The Indiana Legislature consists of a 100-member House of
Representatives and a 50-member Senate. Representatives serve
2-year terms, with elections for all seats every two years.
Senators serve 4-year terms, with half of the seats up for election
every two years. Senators are elected from single-member districts,
while representatives are elected from a mixture of single-member
and multimember districts. In 1981, the legislature reapportioned
the districts pursuant to the 1980 census. At that time, there were
Republican majorities in both the House and the Senate. The
reapportionment plan provided 50 single-member districts for the
Senate and 7 triple-member, 9 double-member, and 61 single-member
districts for the House. The multimember districts generally
included the State's metropolitan areas. In 1982, appellee Indiana
Democrats filed suit in Federal District Court against appellant
state officials, alleging that the 1981 reapportionment plan
constituted a political gerrymander intended to disadvantage
Democrats, and that the particular district lines that were drawn
and the mix of single-member and multimember districts were
intended to and did violate their right, as Democrats, to equal
protection under the Fourteenth Amendment. In November 1982, before
the case went to trial, elections were held under the new plan.
Democratic candidates for the House received 51.9% of votes cast
statewide, but only 43 out of the 100 seats to be filled.
Democratic candidates for the Senate received 53.1% of the votes
cast statewide, and 13 out of the 25 Democratic candidates were
elected. In Marion and Allen Counties, both divided into
multimember House districts, Democratic candidates drew 46.6% of
the vote, but only 3 of the 21 Democratic candidates were elected.
Subsequently, relying primarily on the 1982 election results as
proof of unconstitutionally discriminatory vote dilution, the
District Court invalidated the 1981 reapportionment plan, enjoined
appellants from holding elections pursuant thereto, and ordered the
legislature to prepare a new plan.
Held: The judgment is reversed.
603
F. Supp. 1479, reversed.
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to
Part II, concluding that political gerrymandering, such as occurred
in this case, is properly justiciable under the Equal Protection
Clause. Pp.
478 U. S.
127-143.
Page 478 U. S. 110
Here, none of the identifying characteristics of a
nonjusticiable political question are present. Disposition of the
case does not involve this Court in a matter more properly decided
by a coequal branch of the Government. There is no risk of foreign
or domestic disturbance. Nor is this Court persuaded that there are
no judicially discernible and manageable standards by which
political gerrymandering cases are to be decided. The mere fact
that there is no likely arithmetic presumption, such as the "one
person, one vote" rule, in the present context does not compel a
conclusion that the claims presented here are nonjusticiable. The
claim is whether each political group in the State should have the
same chance to elect representatives of its choice as any other
political group, and this Court declines to hold that such claim is
never justiciable. That the claim is submitted by a political
group, rather than a racial group, does not distinguish it in terms
of justiciability. Pp.
478 U. S.
118-127.
JUSTICE WHITE, joined by JUSTICE BRENNAN, JUSTICE MARSHALL, and
JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concluded in Parts III and IV that the District
Court erred in holding that appellees had alleged and proved a
violation of the Equal Protection Clause. Pp.
478 U. S.
127-143.
(a) A threshold showing of discriminatory vote dilution is
required for a
prima facie case of an equal protection
violation. The District Court's findings of an adverse effect on
appellees do not surmount this threshold requirement. The mere fact
that an apportionment scheme makes it more difficult for a
particular group in a particular district to elect representatives
of its choice does not render that scheme unconstitutional. A
group's electoral power is not unconstitutionally diminished by the
fact that an apportionment scheme makes winning elections more
difficult, and a failure of proportional representation alone does
not constitute impermissible discrimination under the Equal
Protection Clause. As with individual districts, where
unconstitutional vote dilution is alleged in the form of statewide
political gerrymandering, as here, the mere lack of proportional
representation will not be sufficient to prove unconstitutional
discrimination. Without specific supporting evidence, a court
cannot presume in such a case that those who are elected will
disregard the disproportionally underrepresented group. Rather,
unconstitutional discrimination occurs only when the electoral
system is arranged in a manner that will consistently degrade a
voter's or a group of voters' influence on the political process as
a whole. The District Court's apparent holding that
any
interference with an opportunity to elect a representative of one's
choice would be sufficient to allege or prove an equal protection
violation, unless justified by some acceptable state interest, in
addition to being contrary to the above-described conception of an
unconstitutional political gerrymander, would invite attack on all
or almost all reapportionment statutes. Pp.
478 U. S.
127-134.
Page 478 U. S. 111
(b) Relying on a single election to prove unconstitutional
discrimination, as the District Court did, is unsatisfactory.
