Friday, May 15, 2026

No 'maybe' about it, there is a happy ending in 'Maybe Happy EndinCg' casting debate

Darren Criss and Claire Kwon's time in Maybe Happy Ending' is coming to an end.



It looks like the powers that be on Broadway finally got the memo: representation isn’t just a "nice-to-have" in 2026—it’s the whole point, especially when your story is literally rooted in the heart of Seoul.

The dust is finally settling on the casting controversy that rocked the Belasco Theatre. After a massive public outcry from the Asian American community and heavy hitters like BD Wong and Constance Wu, Filipino American star Darren Criss is back to finish what he started in Maybe Happy Ending

For those of you just tuning in, the drama began when producers originally tried to swap out Criss for a white actor—a move that felt like a major step backward for a show that had been a rare beacon of AAPI visibility.

But the big news now is who’s picking up the torch when Criss hangs up his "Oliver" helper-bot gear for the final time on May 17.

The Next Helper-Bot: Zachary Noah Piser

Taking over the lead role on May 19 is none other than Zachary Noah Piser. If that name sounds familiar, it should. Piser is a trailblazer in his own right, famously becoming the first Asian American actor to play the title role in Dear Evan Hansen full-time.

Piser taking over the role is a crucial choice for this moment.

Taking over the roles of Asian robots in 'Maybe Happy Ending' are
Zachary Noah Piser and Hannah Kevitt.


Piser, who identifies as "Jasian" (Jewish and Chinese American), brings a deep understanding of the intersectional Asian experience to the stage.

After the "whitewashing" controversy that sparked open letters and 2,400+ signatures, Piser’s casting feels like a commitment to the show's original promise of AAPI representation.

Piser isn't just a "diversity hire"—he’s a powerhouse. From his recent turn in Redwood opposite Idina Menzel to his work in KPOP, he’s shown he has the chops to lead a Tony-winning production.

Joining him in the new lineup is Chinese American Hannah Kevitt, who moves from standby to full-time lead as Claire on the same day taking over the role from Claire Kwon.

The "Maybe" in Maybe Happy Ending used to refer to the robots' love story. Lately, it felt like it referred to whether Broadway could keep its promises to Asian American performers. With Piser and Kevitt stepping in for Criss and Kwon, it looks like we might be back on the right track.
EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.

AANHPI Heritage Month: Chinese American chef shatters glass ceilings in "America’s Culinary Cup" triumph

Cara Stadler's diverse culinary experience led to her winning $1 million on
'America's Culinary Cup' hosted by Padma Lakshmi.


A Chinese American chef just sent a massive shockwave through the mainstream food media. Chef Cara Stadler walked away with the historic title on CBS’s inaugural season of America’s Culinary Cup.

In a thrilling 90-minute finale, Stadler out-cooked runner-up Chris Morgan by a razor-thin 278 to 274 points, securing the coveted $1 million grand prize.

For Asian American communities watching closely, this isn't just a win for a great chef. It is a powerful validation of cultural heritage on one of network television's biggest stages.

In the finale, she prepared a three-course meal highlighted by a dessert that host Padma Laksmi said: “Cara made this beautiful dish of tea with some dumplings in it, which I had never seen before.”

“I don't think any of us  (judges) had ever had a dish like that, but it was so personal to her that, of course, I couldn't have tried it from anyone else. And that was something new.”

Lakshmi emphasized that Stadler’s triumph challenges the eurocentric hierarchy that has long dominated the culinary world. She praised Stadler for elevating the foods of her ancestors—specifically her Shanghainese heritage—to the absolute highest tier of American network television. 

Lakshmi noted that seeing a chef win $1 million by staying unapologetically true to her roots sends a massive message to young chefs of color nationwide.

What the judges said about the dishes

The culinary elite did not make it easy for Stadler. Her four-point victory came down to a razor-thin margin. The judges scrutinized every texture and cultural reference across her menu:

