Harmeet Dhillon
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
This DOJ put out guidance that Christians could not possibly be the victims of religious discrimination because they're the majority.
That's ridiculous.
That's not what our Constitution says.
The Roberts Court, for all of its flaws, I disagree with some things.
The Roberts Court has absolutely, all the way up to last week's opinion in Louisiana versus Calais, has steered the ship regarding discrimination back to the center where it belongs.
Okay, so we're formulating what the plan means.
I mean, I will tell you that the timing of this ruling is such that, you know, the closer you are to elections happening, the less leeway courts give you to make changes.
A lot of these changes have to be made at the political level, and we're seeing that happen.
And when I say I'm going to enforce the law throughout the United States, I mean, that's not committing to any particular
timeline because we do have to respect some of these parameters and we do have to look at the political situation.
So where some states, but mainly it's Southern states, but not exclusively are committing to redistricting, you know, they're going to go through that process, which is a political process.
And the Supreme court has, has ruled that political gerrymandering is acceptable.
Um, and so that's going to be happening throughout the country.
Um, you know, eventually I think what you're going to see eventually over the next two, four, six years,
is there are going to be legal actions, if not by the Department of Justice, by candidates, bipartisan entities, just like happened in Louisiana versus Calais.
NAACP forced the hand over there.
They may be regretting that now.
But instead of having one black majority district, they went for broke and went for two.
And now there may be zero because political gerrymandering means that they can redraw the lines that fit the other criteria that are mentioned in the court, the jingles test that talks about compactness and, you know, communities of interest and so forth.
And that isn't necessarily race in 2026 in America.