Without finding that, because of the 1981 reapportionment, the
Democrats could not in one of the next few elections secure a
sufficient vote to take control of the legislature, that the
reapportionment would consign the Democrats to a minority status in
the legislature throughout the 1980's, or that they would have no
hope of doing any better in the reapportionment based on the 1990
census, the District Court erred in concluding that the 1981
reapportionment violated the Equal Protection Clause. Simply
showing that there are multimember districts, and that those
districts are constructed so as to be safely Republican or
Democratic, in no way bolsters the contention that there has been a
statewide discrimination against Democratic voters. Pp.
478 U. S.
134-137.
(c) The view that intentional drawing of district boundaries for
partisan ends, and for no other reason, violates the Equal
Protection Clause would allow a constitutional violation to be
found where the only proven effect on a political party's electoral
power was disproportionate results in one election (possibly two
elections), and would invite judicial interference in legislative
districting whenever a political party suffers at the polls. Even
if a state legislature redistricts with the specific intention of
disadvantaging one political party's election prospects, there has
been no unconstitutional violation against members of that party
unless the redistricting does, in fact, disadvantage it at the
polls. As noted, a mere lack of proportionate results in one
election cannot suffice in this regard. Pp.
478 U. S.
138-143.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, joined by THE CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE
REHNQUIST, concluding that the partisan gerrymandering claims of
major political parties raise a nonjusticiable political question,
would reverse the District Court's judgment on the grounds that
appellees' claim is nonjusticiable. The Equal Protection Clause
does not supply judicially manageable standards for resolving
purely political gerrymandering claims, and does not confer group
rights to an equal share of political power. Racial gerrymandering
claims are justiciable because of the greater warrant the Equal
Protection Clause gives the federal courts to intervene for
protection against racial discrimination, and because of the
stronger nexus between individual rights and group interests that
is present in the case of a discrete and insular racial group. But
members of the major political parties cannot claim that they are
vulnerable to exclusion from the political process, and it has not
been established that there is a need or a constitutional basis for
judicial intervention to resolve political gerrymandering claims.
The costs of judicial intervention will be severe, and such
intervention requires courts to make policy choices that are not of
a kind suited for judicial discretion. Nor is
Page 478 U. S. 112
there any clear stopping point to prevent the gradual evolution
of a requirement of roughly proportional representation for every
cohesive political group. Accordingly, political gerrymandering
claims present a nonjusticiable political question. Pp.
478 U. S.
144-155.
WHITE, J., announced the judgment of the Court and delivered the
opinion of the Court with respect to Part II, in which BRENNAN,
MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ., joined, and an
opinion with respect to Parts I, III, and IV, in which BRENNAN,
MARSHALL, and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined. BURGER, C. J., filed an
opinion concurring in the judgment,
post, p.
478 U. S. 143.
O'CONNOR, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which
BURGER, C. J., and REHNQUIST, J., joined. POWELL, J., filed an
opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which
STEVENS, J., joined,
post, p.
478 U. S.
161.
Page 478 U. S. 113
JUSTICE WHITE announced the judgment of the Court and delivered
the opinion of the Court as to Part II and an opinion as to Parts
I, III, and IV, in which JUSTICE BRENNAN, JUSTICE MARSHALL, and
JUSTICE BLACKMUN join.
In this case, we review a judgment from a three-judge District
Court which sustained an equal protection challenge to Indiana's
1981 state apportionment on the basis that the law
unconstitutionally diluted the votes of Indiana Democrats.
603
F. Supp. 1479 (SD Ind.1984). Although we find such political
gerrymandering to be justiciable, we conclude that the District
Court applied an insufficiently demanding standard in finding
unconstitutional vote dilution. Consequently, we reverse.
I
The Indiana Legislature, also known as the "General Assembly,"
consists of a House of Representatives and a Senate. There are 100
members of the House of Representatives, and 50 members of the
Senate. The members of the House serve 2-year terms, with elections
held for all seats every two years. The members of the Senate serve
4-year terms, and Senate elections are staggered, so that half of
the seats are up for election every two years. The members of both
Houses are elected from legislative districts, but, while all
Senate members are elected from single-member districts, House
members are elected from a mixture of single-member and multimember
districts. The division of the State into districts is accomplished
by legislative enactment, which is signed by the Governor into law.
Reapportionment is required every 10 years, and is based on the
federal decennial census. There is no prohibition against more
frequent reapportionments.