  • The Innovation Round (Salmon Caviar): Tasked with reimagining legendary chef Eric Ripert's signature dish, Stadler came out of the gate swinging. The panel lauded her technical execution. Showrunner Josh Silberman later noted she proved she possesses the raw skills of "Michelin Star winners," despite being away from high-stakes kitchens for a minute. She outscored her peers in this round with a massive 113 points.
  • First & Second Courses (Past and Present): Her traditional Dumplings and Lobster Moilee were praised for their deep flavor complexity. Master seafood chef Michael Cimarusti was particularly impressed by her fish-prep techniques and flavor balance. This was a major validation since Stadler admitted to being terrified of serving seafood to him.
  • The Showstopper Finale (Teatime): This was the dish that sealed the $1 million check. Host Padma Lakshmi admitted it was a culinary revelation. She noted that Stadler served a "beautiful dish of tea with some dumplings in it," an inventive fusion of English and Asian cultures that Lakshmi had literally never tasted before in her entire career.
  • The Ultimate X-Factor: Beyond the food, the judges were floored by her mental stamina. Lakshmi pointed out that she had never seen Stadler look frazzled. Her zen-like calmness—which Stadler credits to protecting her unborn baby from stress—ultimately carried her through the chaotic 90-minute finale.

From Berkeley to China by way of Paris

Before she shattered glass ceilings on network television, Chef Cara Stadler went on a global walkabout that reads like an indie film script. For an Asian American woman navigating an industry notoriously dominated by white, male gatekeepers, Stadler didn't just climb the ladder—she built her own.

Born in Maine, where she was often the lone person of color in school. That changed when as a teenager she moved to Berkeley, Calif., where she thrived in the diverse community and discovered her love in the culinary center.

At the age of 16, she interned at a Berkeley restaurant, Cafe Rouge. It was not long before she was offered a full-time position where she rained in the kitchen under chef and owner Marsha McBride. Stadler credits this specific kitchen as the place where she fell in love with the industry and decided to pursue a career as a professional.

Within eight years, she was working at Michelin-starred restaurants in Paris. Stadler scored positions at ultra-prestigious Parisian establishments, including Le Crillon under Chef Jean-François Piège, and the renowned Guy Savoy.

In Paris, she mastered the uncompromising, rigid foundations of classical French cuisine. She learned the art of perfect broths, flawless knife work, and the intense discipline required to survive elite European kitchens.


Having conquered the French classics, Stadler felt a powerful pull toward her maternal roots. She moved to China, splitting her time between Shanghai and Beijing. It was here that her technical French training collided beautifully with her Chinese heritage.

In 2009, Stadler and her mother, Cecile, looked at the rapidly changing culinary landscape of China's capital and decided to shake things up. They launched Underground Beijing, a highly exclusive, underground supper club.

Underground Beijing wasn't just a restaurant; it was a deeply personal exploration of identity. It allowed Stadler to reconnect with the flavors of her Shanghainese ancestors while proving that Chinese food deserved the same respect and elevation as European haute cuisine.

This cross-continental journey—from the rigid kitchens of Paris to the creative freedom of Beijing's courtyards—forged the exact, boundary-pushing flavor profile that would one day win her a $1 million grand prize.

In her final assessments, Lakshmi lauded Stadler for refusing to "water down" or compromise traditional flavor profiles to appease Western palates. By executing an innovative, elevated menu that married elite French technique with deep Chinese flavor profiles, Stadler demonsrated that Asian American cuisine is not a monolith, but a dynamic, evolving culinary powerhouse.

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

AANHPI Heritage Month: California state park plans a public celebration of Chinese house of worship

The interior of the Weavervill Joss House tells stories of Chinese immigrants.

California State Parks and its partner, the Weaverville Joss House Association, invite the public to watch history come alive during the Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Day with a Lion Dance at Weaverville Joss House State Historic Park (SHP). This free event will take place Saturday, May 23, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Asian American, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander Heritage Month is an annually observed commemorative month in the United States. It is celebrated during the month of May, and recognizes the contributions and influence of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islander Americans to the history, culture and achievements of the United States.

The Weaverville Joss House, known traditionally as the Temple among the Forest beneath the Clouds. Built in 1874, it stands as a resilient anchor of cultural history. It is the oldest continuously used Chinese temple in California and the entire United States.
Hundreds of Chinese miners arrived here during the 1850s Gold Rush. They faced immense discrimination and heavy foreign miner taxes. This temple was their safe space. It functioned as a house of worship, a social hall, and a travelers' hostel.
The interior walls hold actual handwritten census logs. These logs provide a rare, priceless archive of a community that left behind very few written records.
The Joss House is an active house of worship.
Culturally, it’s believed that lions will preserve peace and tranquility in the community and prevail over all evil to bring joy and happiness. After the lion dance, there will be a traditional firecracker display, followed by a dragon dance by the Eastern Ways Martial Arts School. Refreshments will include green tea ice cream with specialty tea and cookies provided by the Weaverville Joss House Association.

