The judgment is affirmed.
Justice STEVENS, concurring.
Although I agree that a summary affirmance of the judgment of
the District Court is entirely appropriate in these cases, what has
been written in dissent prompts me to make two important
points.
First, there is little, if any, resemblance between the argument
advanced in the dissenting opinion and the specific questions
presented in the parties' jurisdictional statements. This Court has
determined that summary affirmances "reject the specific challenges
presented in the statement of jurisdiction." Mandel v. Bradley,
432 U.S.
173, 176, 97 S. Ct. 2238, 2240 (1977). The only questions
presented
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1003
in the jurisdictional statement that the Mississippi Republican
Executive Committee filed in case No. 83-1722 read as follows:
"1. Whether Section 5 and Section 2
as amended apply to redistricting decisions.
"2. Whether the amendment to Section
2 or any other portion of the Voting Rights Amendments of 1982 has
any bearing upon litigation under Section 5.
"3. Whether Section 2 as amended
prohibits only those electoral schemes intentionally designed or
maintained to discriminate on the basis of race.
"4. Whether Section 2, if construed
to prohibit anything other than intentional discrimination on the
basis of race in registration and voting, exceeds the power vested
in Congress by the Fifteenth Amendment." Juris. Statement in No.
83-1722, p. i.1
Second, the dissent does not fairly characterize the opinion of
the District Court. That opinion does not "in effect" construe the
recent amendment to 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 96 Stat.
134, 42 U.S.C . 1973, as entitling "minority plaintiffs, in a State
where there exist present effects from past discrimination, to have
a state redistricting plan invalidated if it has failed to provide
at least one district in which the 'minority' is a majority of the
eligible voters." Post, at 1005 . The dissent buttresses this
incorrect impression by attributing the following statement to the
District Court:
"The District Court felt it was
obligated, under the 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act, to
redraw the district map so that the redefined Second District would
have a 'clear black voting age population majority of 52.83
percent.' " Post, at 1008.
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1004
What the District Court actually said was this:
"In the opinion of this court, after
considering the totality of the circumstances, the creation of a
Second District with a clear black voting age population majority
of 52.83% is sufficient to overcome the effects of past
discrimination and racial bloc voting and will provide a fair and
equal contest to all voters who may participate in congressional
elections." App. to Motion to Dismiss or Affirm in No. 83-1722, p.
14a.
The District Court's conclusion that its remedy was required was
not based on any notion that the law gives every minority group an
entitlement to some form of proportional representation. Its
conclusion was quite the contrary. It rested on specific findings
of fact describing the impairment-or "dilution" if you will-of the
voting strength of the black minority in Mississippi. Those factual
findings reveal that Mississippi has a long history of de jure and
de facto race discrimination,2 that racial bloc voting is
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1005
common in Mississippi, and that political processes have not
been equally open to blacks. [
Footnote 3]
Because I find no merit in any of the specific challenges
presented in the parties' jurisdictional statements,4 and because
the record supports the District Court's findings of fact, as the
dissent notes, post, at 423, I join the Court's summary
affirmance.
Justice REHNQUIST, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins,
dissenting.
The District Court's ruling in these cases presents important
questions concerning the construction of the recent amendment to 2
of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 96 Stat. 134, 42 U.S.C. 1973. The
District Court in effect has construed the amendment to entitle
minority plaintiffs, in a State where there exist present effects
from past discrimination, to have a state redistricting plan
invalidated if it fails to provide at least one district in which
the "minority" is a majority of the eligible voters. This is so
even though the challenged redistricting plan is constitutional, is
not the product of discriminatory intent, and indeed was intended
by the
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1006
court which adopted it to "deal fairly with [the State's] black
citizens by avoiding any scheme that has the purpose or effect of
unnecessarily minimizing or fragmenting black voting strength."
In 1982, the District Court in these cases adopted a
redistricting plan for Mississippi's congressional districts in
order to remedy district population disparities, revealed by the
1980 census, of up to 17%. In choosing from among several plans
offered by the litigants, it sought a plan that would "satisfy the
one person, one vote rule and avoid any dilution of minority voting
strength." Jordan v. Winter,
541 F.
Supp. 1135, 1142 (ND Miss.1982) (Jordan I ). The court further
observed that "[w]hat is required is that the state deal fairly
with its black citizens by avoiding any scheme that has the purpose
or effect of unnecessarily minimizing or fragmenting black voting
strength." Id., at 1143. The court chose the so-called "Simpson"
plan because it satisfied most of the State's policy considerations
in districting, created two districts with 40% or better black
population, and included a district where nearly 54% of the
population was black.