In early 1981, the General Assembly initiated the process of
reapportioning the State's legislative districts pursuant to the
1980 census. At this time, there were Republican majorities in both
the House and the Senate, and the Governor
Page 478 U. S. 114
was Republican. [
Footnote 1]
Bills were introduced in both Houses, and a reapportionment plan
was duly passed and approved by the Governor. [
Footnote 2] This plan provided 50 single-member
districts for the Senate; for the House, it provided 7
triple-member, 9 double-member, and 61 single-member districts. In
the Senate plan, the population deviation between districts was
1.15%; in the House plan, the deviation was 1.05%. The multimember
districts generally included the more metropolitan areas of the
State, although not every metropolitan area was in a multimember
district. Marion County, which includes Indianapolis, was combined
with portions of its neighboring counties to form five
triple-member districts. Fort Wayne was divided into two parts, and
each part was combined with portions of the surrounding county or
counties to make two triple-member districts. On the other hand,
South Bend was divided and put partly into a double-member district
and partly into a single-member district (each part
Page 478 U. S. 115
combined with part of the surrounding county or counties).
Although county and city lines were not consistently followed,
township lines generally were. The two plans, the Senate and the
House, were not nested -- that is, each Senate district was not
divided exactly into two House districts. There appears to have
been little relation between the lines drawn in the two plans.
In early 1982, this suit was filed by several Indiana Democrats
(here the appellees) against various state officials (here the
appellants), alleging that the 1981 reapportionment plans
constituted a political gerrymander intended to disadvantage
Democrats. Specifically, they contended that the particular
district lines that were drawn and the mix of single-member and
multimember districts were intended to, and did, violate their
right, as Democrats, to equal protection under the Fourteenth
Amendment. A three-judge District Court was convened to hear these
claims.
In November, 1982, before the case went to trial, elections were
held under the new districting plan. All of the House seats and
half of the Senate seats were up for election. Over all the House
races statewide, Democratic candidates received 51.9% of the vote.
Only 43 Democrats, however, were elected to the House. Over all the
Senate races statewide, Democratic candidates received 53.1% of the
vote. Thirteen (of twenty-five) Democrats were elected. In Marion
and Allen Counties, both divided into multimember House districts,
Democratic candidates drew 46.6% of the vote, but only 3 of the 21
House seats were filled by Democrats.
On December 13, 1984, a divided District Court issued a decision
declaring the reapportionment to be unconstitutional, enjoining the
appellants from holding elections pursuant to the 1981
redistricting, ordering the General Assembly to prepare a new plan,
and retaining jurisdiction over the case.
See 603
F. Supp. 1479.
Page 478 U. S. 116
To the District Court majority, the results of the 1982
elections seemed "to support an argument that there is a built-in
bias favoring the majority party, the Republicans, which instituted
the reapportionment plan."
Id. at 1486. Although the court
thought that these figures were unreliable predictors of future
elections, it concluded that they warranted further examination of
the circumstances surrounding the passage of the reapportionment
statute.
See ibid. [
Footnote 3] In the course of this further examination, the
court noted the irregular shape of some district lines, the
peculiar mix of single-member and multimember districts, [
Footnote 4] and the failure of the
district lines to adhere consistently to political subdivision
boundaries to define communities of interest. The court also found
inadequate the other explanations given for the configuration of
the districts, such as adherence to the one person, one vote
imperative and the Voting Rights Act's no-retrogression
requirement. These factors, concluded the court, evidenced an
intentional effort to favor Republican incumbents and candidates
and to disadvantage Democratic voters. [
Footnote 5] This was achieved by "stacking" Democrats
into
Page 478 U. S. 117
districts with large Democratic majorities and "splitting" them
in other districts, so as to give Republicans safe but not
excessive majorities in those districts. [
Footnote 6] Because the 1982 elections indicated that
the plan also had a discriminatory effect, in that the
proportionate voting influence of Democratic voters had been
adversely affected and because any scheme "which purposely
inhibit[s] or prevent[s] proportional representation cannot be
tolerated,"
id. at 1492, the District Court invalidated
the statute. [
Footnote 7]
Page 478 U. S. 118
The defendants appealed, seeking review of the District Court's
rulings that the case was justiciable and that, if justiciable, an
equal protection violation had occurred. [
Footnote 8] We noted probable jurisdiction. 470 U.S.
1083 (1985).
II
We address first the question whether this case presents a
justiciable controversy or a nonjusticiable political question.
Although the District Court never explicitly stated that the case
was justiciable, its holding clearly rests on such a finding. The
appellees urge that this Court has in the past acknowledged and
acted upon the justiciability of purely political gerrymandering
claims. The appellants contend that we have affirmed on the merits
decisions of lower courts finding such claims to be
nonjusticiable.