Since it’s the Year of the Fire Horse, there will be fire horse crafts for children and guided tours of the Temple of the Forest Beneath the Clouds (Cloud Forest Temple), the oldest continuously used Chinese temple in California.

WHAT: Asian American, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander Heritage Day
WHEN: Saturday, May 23, from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
WHERE: Weaverville Joss House State Historic Park,630 Main St., Weaverville, CA 96093
California State Parks welcomes all visitors. For more information about the event or if members of your group have accessibility needs, please contact the park at (530) 623-5284 in advance to arrange accommodations.You can also get updates by following the park’s Facebook page.

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

After Nicole Scherzinger's and Darren Criss 'Tony wins last year, Broadway steps back


Stephanie Hsu earns her first Tony nomination for her role in The "Rocky Horror Show."


The 2026 Tony nominations are out and we are reminded that the "Great White Way" has a more darker meaning. For AANHPI Broadway artists, the results are a bittersweet reminder of the long climb toward true equity.

While we’re seeing undeniable brilliance from AANHPI artists, the numbers still feel like a slow drip in a desert of underrepresentation. While 2026 brings celebrated nominees like Stephanie Hsu for her role in The Rocky Horror Show, the historical context reveals a pattern of "one step forward, two steps back".

Following Nicole Scherzinger’s powerhouse win last year for Sunset Boulevard—a moment that felt like a breakthrough for Pacific Islander visibility—many hoped 2026 would be the year the floodgates finally opened. Instead, we’re looking at a handful of standout artists carrying the torch for a community that remains largely sidelined in lead roles.

Tony nominee Uzo Aduba and Tony winner and Filipino American Darren Criss announced the nominations for the biggest awards.

Leading the charge is Stephanie Hsu, whose nod for Best Actress in a Musical for
The Rocky Horror Show proves she’s the real deal. But let’s be real: why is it still news when one of ours leads a marquee production? 

We also see the technical masters like Kimie Nishikawa, Ani Taj, and the prolific Kai Harada (pulling double duty for Ragtime and Cats) showing that our vision is what makes these shows run.

In addition, AANHPI fnominees among Creative & Design, include:
  • Hue Park: Nominated for Best Original Score for Maybe Happy Ending (co-written with Will Aronson).
  • Linda Cho: Earned dual nominations for Best Costume Design of a Musical for both Ragtime and Schmigadoon!
  • Kai Harada: Earned dual nominations for Best Sound Design of a Musical for both Cats: The Jellicle Ball and Ragtime.
  • Ruey Horng Sun: Nominated for Best Lighting Design of a Musical for Floyd Collins (shared with Scott Zielinski).
The history of AANHPI presence at the Tonys is marked by rare, isolated breakthroughs followed by long periods of invisibility. For decades, the community was largely shut out of leading roles, with wins often confined to specific, culturally coded productions.

History of exclusion

It wasn't until 1981 for the first Asian artist, Willa Kim, to win a Tony (Best Costume Design). In the acting categories, BD Wong made history in 1988 as the first Asian actor to win for M. Butterfly.

One of the most glaring historical snubs wasn't just a lack of nominations, but the 1990 controversy surrounding Miss Saigon, where the lead role of a Eurasian character was cast with a white actor in yellowface. This incident sparked decades of activism regarding the theft of AANHPI roles.

Statistics show that for years, Asian representation hovered at a dismal 2–5% of all Broadway roles. Often, spikes in representation were tied to a single production, like the 2015 revival of The King and I, which accounted for nearly half of all Asian actors employed that season.

The short-lived breakthroughs?

We though there was a breakthrough when Lea Salonga won Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical in 1991 for her role as Kim in the original Broadway production of Miss Saigon.

But it wasn't long before the taste of that win faded and Broadway returned to the same old habits and inbred  blindness and AAPI artists had to settle for revivals of The King and I for work.

Nicole Scherzinger, a Filipino American, won a Tony last year for her performance in Sunset Blvd.


Recent productions of  the musical about the rise and fall of Imelda Marcos, Here Lies Love, and the off-Broadway KPOP provided work but were short-lived.

Last year felt like a sea change, or so we thought. Filipino American Nicole Scherzinger’s win for Best Actress in a Musical for Sunset Boulevard was a landmark moment for Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander representation. 