On appeal to this Court, the judgment of the District Court was
vacated and the case remanded for reconsideration in the light of
the 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act. Brooks v. Winter, 461
U.S. 921 (1983). On remand, the District Court found that the very
plan which it had approved and adopted in 1982 was unlawful under
the amended 2 of the Voting Rights Act because "the structure of
the Second Congressional District in particular unlawfully diluted
black voting strength." Jordan v. Winter, No. GC82-80-WK-0 (ND
Miss., Apr. 16, 1984) (Jordan II ). I think the rather remarkable
conclusion that the 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act made
unlawful a plan adopted by the District Court, which plan the
District Court had adopted with a view to the requirement that "the
state deal fairly with its black citizens by avoiding any scheme
that has the purpose or effect of unnecessarily minimizing or
fragmenting black voting strength," 541 F.Supp., at 1143, should
receive plenary review by this Court.
After being presented with the census data revealing the
previously mentioned population disparities between existing
congressional districts, the Mississippi Legislature in 1981
enacted a new redistricting plan. The Attorney General of the
United States refused preclearance, however, and the legislature
adjourned without enacting a new plan. A three-judge District Court
was convened to hear actions filed by two groups of Mississippi
voters
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1007
seeking a court-ordered interim plan for the 1982 congressional
elections. That court refused to place in effect the legislative
plan which had not been precleared, and held the existing
districting statute unconstitutional because of the population
disparities. It then adopted the "Simpson" plan from among several
plans submitted to it by the litigants. Jordan I, supra.
In choosing the "Simpson" plan, the court followed the teaching
of Upham v. Seamon,
456 U.S. 37 (1982), which
requires courts to fashion interim plans that adhere to a State's
political policies. The court identified Mississippi's political
districting policies as follows: (1) minimal change from 1972
district lines; (2) least possible population deviation; (3)
preservation of the electoral base of incumbent congressmen; and
(4) establishment of two districts with 40% or better black
population. The court specifically rejected two plans proposed by a
group of black plaintiffs. These plans would have kept the
predominantly black northwest or "Delta" portion of Mississippi
intact, and would have combined that area with predominantly black
portions of Hinds County and the city of Jackson. Each of these
plans would have resulted in one congressional district with a
black population of approximately 65%. The "Simpson" plan, on the
other hand, combined 15 Delta or partially Delta counties with six
predominantly white eastern rural counties, and resulted in a
congressional district with a 53% black population, but a 48% black
voting population. The District Court found the "Simpson" plan most
nearly in accord with the State's policies articulated above. The
rejected plans would have resulted in only one district with
greater than 40% black population; this was contrary to the
reasonable state policy established to assure that blacks would
have an effective voice in choosing representatives in more than
one district. In addition, the court noted that the black
plaintiffs had managed to place a high percentage of black voters
in a single congressional district only through obvious and
unseemly racial gerrymanders.
When this Court subsequently vacated the District Court's
judgment for reconsideration in the light of the 1982 amendment the
District Court held further evidentiary hearings, and concluded
that its own plan violated the amended section. This violation
occurred, in the opinion of the District Court, because "the
structure of the Second Congressional District in particular
unlawfully diluted black voting strength." Under the plan adopted
by the District Court in 1982, the Second District had a
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1008
black population of 53.77%, but blacks comprised only 48.09% of
the voting age population. The District Court felt it was
obligated, under the 1982 amendments to the Voting Rights Act, to
redraw the district map so that the redefined Second District would
have a "clear black voting age population majority of 52.83
percent." In doing so, the District Court " recognize[d] that the
creation of a Delta District with a majority black voting age
population implicates difficult issues concerning the fair
allocation of political power." Jordan II, supra.
Any statute that would lead a District Court to reject a plan
which it had previously found fair to all concerned in favor of one
including an obligatory district with a majority black voting age
population deserves careful attention, and so I turn to the
language of the Voting Rights Act as amended in 1982. The District
Court in its most recent opinion set out the statutory provisions
toward the beginning of its opinion, but scarcely mentioned that
language again, and instead went on to quote extensively from the
Senate Report of the 1982 amendments. The applicable statutory
language is this:
"(a) No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or
standard, practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any
State or political subdivision in a manner which results in a
denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United
States to vote on account of race or color, or in contravention of
the guarantees set forth in section 4(f)(2), as provided in
subsection (b).
"(b) A violation of subsection (a) is established if, based on
the totality of circumstances, it is shown that the political
processes leading to nomination or election in the State or
political subdivision are not equally open to participation by
members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a) in that
its members have less opportunity than other members of the
electorate to participate in the political process and to elect
representatives of their choice. The extent to which members of a
protected class have been elected to office in the State or
political subdivision is one circumstance which may be considered:
Provided, That nothing in this section establishes a right to have
members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their
proportion in the population." 96 Stat. 134, 42 U.S.C. 1973
(emphasis in original).
