Most headlines about Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections and Public Safety say the Supreme Court denied a Rastafarian prisoner damages after guards forcibly shaved his dreadlocks in violation of his faith. That’s the facts, but it’s only the surface story that most of the MSM is reporting. Most of the MSM is ignoring the far more important flow of power context. This June 23, 2026 decision is far more important than those facts alone. This decision in Landor is really about (1) gutting Congress’s ability to enforce federal conditions on spending federal money, and (2) gutting civil rights for people affected by federal spending conditions that require respect for people's civil liberties. US Supreme Court won't let Rastafarian man shaved bald in prison sue guards; The Supreme Court Deals Major Blow to Congressional Authority -- In one devastating ruling, the Republican justices disempower ordinary citizens and their elected representatives. ..... with time, the ruling may prove far more disastrous and far-reaching, unleashing illegal behavior that both Congress and the victims are powerless to prevent; Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections and Public Safety (2026) -- Although the federal government had the right to attach strings to aid that it provided, any conditions had to be clearly established and agreed to as they would be in most contracts. Although the prisons that had accepted aid had agreed to the conditions Congress had imposed under RLUIPA, their employees had not and were hence not liable.
Under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), Congress promised “appropriate relief” when prisons violate religious rights. For decades, courts treated that kind of statutory language as enforceable creating rights, including enforcement of spending‑clause programs like Medicaid, nursing‑home protections and prisons. In Landor, the 6–3 MAGA majority written by the authoritarian kleptocrat Gorsuch changed that. Now, federal spending‑clause statutes are just contracts with states, not “laws” that individuals can enforce against state officials. This lands a massive blow to Congressional power because it severs civil rights from remedies to enforce those rights. The MAGA judges have been planning this kind of authoritarian attack for some time now. LANDOR v. LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF
CORRECTIONS AND PUBLIC SAFETY ET AL. -- Held: Individuals may not be held liable in their personal capacities under a Spending Clause statute unless those individuals have voluntarily and knowingly consented to answer lawsuits under the statute; because the individual defendants in this case did not voluntarily and knowingly consent to face RLUIPA liability in an agreement with the
federal government, Mr. Landor’s case cannot proceed against them; Spending Programs and the New Roberts Court -- The Supreme Court is poised to place new limits on Congress’s spending power at the urging of states vying for regulatory dominance, particularly in health care and public health. ..... Congress may not choose to work more with states if the spending power becomes harder to exercise; and, states depend on federal funding for the safety net’s fiscal stability. Also, federal spending has often protected civil rights, so limits on spending programs may contribute to retrenchment.; New Rule: Spending Clause Statutes Cannot Impose Personal-Capacity Damages Liability on Nonconsenting State Employees
Mainstream coverage mostly misses this. Most MSM reporting frame Landor as a narrow question about whether a mistreated prisoner can sue his guards for money, emphasizing the egregious facts and the culture‑war angle around religious liberty. Some highlights the contradiction with the Court’s broader campaign to expand religious‑liberty claims, but still treats the case largely as a doctrinal oddity in that field. The result is fact‑accurate but context‑empty reporting that leaves readers thinking Landor is a one‑off injustice instead of a major shift in federalism and civil‑rights enforcement. The Supreme Court’s campaign to expand religious liberty now has a glaring exception; Supreme Court Bars Lawsuit After Prison Guards Shaved Inmate’s Dreadlocks -- Damon Landor, a Rastafarian, tried to sue Louisiana prison officials for violating his religious rights
The main, under-reported impact is on power. Congress uses conditional spending to enforce civil‑rights and social‑welfare protections in the public interest. That includes Medicaid patient rights, nursing‑home standards, nondiscrimination rules in education and health care, and protections baked into environmental cooperative‑federalism regimes like the Clean Air Act. When private enforcement is taken away from injured people, their “remedy” becomes federal agencies cutting off or threatening funds. That is no remedy at all. The HHS itself has said cutting funding is politically implausible, usually harmful to the people Congress meant to protect. Landor shifts serious power from Congress and individual beneficiaries to state governments and the organized interests that dominate state policy, e.g., hospital chains, insurers, fossil‑fuel businesses, charter‑school advocates, and utility giants. The Spending Power and Environmental Law after Sebelius -- The review sheds light not only on environmental law after Sebelius, but also the many other realms of American governance that engage spending power bargaining, such as public education, civil rights law, social service programs, and civic infrastructure. The Article concludes that the impacts of the doctrine will be most palpable not in litigation but in the dynamics of intergovernmental bargaining. States will have more leverage when negotiating design and enforcement terms within spending-power partnerships; Federalism by Waiver after the Health Care Case -- But the Court’s Spending Clause ruling will have potentially an even more far-reaching effect on the constitutionality of other federal statutes enacted pursuant to Congress’s spending power, as states will be prompted to challenge other conditional-spending laws in the education, social welfare, environmental, and civil rights areas as unconstitutionally coercive
In a normal constitutional order, that would be bad enough. In a political environment where the MAGA movement and its allies are openly hostile to voting rights, equal protection, and independent law enforcement, disabling Congress’s main enforcement tool for civil rights, health care, and environmental protections takes on a different character. It gives state‑level actors aligned with authoritarianism and special interest demands much more room to violate federal spending conditions with impunity. Violators of the law can be confident that neither Washington nor individual plaintiffs can predictably hold them to account.
Fundamentally, Landor is authoritarian and kleptocratic even though it’s dressed up in contract‑law jargon. Authoritarian, because it concentrates power in less accountable state institutions and a Supreme Court majority that is systematically obliterating space for democratic lawmaking and rights enforcement. Kleptocratic, because the beneficiaries of weakened enforcement are not “the people” but entrenched economic interests that profit when civil‑rights, health‑care, and environmental conditions are treated as optional rather than obligatory. The MSM sells the Landor decision to the public as a tragic but technical dispute about a prisoner’s dreadlocks. In reality, the decision is a major step in dismantling Congress’s capacity to protect the public interest. Special interests[1] win, we lose.
Footnote:
1. Special interests include state governments. By contrast with the federal government, it is usually easier for special interests to capture and corrupt state governments. About 85% of public‑corruption convictions in the US are the result of federal prosecutions, not state or local cases. That suggests states do little to prosecute corruption by their own state and local officials. In effect states acquiesce to federal dominance in corruption enforcement. State governments are, on average, easier targets for corrupt networks than the federal government because federal prosecutors and national media often uncover and punish state‑level corruption. Now the government is neutered by MAGA anti-government and anti-rule of law politics and policy.