Alongside Darren Criss (the first Asian American to win Best Lead Actor in a Musical for Maybe Happy Ending) and Marco Paguia, the 2025 ceremony saw the highest number of AAPI acting wins in history.

However, the glow of that victory was quickly dimmed by the "white-washing" controversy that followed. 

When Criss briefly stepped away from Maybe Happy Ending—a show set in South Korea with a predominantly Asian cast—he was replaced by a white actor. To many in the community, this felt like an "affront" and a "slap in the face," signaling that even after historic wins, AANHPI roles are still viewed as interchangeable.

A curtain rising?

With the hope that AANHPI representationfd on Broadway and Off-Broadway will only get stronger, currently, there are a few productions that feature Asian American leads:
  • Maybe Happy Ending: A standout of the current season that continues to draw attention, this musical is set in a futuristic Seoul and features a predominantly Asian cast, led by Helen J. Shen and Darren Criss. It’s a rare example of a Broadway show where the core narrative and casting are deeply rooted in Asian artistry.
  • Schmigadoon!: This Broadway adaptation of the hit series has earned 12 Tony nominations for 2026 and features Ann Harada, reprising her role as Florence Menlove.
  • Henry VI: A Trilogy in Two Parts: Off-Broadway at The Public Theater, NAATCO (National Asian American Theatre Company) is presenting an all-Asian American ensemble featuring veterans like Mia Katigbak and James Yaegashi.

View from the edge

The history of AANHPI presence at the Tonys is marked by rare, isolated breakthroughs followed by long periods of invisibility. For decades, the community was largely shut out of leading roles, with wins often confined to specific, culturally coded productions.
FYI: The 79th Annual Tony Awards will broadcast live from Radio City Music Hall on Sunday, June 7, 2026, from 8:00–11:00 PM ET/5:00–8:00 PM PT. You can watch it on TV via the CBS Television Network or stream it live and on-demand on Paramount+
The community's fight today isn't just for a trophy; it’s against a system where AANHPI talent is celebrated only when it's exceptional, while mediocre representation remains the baseline for others. One win doesn't fix a century of being sidelined — it only highlights how much more room there is at the table.
The momentum for AANHPI talent on Broadway isn't just about award season — it’s about the work being staged right now and in the coming months, rom classic revivals of The Flower Drum Song, The King and I and Miss Saigon to futuristic Seoul in Maybe Happy Ending.
The talent is there — it always has been. But as we look toward the June 7 ceremony at Radio City, the question remains: when will Broadway’s casting offices and boardrooms finally catch up to the reality of the talent pool? One Scherzinger win or a few technical nods isn't the finish line; it’s a prompt to keep pushing until our stories aren't just "notable mentions," but the main event.
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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

AsAm mayor resigns after admitting she was a spy for China

Once considered a 'rising star:' Eileen Wang resigns as mayor of Arcata, California.


The political landscape of the Chinese Americans of California's San Gabriel Valley was rocked Monday as Eileen Wang, the mayor of Arcadia, abruptly resigned, admitting she had been operating as an unregistered agent for the Chinese government.

In a stunning plea agreement unsealed in federal court, Wang confessed to a felony count of acting as an illegal foreign agent — a move that brings a swift and ignominious end to her short tenure as mayor. 

According to prosecutors, from 2020 to 2022, Wang was essentially moonlightng for Beijing, using a website called "U.S. News Center" to push pro-China propaganda directly into the feeds of Chinese-speaking residents in the San Gabriel Valley.

The evidence presented was as damning as it was cinematic. Text messages showed Wang reporting viewership metrics back to Chinese officials and editing articles at their behest. In one exchange that will likely haunt her legacy, she responded to a superior's praise by texting, "Thank you leader."

This isn't an isolated incident for the "City of Homes." Wang’s downfall is the latest domino to fall in a sprawling federal investigation that has already snagged her former fiancé, Yaoning "Mike" Sun, and high-level operative John Chen.

Sun was the bridge between Wang and Chen, a convicted operative who worked to cultivate Wang as a "new political star" for the Peoples Republican of China. Sun is currently serving a four-year prison sentence.

Wang, who just took the mayor's gavel this past April and was considered a rising star among local politicians, now faces up to 10 years in federal prison. Her resignation is effective immediately, leaving Arcadia to pick up the pieces of a trust shattered by international intrigue.