A
Since
Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186
(1962), we have consistently adjudicated equal protection claims in
the legislative districting context regarding inequalities in
population between districts. In the course of these cases, we have
developed and enforced the "one person, one vote" principle.
See, e.g., Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533 (1964).
Page 478 U. S. 119
Our past decisions also make clear that, even where there is no
population deviation among the districts, racial gerrymandering
presents a justiciable equal protection claim. In the multimember
district context, we have reviewed, and on occasion rejected,
districting plans that unconstitutionally diminished the
effectiveness of the votes of racial minorities.
See Rogers v.
Lodge, 458 U. S. 613
(1982);
Mobile v. Bolden, 446 U. S.
55 (1980);
White v. Regester, 412 U.
S. 755 (1973);
Whitcomb v. Chavis, 403 U.
S. 124 (1971);
Burns v. Richardson,
384 U. S. 73
(1966);
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U.
S. 433 (1965). We have also adjudicated claims that the
configuration of single-member districts violated equal protection
with respect to racial and ethnic minorities, although we have
never struck down an apportionment plan because of such a claim.
See United Jewish Organizations of Williamsburgh, Inc. v.
Carey, 430 U. S. 144
(1977);
Wright v. Rockefeller, 376 U. S.
52 (1964).
In the multimember district cases, we have also repeatedly
stated that districting that would "operate to minimize or cancel
out the voting strength of racial
or political elements of
the voting population" would raise a constitutional question.
Fortson, supra, at 439 (emphasis added).
See also
Gaffney v. Cummings, 412 U. S. 735,
412 U. S. 751
(1973);
Whitcomb v. Chavis, supra, at
403 U. S. 143;
Burns v. Richardson, supra, at
384 U. S. 88.
Finally, in
Gaffney v. Cummings, supra, we upheld against
an equal protection political gerrymandering challenge a state
legislative single-member redistricting scheme that was formulated
in a bipartisan effort to try to provide political representation
on a level approximately proportional to the strength of political
parties in the State. In that case, we adjudicated the type of
purely political equal protection claim that is brought here,
although we did not, as a threshold matter, expressly hold such a
claim to be justiciable. Regardless of this lack of a specific
holding, our consideration of the merits of the claim in
Gaffney in the face of a discussion of justiciability in
appellant's brief, combined
Page 478 U. S. 120
with our repeated reference in other opinions to the
constitutional deficiencies of plans that dilute the vote of
political groups, at the least supports an inference that these
cases are justiciable.
In the years since
Baker v. Carr, both before and after
Gaffney, however, we have also affirmed a number of
decisions in which the lower courts rejected the justiciability of
purely political gerrymandering claims. In
WMCA, Inc. v.
Lomenzo, 382 U. S. 4 (1965),
summarily aff'g 238 F.
Supp. 916 (SDNY), the most frequently cited of these cases, we
affirmed the decision of a three-judge District Court upholding a
temporary apportionment plan for the State of New York. The
District Court had determined that political gerrymandering equal
protection challenges to this plan were nonjusticiable.
See
id. at 925-926. Justice Harlan, in his opinion concurring in
the Court's summary affirmance, expressed his understanding that
the affirmance was based on the Court's approval of the lower
court's finding of nonjusticiability.
See 382 U.S. at
382 U. S. 6.
See also Jimenez v. Hidalgo County Water Improvement District
No. 2, 424 U.S. 950 (1976),
summarily aff'g 68 F.R.D.
668 (SD Tex. 1975);
Ferrell v. Hall, 406 U.S. 939 (1972),
summarily aff'g 339 F. Supp.
73 (WD Okla.);
Wells v. Rockefeller, 398 U.S. 901
(1970),
summarily aff'g 311 F. Supp.
48 (SDNY). Although these summary affirmances arguably support
an inference that these claims are not justiciable, there are other
cases in which federal or state courts adjudicated political
gerrymandering claims and we summarily affirmed or dismissed for
want of a substantial federal question.
See, e.g., Wiser v.
Hughes, 459 U.S. 962 (1982),
dismissing for want of a
substantial federal question an appeal from In re Legislative
Districting, 299 Md. 658, 475 A.2d 428;
Kelly v.
Bumpers, 413 U.S. 901 (1973),
summarily
aff'g 340 F.
Supp. 568 (ED Ark.1972);
Archer v. Smith, 409 U.S. 808
(1972),
summarily aff'g Graves v. Barnes, 343 F.
Supp. 704, 734 (WD Tex.).
Page 478 U. S. 121
These sets of cases may look in different directions, but to the
extent that our summary affirmances indicate the nonjusticiability
of political gerrymander cases, we are not bound by those
decisions. As we have observed before,
"[i]t is not at all unusual for the Court to find it appropriate
to give full consideration to a question that has been the subject
of previous summary action."
