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The recent legislation in Connecticut, known as the Connecticut Voting Rights Act (CTVRA), is a significant step forward in strengthening vote dilution claims and ensuring fair electoral processes. The CTVRA follows the trend of other state voting rights acts (SVRAs) by lowering the threshold for establishing vote dilution. This more flexible standard allows plaintiffs to advance vote dilution claims more effectively. However, future SVRAs should go further by explicitly allowing plaintiffs to prove underrepresentation through their benchmark of choice and extending plaintiff deference to the remedial stage. By clarifying vote dilution standards and shifting remedial power towards claimants, future SVRAs can empower plaintiffs and encourage innovative solutions to political inequality. Congress has not taken meaningful action to update or strengthen the Voting Rights Act of 1965, leaving states to fill the void. SVRAs, including the CTVRA, aim to protect underrepresented voters and improve electoral access. However, the CTVRA could benefit from providing more clarity on how plaintiffs can prove underrepresentation and identifying potential benchmarks for comparison. Additionally, future SVRAs should prioritize claimant-proposed remedies and empower voters to design fair solutions. These changes would ensure that SVRAs effectively address vote dilution and promote representative democracy.