What a college career for NiJaree Canady 💐
🥎 FIRST $1 Million softball player
🥎 Big 12 Pitcher of the Year (2025)
🥎 First Team All-Big 12 (2025)
🥎 Big 12 Tournament Most Outstanding Player (2025)
🥎 D1Softball National Pitcher of the Year (2025)
🥎 2x NFCA National Pitcher of the Year (2024, 2025)
🥎 Pac-12 Pitcher of the Year (2024)
🥎 D1Softball Freshman of the Year (2023)
🥎 3x Women's College World Series All-Tournament Team (2023, 2024, 2025)
Today’s Supreme Court ruling guts the Voting Rights Act and turns back the clock on the foundational promise of equality and fairness in our election systems.
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act was one of the last remaining federal protections for Black and brown voters against maps deliberately drawn to dilute their political power. That protection has been stripped away.
It is an outrage. But it is not a surprise.
It is part of an agenda that conservatives set in place decades ago to steal power from everyday people and then cling to that power for generations.
The court’s decision is motivated by politics and designed to give an upper hand to Donald Trump’s Republican Party, which faces the threat of losing the upcoming midterm elections.
We must pay attention to what happens next.
The fight now returns to the states. Legislatures — particularly those in the South — will rush to redraw districts before voting for the midterms begins in just a few months. Already, Louisiana and Florida are planning to redraw their maps, and we should not be surprised if others rapidly follow suit ahead of the midterms and 2028. Their politically-motivated power grab is meant to protect elected Republicans from any consequences for their failure to make groceries, gas, health care, or housing more affordable for you and your family. They want to cheat and choose their voters, instead of the voters deciding who they choose.
The mission before us is to restore the power of the people. There is no question our fight became harder today, but I know we are up for the battle.
Today, the Supreme Court has dealt a devastating new blow to the Voting Rights Act and against the sacred right to vote. The consequences will be felt across the country: fewer voices heard, fewer communities represented and a democracy diminished.
Congress must urgently pass the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act to restore the full strength of the Voting Rights Act before this latest blow becomes fatal.
🚨 UPDATE — North Carolina GOP Senate Leader Phil Berger's primary opponent, Sam Page, netted 21 votes over Berger after counting cured absentee and provisional ballots.
Page leads by 23 votes, 50.04% to 49.96%.