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1009
Applying the statutory language to the situation confronting the
District Court after our remand, the "voting qualification or
prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure" to
which the amended statute is to be applied is obviously the 1982
plan adopted by the District Court. That court clearly thought so,
and no other " qualification . . . standard, practice, or
procedure" suggests itself. There has never been any suggestion
that the plan adopted by the District Court in 1982 denied or
abridged the right of any citizen to vote on account of race or
color, so if that plan does violate the amended Act it is because
it contravenes "the guarantees set forth . . . in subsection (b
)."
Subsection (b), in turn, provides that a violation of subsection
(a) is established if "it is shown that the political processes
leading to nomination or election in the State or political
subdivision are not equally open to participation by members of a
class of citizens protected by subsection (a)." The District Court
read subsection (b) as if it were totally divorced from subsection
(a), and proceeded to enumerate factors in the political history of
Mississippi which it felt indicated that the plan it had adopted in
1982 "unlawfully dilutes minority voting strength." Jordan II,
supra. The District Court did not state what it understood the term
"unlawfully dilutes minority voting strength" to mean, and since
that term is nowhere used in the statutory language one is left to
infer that the court derived the necessary meaning for the language
from the report of the Senate Judiciary Committee which it cited at
some length. The District Court's understanding of what is required
by 2 is highly questionable in light of the statute's language and
legislative history. To fully evaluate the District Court's
analysis it is necessary to review the events preceding the
amendment of 2.1
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1010
In Mobile v. Bolden,
446 U.S. 55 (1980 ), this
Court wrestled with the question whether legislative "intent" to
discriminate must exist in order to find that a particular
legislative action violates the Voting Rights Act, or whether it
was enough that the legislative action have a "discriminatory
effect." In Mobile black plaintiffs had brought an action
challenging the constitutionality of the city's at-large method of
electing its commissioners. We produced six different opinions
debating among ourselves whether discriminatory intent was required
to find a violation of the Fifteenth Amendment, or whether " an
invidious discriminatory purpose could be inferred from the
totality of facts." Id., at 95 (WHITE, J., dissenting). None of the
opinions challenged the conclusion of the plurality that the Voting
Rights Act as it then existed added "nothing to the appellee's
Fifteenth Amendment claim." Id., at 61 (opinion of Stewart,
J.).
It is clear that the 1982 amendment was precipitated in large
part by the holding of Mobile. But the language used in the amended
statute is, to say the least, rather unclear. The legislative
history indicates that Congress was well aware of the "intent
effects" dichotomy, and of the problems with identifying actions
with discriminatory "effects." The bill originally passed the House
under a loose understanding that 2 would prohibit all
discriminatory "effects" of voting practices, and that intent would
be "irrelevant." H.R.Rep. No. 97-227, p. 29 (1981). This version
met stiff resistance in the Senate, however. Two Senate
Subcommittees held extensive hearings, at which testimony was given
concerning the tendency of a "results" approach to lead to
requirements that minorities have proportional representation, or
to devolve into essentially standardless and ad hoc judgments. See,
e.g., Hearings on S. 53, S. 1761, S. 1975, S. 1992, and H.R. 3112
before the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the Senate Committee
on the Judiciary, 97th Cong., 2d Sess ., 1309-1313, 1334-1338
(1982). The Subcommittees could not agree on the proposed
amendment, and at that point Senator Dole stepped in with a
proposed compromise. The compromise bill retained the "results"
language but also incorporated language directly from this Court's
opinion in White v. Regester,
412 U.S. 755 (1973), and
strengthened the caveat against proportional representation. The
debates on the compromise focused on whether the "results" language
would nevertheless provide for proportional representation, or
merely for equal " access" to the political process. Senator
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1011
Dole took the position that "access" only was required by
amended 2: "[ T]he concept of identifiable groups having a right to
be elected in proportion to their voting potential was repugnant to
the democratic principles on which our society is based." 128
Cong.Rec. 14132 (1982) ( remarks of Senator Dole). This position
was adopted by many supporters of the compromise in the Senate, and
the bill passed as written.
The District Court apparently felt obliged to reach a conclusion
in tension with this legislative history because of language in the
Senate Judiciary Committee Report on the 1982 amendment stating
that the "results" language of 2(a) was meant to "restore the
pre-Mobile [v. Bolden ] legal standard which governed cases
challenging election systems or practices as an illegal dilution of
the minority vote." S.Rep. No. 97-417, p. 27 (1982 ). The Report
then enumerates the factors courts may consider in deciding whether
plaintiffs have established a violation of 2, factors apparently
derived from this Court's opinion in White v. Regester, supra.