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.

Monday, May 11, 2026

UCLA offers new digital textbook on AANHPI history for free




One of the problems of offering ethnic studies in US schools — particularly about AANHPI history — has been the lack of teaching material, but school districts can no longer use the lack of resources as an excuse.

UCLA’s Asian American Studies Center just dropped a game-changer for the classroom. Their new multimedia textbook, Foundations and Futures, isn't just another dry history book — it’s a massive, digital deep-dive into the AAPI stories that usually get short shrift in American curricula.

Led by professors Karen Umemoto and Kelly Fong, It moves way beyond the "model minority" myth, bringing in over 100 scholars to spotlight more than 20 different communities, including often-overlooked stories from South Asian organizers and Pacific Islander diasporas.

This free resource packs 50 chapters of history, from the struggles of 8-year-old Mary  Tape fighting for her right to go to school to the groundbreaking legacy of Hawaii Congressmember Patsy Mink.

“It’s transformative for youth to see themselves and their families centered in curriculum instead of in a paragraph, sentence, footnote or not at all,” said Fong. “In centering Asian American and Pacific Islander experiences, the textbook opens possibilities for students to feel valued and learn more about the communities they belong to as well as communities they may not know much about.”

“I was inspired by the thought of my 15-year-old Indian/Pakistani American niece seeing herself and her community represented in a major textbook,” said Uzma Quraishi, a contributing writer to the project. “I thought, ‘How empowering and affirming would that feel for a young Asian American today?’”

Almost 25 million people identify as Asian in the United States, according to the Pew Research Center. Yet, a recent study from The Asian American Foundation (TAAF) found that one in four adults in the US say they lack personal connections with anyone in the AAPI community. About half of adults say that AAPIs have little or no influence on American culture, with 47% of those surveyed unable to name a famous Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander and 53% unable to name a single significant moment in US history related to AAPIs.




Foundations and Futures is being released at an important time for public education, as the movement for ethnic studies in K–12 schools and higher education has grown significantly in recent years.

Governor Gavin Newsom signed California Assembly Bill 1468 in 2020, requiring students enrolled in California State University campuses to take a class in Native American Studies, African American Studies, Asian American Studies, or Latina and Latino Studies. This was followed by AB 101 in 2021, which made California the first state to require ethnic studies for high school graduation.

There are now 22 other states that have statutes requiring ethnic studies, with Oregon, Oklahoma, Florida, Tennessee and Connecticut among those that include Asian American and Pacific Islander studies in their academic standards.

What makes UCLA's textbook stand out is the format. It’s built for the TikTok generation but grounded in serious scholarship, using audio, video, and poetry to bring 200 years of struggle and triumph to life. As ethnic studies becomes a requirement in more states, UCLA is handing teachers the keys to tell a more honest, inclusive version of the American story.

“The histories featured in the textbook expand our understanding of the world in transformative ways. It helps grow our understanding of who we are and build mutual respect across differences,” said Umemoto. “It deepens knowledge about growing societal problems and shares intergenerational wisdom to make positive change in the world.”

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

ANHPI Heritage Month: Congressional Resolution for recognition in a climate of contempt



As we move into May 2026, the familiar ritual of AANHPI Heritage Month feels a lot less like a celebration and more like a battle cry.

As we kick off May 2026, the ritual of AANHPI Heritage Month feels less like a celebration and more like a desperate holding action. On April 30, Representative Grace Meng and Senator Mazie Hirono dropped a bicameral resolution (H.Res.1243) to officially recognize our month. But let’s be real: while Congress cites our history, the current administration is busy repeating the worst parts of it.

“Happy Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month! This year’s celebration precedes the 250th anniversary of the United States—a historic milestone and an opportunity to honor the generations of AANHPIs who have helped build and strengthen this nation," says Rep. Grace Meng, chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC).

        FYI: Read the entire Resolution

"Our presence long predates America's founding, beginning with the first recorded arrival of Filipinos in what is now the continental United States at Morro Bay in 1587."

The resolution doesn't just list our "contributions" — it serves as a historical receipt. By explicitly citing the Page Act of 1875 and the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, it reminds the country that the US government has a long, ugly history of using law as a weapon against us. It’s a necessary jab at a political climate that feels increasingly like a 19th-century throwback.

