
36 Seats
Could Be Up for Grabs in New Supreme Court Redistricting
Case
Dozens of Democrat-held House seats could soon become competitive
for Republicans, should the court overturn a 1960s race-based
gerrymandering law.
A major case working its way through the nation's top court could
spell doom for Democrats retaking the U.S. House of
Representatives—ever.
On August 1, the Supreme Court announced it would reexamine a
provision of the 1965 Voting Rights Act that mandates racial
gerrymandering—"majority-minority" congressional maps that virtually
guarantee a non-white candidate wins that House seat.
There are 144 majority-minority House
districts in the United States, or 30% of all congressional
seats. Just 23 of them elected Republicans last year,
and Democrats historically controlled 5 of those.
The question before the court: Whether drawing racially
gerrymandered maps violates the Civil War-era 14th and 15th Amendments
to the Constitution, which together mandate "equal protection" to all
U.S. citizens regardless of "race, color, or previous condition of
servitude." A decision is expected in October.

Lifting
the Curtain on FDA's Questionable Abortion Pill
Approval
The agency claims the decision wasn't political. The evidence
suggests otherwise.
The average cost of abortion pills in the United States is $600,
plus one life.
Unfortunately, that is a price many women are willing to accept in
exchange for cutting motherhood short. But what if they knew their own
lives were at risk, too?
Any patient considering taking a new medication has a right to know
the full extent of its potential risks. In the case of mifepristone,
however, any concerns about the abortion drug's true dangers have been
dismissed for 25 years by proponents who claim the FDA conducted a
thorough review of its safety.
Yet the Foundation for the Restoration of America's (FFROA) recent
study
of insurance claims data for chemical abortions show a serious
complication rate of about 11 percent—22 times higher than the FDA
admits.

Steve
Cortes: Catholics & Hispanics Go America First
Two pillars of the emerging populist-conservative majority, today
on Restoration Spotlight
For decades, Democrat strategists counted on Catholics and
Hispanics—two powerful and widespread voting blocs—to help build a
permanent majority in Washington. Under President Donald Trump and the
pro-worker MAGA movement, Catholics and Hispanics are shaping a
permanent Republican majority for decades to come.
Here to read the tea leaves on what this means for the coming
elections and American economy is Steve Cortes, a pollster and founder
of the League
of American Workers.
Catch the latest episode of Restoration Spotlight with Hayden
Ludwig:

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