[
Footnote 2] Applying these
"factors," the District Court found that Mississippi has a long
history of de jure and de facto race discrimination, which has
present effects in impeding black voter registration and turnout.
It noted that although blacks constitute 35% of the State's
population, no black has been elected to Congress since the
Reconstruction period, and none has been elected
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1012
to statewide office in this century. Furthermore, the court
found socioeconomic disparities between blacks and whites in the
Delta area, and finally, that voters in Mississippi have previously
voted and continued to vote on the basis of the race of candidates
for elective office. The District Court concluded from this that
the adoption of a plan in which the Second District contained less
than a majority of voters from a protected class "diluted" the
class' voting strength.
Thus we have a statute whose meaning is by no means easy to
determine, supplemented by legislative history which led the
District Court in this case to conclude that only the inclusion
within one congressional district of a majority black voting age
population could satisfy the Act. I think it can be fairly argued
from the legislative history, and from the express caveat that the
section was not intended to establish a right to proportional
representation, that in amending 2 Congress did not intend courts
to supersede state voting laws for the sole purpose of improving
the chance of minorities to elect members of their own class.
To best understand the meaning of the Senate Committee's
references to our decisions in Mobile and White v. Regester, it is
essential to remember that those cases dealt with challenges to
multimember legislative districts. It is only in this context that
phrases such as "vote dilution" make any sense, for the phrase
itself suggests a norm with respect to which the fact of dilution
may be ascertained. In the case of multimember districts, the norm
available for at least theoretical purposes is the single-member
district. But when we turn from attacks on multimember districts to
attacks on the way lines are drawn in creating five single- member
congressional districts, as in the cases at hand, phrases such as "
vote dilution" and factors relied upon to determine discriminatory
effect are all but useless as analytical tools. Neither White v.
Regester, Mobile v. Bolden, nor Zimmer v. McKeithen,
485 F.2d
1297 (CA5 1973), a case also dealing with challenges to
multimember legislative districts, ever suggested that their
analysis should be carried over to challenges addressed to
single-member districts. And whichever of the views espoused in
Mobile is found to have been adopted by the 1982 amendment, it
would seem that a plan adopted by the District Court under the
command "that the state deal fairly with its black citizens by
avoiding any scheme that has the purpose or
Page 469 U.S.
1002 , 1013
effect of unnecessarily minimizing or fragmenting black voting
strength" should be home free under either test.
Under this view, the District Court's most recent opinion and
judgment seem to me to present virtually insuperable difficulties.
Although we may regretfully concede that the District Court's
findings were correct, it nevertheless seems a non sequitur to say
that the past discrimination, and its present effects, have
"resulted" in "dilution" of minority voting strength through the
adoption of this particular districting plan. To the extent that
fewer blacks vote due to past discrimination, that in itself
diminishes minority voting strength. But this occurs regardless of
any particular state voting practice or procedure. As the plurality
opinion in Mobile recognized in another context, "past
discrimination cannot, in the manner of original sin, condemn
governmental action that is not itself unlawful." Mobile, 446 U.S
., at 74. Here the only finding even remotely related to the
boundaries of the Second Congressional District under the 1982 plan
is what the District Court referred to as "socioeconomic
disparities between blacks and whites in the Delta area." The
findings as to the history of racial discrimination and bloc voting
apparently obtained throughout the State. It is obvious that no
plan adopted by the Mississippi Legislature or the District Court
could possibly have mitigated or subtracted one jot or title from
these findings of past discrimination. What we have, therefore, is
in effect a declaration by the District Court that because of these
past examples of racial discrimination throughout the State, any
plan adopted either by the legislature or by a court which did not
give blacks one of five congressional districts in which they had a
majority of the voting age population violated the 1982 amendments
to the Voting Rights Act. Under this analysis, cause and effect are
entirely severed.
For these reasons, I think the judgment of the District Court
presents substantial questions concerning the interpretation of a
new amendment to the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and that the Court
seriously misapprehends its obligation in such a case when it
summarily affirms the judgment of the District Court.
Footnotes
Footnote 1 The
jurisdictional statement that William A. Allain and others filed in
No. 83-2053 presents two questions that are similar to those
presented in No. 83-1722 and also presents the question whether the
District Court erroneously found as a fact that black persons in
Mississippi-and especially in the Delta generally-have less
education, lower incomes, and more menial occupations than white
persons, and that there has been racially polarized voting in
Mississippi. See n. 2, infra. Nothing in the dissenting opinion
indicates that it believes these questions merit full briefing and
argument. In my judgment the jurisdictional statement in No.