The "Hellhole" rhetoric

While Congress tries to "honor" us, the rhetoric coming from the top is pure vitriol. Just last month, Trump reportedly lumped China and India into a list of "hellholes," a move that does more than just offend—it signals to his base that people from these regions are "less than."

This isn't just talk; it's a green light for targeted harassment. In Minneapolis, we’ve seen a disturbing spike in anti-Asian incidents where residents are being told to "go back" to those very places. This atmosphere of xenophobia is exactly what the 2026 resolution warns against, yet it is being fueled daily by the White House.

The machinery of exclusion

The most brutal edge of this rhetoric is found in the surging number of AANHPIs in ICE detention. We are seeing a record-breaking crackdown, with families being torn apart as the administration aggressively moves to deport Southeast Asian refugees for minor, decades-old crimes—crimes for which they have already served their time.

 These are people who came here as children fleeing war, now being sent back to countries they don't even know.

The stakes are life and death. The rise in detention numbers has been accompanied by reports of preventable deaths in ICE custody, where language barriers and medical neglect have turned a "minor crime" into a death sentence.

View from the edge

For AANHPI Heritage Month 2026, let’s get one thing clear: we aren’t "guests" in this country, and we’re tired of being asked where we’re really from. This year, as we celebrate under the theme "Power in Unity: Strengthening Communities Together," we’re taking a hard look at the "perpetual foreigner" trope — that tired, racist myth that treats us as outsiders no matter how many generations our families have been here.
A fresh report from the Committee of 100 and NORC shows that 55% of Asian Americans still deal with people assuming they’re foreign. It’s a weight that hits U.S.-born and naturalized citizens almost equally, making it clear this isn’t about a passport—it’s about how we’re seen.
A resolution is a nice gesture, but it won’t stop a deportation bus or silence a racist trope. As the resolution’s 2026 theme reminds us, there is "Power in Unity," but that unity is being tested by an administration that treats our community as a political scapegoat. 
If we want more than just a commemorative plaque, we have to keep fighting the policies that treat us like the the "perpetual foreigners" that the Exclusion Act intended us to be. From land bans to visa limitations and the gutting of DEI programs, the current administration is using policy to reinforce that trope. We're not simply the good little boys and girls that the "model minority" that separates us from other communities.
This May, we’re not just celebrating heritage; we’re asserting our belonging and integration into American society. We’re bridge builders, teachers, innovators, artists, healers and leaders, and — most importantly — neighbors who have been part of the American story from the start.

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.


Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Republicans celebrate dismantling of the Voting Rights Act by launching redistricting in 7 southern states




April 29, 2026 was one of the worst days for American democracy. Over 60 years of voting rights dismantled and dismissed.

Watch out. After the conservative majority in the US Supreme Court’s destruction of the Voting Rights Act, Republicans are wasting no time in trying to wrest away Congressional districts from Black voters.

On April 29, the Supreme Court 6-3 decision in Louisiana v. Callais significantly weakened Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA), limiting the use of race in creating majority-minority districts.

“For decades, the Voting Rights Act has helped ensure that communities of color have a fair opportunity to make their voices heard at the ballot box,” said Christine Chen, Executive Director of APIAVote. The Supreme Court “decision weakens one of the most important remaining safeguards against discrimination in our electoral system and threatens the progress that so many communities have fought hard to achieve. Today’s decision will make it easier for politicians to draw voting districts that let them choose their voters rather than empowering voters to choose their elected officials. ”

As of early 2025, In the 119th Congress there is a record number of 67 Black lawmakers serving in the 119th Congress, according to Spectrum News. This total includes 62 Democrats and five Republicans, with 62 serving in the House of Representatives and five in the Senate, marking the highest representation in US history. 

Currently, here are 15 congressional districts where Black voters make up a majority of the voting-age population. Each of these districts is currently represented by a Black Democrat.


According to an analysis by Fair Fight Action and Black Voters Matter, the Callais ruling could eventually lead to a redistricting wave down in Dixie that could help Republicans flip as many as 19 majority-minority seats currently held by Democrats.

While majority-Black districts have historically been the primary vehicle for Black representation, most Black members of Congress now represent districts where Black voters are not the majority.

Although the main target was Black majority districts in the South, the SCOTUS ruling could also be used against Asian Americans or Latinos not only for Congressional districts but also local jurisdictions like school districts, cities and counties.

