case, the court handed down its decision after mail ballots had already been sent out to voters.
Spike Lee laments Supreme Court ruling on voting rights: ‘It’s an attack’
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Spike Lee laments Supreme Court ruling on voting rights: ‘It’s an attack’
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And in the wake of the decision, Gov. Jeff Landry, a Republican, announced the state was suspending the May 16 primary election for House races. Other states – including Florida, Alabama and Tennessee – have already carried out a redrawing of their maps or are considering plans to do so.
“It strikes me as completely irreconcilable and inconsistent,” said Davin Rosborough, deputy director of the ACLU Voting Rights Project, who filed a lawsuit Monday attempting to stop Louisiana from suspending the congressional primaries. “I don’t know how the three of them can reconcile what they said with what the court has said over the past six years.”
Those decisions have spurred a glut of new lawsuits, including Rosborough’s, some of which may wind up at the Supreme Court before November.
In her dissent Monday, Jackson zeroed in on the apparent contradiction of a court that has for years urged caution in election matters suddenly upending elections in multiple states.
“There is also the so-called Purcell principle,” she wrote, “which we invoked only five months ago to chide a federal district court for ‘improperly inserting itself into an active primary campaign.’”
The tension evident in the Alito and Jackson opinions Monday was surprising given what was a relatively low-stakes issue. Usually, the Supreme Court issues its “judgment” 32 days after handing down the decision. That procedural step hands the case back to the lower court – in this case, allowing a special district court to dictate the next steps for Louisiana’s redistricting.
A group of White voters who challenged Louisiana’s map made the unusual (but not unheard of) request to expedite the handing down of the judgment. A majority of the court granted that request in a brief and unsigned order, but not until tensions spilled out onto the page.
“The dissent accuses the court of ‘unshackling’ itself from ‘constraints,’” Alito wrote in the final sentence of his opinion. “It is the dissent’s rhetoric that lacks restraint.”
Meanwhile, the fight over finalizing the Supreme Court’s decision continued Tuesday. A group of Black voters who defended Louisiana’s map filed a long-shot motion urging the high court to revoke the judgment to reconsider its decision in the case.
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