83-1865 raises a more serious question, but I do not understand
that the dissenting opinion favors review of that question.
Footnote 2 Regarding past
discrimination, the District Court carefully found that Mississippi
had often used poll taxes, literacy tests, residency requirements,
white primaries, and violence to intimidate black persons from
registering to vote. More importantly, the court found "that the
effects of the historical official discrimination in Mississippi
presently impede black voter registration and turnout." App. to
Motion to Dismiss or Affirm in No. 83-1722, p. 9a. Additionally,
the court wrote:
"Black registration in the Delta area
is still disproportionately lower than white registration. No black
has been elected to Congress since the Reconstruction period, and
none has been elected to statewide office in this century. Blacks
hold less than ten percent of all elective offices in Mississippi,
though they constitute 35% of the state's population and a majority
of the population of 22 counties.
"The evidence of socio-economic
disparities between blacks and whites in the Delta area and the
state as a whole is also probative of minorities' unequal access to
the political process in Mississippi. Blacks in Mississippi,
especially in the Delta region, generally have less education,
lower incomes, and more menial occupations than whites. The State
of Mississippi has a history of segregated school systems that
provided inferior education to blacks. . . . Census statistics
indicate lingering effects of past discrimination: the median
family income in the Delta region (Second District) for whites is
$17,467, compared to $7,447 for blacks; more than half of the adult
blacks in the Second District have attained only 0 to 8 years of
schooling, while the majority of white adults in this District have
completed four years of high school; the unemployment rate for
blacks is two to three times that for whites; and blacks generally
live in inferior housing." Id., at 9a-10a (footnote omitted).
Footnote 3 The court also
found that there existed "persuasive evidence" that Mississippi's
political processes have not recently been open to black persons.
In addition, the court particularly noted the following message
accompanying a campaign television commercial:
"You know, there's something about
Mississippi that outsiders will never, ever understand. The way we
feel about our family and God, and the traditions that we have.
There is a new Mississippi, a Mississippi of new jobs and new
opportunity for all our citizens. [video pan of black factory
workers] We welcome the new, but we must never, ever forget what
has gone before. [video pan of Confederate monuments] We cannot
forget a heritage that has been sacred through our generations."
Id., at 12a, n. 8.
The commercial opened and closed with a view of Confederate
monuments ; the candidate that ran the commercial used "He's one of
us" as his campaign slogan. Ibid.
Footnote 4 Indeed, it should
be noted that the District Court's plan would be an acceptable
remedy for the violations even if it did not regard the Simpson
plan itself as a violation of 2 of the Voting Rights Act as
amended. For after our remand, the District Court could have
appropriately decided that the policy of that Act, coupled with the
findings of fact concerning the effects of historic discrimination,
particularly in the Delta area, required a remedy that established
at least one district in which black persons represented an
effective majority of the eligible voters.
[
Footnote 1] Justice
STEVENS' concurrence suggests that my analysis is unwarranted
because the problems I perceive with the District Court's opinion
were not specifically raised by the "questions presented" in
appellants' jurisdictional statements. I believe, however, that
several of the "questions presented" "fairly include" the issues
that I address. In particular, question 3, quoted ante, at 1003
(STEVENS, J., concurring), raises the question of the scope of
activity Congress intended to proscribe under 2. I need not agree
100% with appellants' position-that 2 only proscribes intentionally
discriminatory conduct-to reach the question whether the District
Court misconstrued Congress' intent.
[
Footnote 2] Those
factors are:
"1. the extent of any history of
official discrimination in the state or political subdivision that
touched the right of the members of the minority group to register,
to vote, or otherwise to participate in the democratic
process;
"2. the extent to which voting in the
elections of the state or political subdivision is racially
polarized.
"3. the extent to which the state or
political subdivision has used unusually large election districts,
majority vote requirements, anti- single shot provisions, or other
voting practices or procedures that may enhance the opportunity for
discrimination against the minority group;
"4. if there is a candidate slating
process, whether the members of the minority group have been denied
access to that process;
"5. the extent to which members of
the minority group in the state or political subdivision bear the
effects of discrimination in such areas as education, employment
and health, which hinder their ability to participate effectively
in the political process;
"6. whether political campaigns have
been characterized by overt or subtle racial appeals;
"7. the extent to which members of
the minority group have been elected to public office in the
jurisdiction." S.Rep. No. 97-417, at 28- 29.