The districts which are vulnerable under the SCOTUS ruling  could be gerrymandered GOP controlled states in order to maintain their control of Congress. Because of Donald Trump's record-breaking unpopularity due to his dismal economic record, his harsh immigration policies, rising healthcare costs and his war against Iran.

According to Democracy Docket, while SCOTUS said redistricting based on race was illegal,  political gerrymandering is OK. The GOP is celebrating and wasting no time in implementing the court's astonishing decision.
  • Alabama: Gov. Kay Ivey (R) called a special session to reinstate the state’s old gerrymander before the midterms — pending a greenlight from SCOTUS. 

  • Louisiana: The state successfully suspended its US House primaries. There are already three lawsuits against the state for halting its active election and nullifying votes.

  • Tennessee: In a move that may eliminate its one blue congressional seat and disenfranchise Black voters, Tennessee is now seeking to redistrict mid-cycle.

  • South Carolina: Lawmakers and the state GOP have urged the governor to call for a special session to mid-cycle redistrict. 

  • Georgia: The governor has said he won’t call a special session to redraw for 2026, but as we saw after Alabama’s 180, that could change.

  • Florida: We’re waiting for Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis to sign the recently passed gerrymandered map. 

  • Virginia: The Republican National Committee is appealing its loss in a third challenge to Virginia's 10-1 congressional map approved by voters last month.
There is a justifiable fear is that the SCOTUS decision will have a trickle down effect and affect local  legislative districts in the states and our AANHPI communities that have only recently been able to elect representatives that reflect them.

“When the Voting Rights Act is undermined, Black voters are harmed first. But the damage won’t stop there. The Supreme Court has gutted one of the last protections we have against racial discrimination in our democracy. It puts the political power of Asian Americans and communities of color at risk," said Asian Law Caucus' Executive Director Aarti Kohli.

"It leaves communities of color with fewer enforceable protections against unfair maps — and not just for Congress, but in state and local elections across the country. We stand with Black and Brown voters from Louisiana to every state where maps could now be redrawn to limit their voice," Kohli continued.

“The same protections that safeguard the voice of Black voters are the same ones that protect Asian Americans, immigrants, and language-minority communities. This decision is not isolated. It is the latest in a sustained assault on the right of communities of color to participate fully in our democracy. We will not let our rights be taken without a fight — in the courts, in our legislatures, and at the ballot box, together.”

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.

 

California's Asian communities may get split up under SCOTUS' weakening of the Voting Rights Act

Democrats and Republicans pursued Asian American votes in Nevada in 2024.

Unable to win the popular vote in an election, the Republican Party is finagling every which way to dissuade or block Democratic voters, including the majority of Asian American, Native American and Pacific Islander electorate.
For those of us in the AANHPI community, the writing isn’t just on the wall—it’s being carved into the law books. With the Supreme Court’s latest hatchet job on the Voting Rights Act, the legal armor we’ve relied on since the 1960s hasn’t just been dented; it’s been stripped away.
The recent SCOTUS pivot in Louisiana v. Callais effectively puts a tombstone on Section 2 of the VRA. For decades, this was our go-to weapon against "cracking"—the cynical practice of splitting up Asian American neighborhoods so our voices are drowned out by the surrounding districts. Now, the Court has given a wink and a nod to map-makers, allowing them to dilute our voting power under the thin veil of "partisan politics."
But the impact goes deeper than just lines on a map. By raising the bar for proving discrimination to near-impossible heights, the Court is ignoring the reality of the AANHPI experience. We’re talking about the quiet erasure of language assistance at the polls, the shuttering of ballot boxes in growing immigrant hubs, and the "show me your papers" intimidation tactics that target our most vulnerable elders.
The message from the high court is clear: if you can't beat 'em, rig the game. As the fastest-growing electorate in the country, AANHPI voters represent a demographic shift that some in power find terrifying. Instead of competing for our ideas, the strategy has shifted to making sure our ballots never reach the box—or that they don't count when they do.
We’re moving into a "post-VRA" world where the federal government is no longer the referee. The fight now moves to the state houses and the streets. If we want to keep our seat at the table, we’re going to have to fight twice as hard to protect the right to pull the lever.

Impact on California

In California, where we often feel like we're in a progressive bubble, the Supreme Court’s recent gutting of the Voting Rights Act (VRA) is popping that illusion. By dismantling the federal guardrails that prevent racial gerrymandering and vote dilution, SCOTUS has essentially invited a new wave of legal challenges that could unravel decades of gains in AANHPI representation.
California’s AANHPI communities are entering a high-stakes redistricting cycle where "cracking"—the intentional splitting of a community to dilute its vote—is no longer as easy to stop in federal court and those in power will be less inclined to cater to ethnic  neighborhoods.
While California has its own California Voting Rights Act (CVRA), the weakening of federal standards puts every level of our government in the crosshairs.

The immediate threat to the state legislature isn't just about today; it's about the future of how we draw the lines after the 2030 Census.

California’s independent commission has been a model for fairness, but Republicans could now use the SCOTUS "partisan" loophole to challenge existing maps. The "Partisan" Shield: If the commission is seen as favoring Democrats, the Court's new standard makes it nearly impossible to prove that a map also dilutes AANHPI power.

Splitting Silicon Valley, San Francisco

When the 2030 census rolls around, the mandate to protect minority-majority districts will be significantly weaker, potentially leading to "cracked" districts in areas with surging AANHPI populations.

In counties like Santa Clara, home of Silicon Valley, where the AANHPI community has finally reached a "critical mass," the VRA’s demise is a direct hit to local power.

Santa Clara County recently saw its first AANHPI supermajority on the Board of Supervisors. Without Section 2 protections, those newly drawn "unity maps" that represent concentrated Asian American neighborhoods in Districts 1 and 3 are now vulnerable to being redrawn and split up.

Assembly District 17, which houses Chinatown, the Filipino Heritage District and the Tenderloin, home to many Vietnamese families, is currently represented by Matt Haney. In a 2022 special election, Haney replaced David Chiu, who became the city's District Attorney. Some residents say they would prefer an Asian American representing them in Sacramento. Recent maps have already attempted to "crack" this 34% AANHPI district by adding affluent, white neighborhoods, potentially dropping AANHPI influence to 30%.

Filipino Americans have been able to get Filipinos onto the Daly City, Calif. city council.

L.A, San Diego & ther redistricting chaos

When the federal government stops looking, local boards are more likely to put non-English voter education materials on the chopping block during "budget crunches," as we've already seen attempted in the South Bay.

Cities like San Diego and Los Angeles, large concentrations of AANHPI neighborhoods could lose their impact and influence at city hall.The fight at the city level is where the "rigging" gets granular, specifically targeting at-large versus district elections.

In a city already reeling from redistricting scandals, the loss of federal oversight means there’s one less referee to stop the "cracking" of AANHPI neighborhoods in the Valley or South LA.

The "cracking" of the San Gabriel Valley's AANHPI voting power across multiple districts is a perennial threat that Section 2 of the VRA used to mitigate; that shield is now effectively gone.

As the AANHPI electorate grows in San Diego, the SCOTUS ruling provides a roadmap for opponents to challenge district-based voting. They can argue that drawing districts to ensure AANHPI representation is "unconstitutional racial gerrymandering," forcing cities back into at-large systems where our votes are easily drowned out.

View from the edge

Experts warn that the California Voting Rights Act itself could be the next target. If the federal courts decide that race-conscious map-making is illegal everywhere, our state-level protections could be struck down entirely.

"While the full impact of this ruling is still uncertain, we know from past experience that decisions striking down, or effectively gutting, provisions of the Voting Rights Act are often followed by new state laws that restrict access to the ballot for voters of color," said California's AG Rob Bonta, a Filipino American.

The high court's decision won't affect California's recently approved remapping of Congressional districts because they were based on partisansip, not race. State voters approved the redistricting last November to counter Texas' redistricting that favored Republicans.


This SCOTUS ruling reverses hard-won progress toward fair representation and responsive leadership. When communities are denied a fair opportunity for political power, the consequences extend far beyond elections, states APIAVote in a press release. Fair representation impacts whether communities can effectively advocate for better schools, affordable health care, safer bridges and roads, environmental protections, language access, and economic opportunity.

“At a time when our democracy should be working to include more voices, this ruling moves us in the wrong direction,” said Christine Chen, executive director of APIAVote. “Every voter has the right to elect representatives who understand and respond to their communities’ needs. We cannot allow hard-fought protections for minority voters to be eroded.”

EDITOR'S NOTE: For additional commentary, news, views and chismis from an AANHPI perspective, follow me on Threads, on X, BlueSky or at the blog Views From the Edge. If you find this perspective interesting, please repost.