Washington v. Yakima Indian Nation, 439 U.
S. 463,
439 U. S. 477,
n. 20 (1979).
See also Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.
S. 651,
415 U. S.
670-671 (1974). The issue that the appellants would have
us find to be precluded by these summary dispositions is an
important one, and it deserves further consideration.
B
The outlines of the political question doctrine were described
and to a large extent defined in
Baker v. Carr. The
synthesis of that effort is found in the following passage in the
Court's opinion:
"It is apparent that several formulations which vary slightly
according to the settings in which the questions arise may describe
a political question, although each has one or more elements which
identify it as essentially a function of the separation of powers.
Prominent on the surface of any case held to involve a political
question is found a textually demonstrable constitutional
commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; or a
lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for
resolving it; or the impossibility of deciding without an initial
policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion;
or the impossibility of a court's undertaking independent
resolution without expressing lack of the respect due coordinate
branches of government; or an unusual need for unquestioning
adherence to a political decision already made; or the potentiality
of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various
departments on one question. "
Page 478 U. S. 122
"Unless one of these formulations is inextricable from the case
at bar, there should be no dismissal for nonjusticiability on the
ground of a political question's presence. The doctrine of which we
treat is one of 'political questions,' not one of 'political
cases.' The courts cannot reject as 'no law suit' a bona fide
controversy as to whether some action denominated 'political'
exceeds constitutional authority. The cases we have reviewed show
the necessity for discriminating inquiry into the precise facts and
posture of the particular case, and the impossibility of resolution
by any semantic cataloguing."
369 U.S. at
369 U. S.
217.
In
Baker, the Court applied this analysis to an equal
protection claim based on a state legislative apportionment that
allowed substantial disparities in the number of voters represented
by each state representative.
See id. at
369 U.S. 253-258 (Clark, J.,
concurring). In holding that claim to be justiciable, the Court
concluded that none of the identifying characteristics of a
political question were present:
"The question here is the consistency of state action with the
Federal Constitution. We have no question decided, or to be
decided, by a political branch of government coequal with this
Court. Nor do we risk embarrassment of our government abroad, or
grave disturbance at home if we take issue with Tennessee as to the
constitutionality of her action here challenged. Nor need the
appellants, in order to succeed in this action, ask the Court to
enter upon policy determinations for which judicially manageable
standards are lacking. Judicial standards under the Equal
Protection Clause are well developed and familiar, and it has been
open to courts since the enactment of the Fourteenth Amendment to
determine, if on the particular facts they must, that a
discrimination reflects
no policy, but simply arbitrary
and capricious action."
Id. at
369 U. S.
226.
Page 478 U. S. 123
This analysis applies equally to the question now before us.
Disposition of this question does not involve us in a matter more
properly decided by a coequal branch of our Government. There is no
risk of foreign or domestic disturbance, and, in light of our cases
since
Baker, we are not persuaded that there are no
judicially discernible and manageable standards by which political
gerrymander cases are to be decided.
It is true that the type of claim that was presented in
Baker v. Carr was subsequently resolved in this Court by
the formulation of the "one person, one vote" rule.
See, e.g.,
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U. S.
557-561. The mere fact, however, that we may not now
similarly perceive a likely arithmetic presumption in the instant
context does not compel a conclusion that the claims presented here
are nonjusticiable. The one person, one vote principle had not yet
been developed when
Baker was decided. At that time, the
Court did not rely on the potential for such a rule in finding
justiciability. Instead, as the language quoted above clearly
indicates, the Court contemplated simply that legislative
linedrawing in the districting context would be susceptible of
adjudication under the applicable constitutional criteria.
Furthermore, in formulating the one person, one vote formula,
the Court characterized the question posed by election districts of
disparate size as an issue of fair representation. In such cases,
it is not that anyone is deprived of a vote or that any person's
vote is not counted. Rather, it is that one electoral district
elects a single representative and another district of the same
size elects two or more -- the elector's vote in the former
district having less weight in the sense that he may vote for and
his district be represented by only one legislator, while his
neighbor in the adjoining district votes for and is represented by
two or more.
Reynolds accordingly observed:
"Since the achieving of fair and effective representation for
all citizens is concededly the basic aim of legislative
Page 478 U. S. 124
apportionment, we conclude that the Equal Protection Clause
guarantees the opportunity for equal participation by all voters in
the election of State legislators. Diluting the weight of votes
because of place of residence impairs basic constitutional rights
under the Fourteenth Amendment just as much as invidious
discriminations based upon factors such as race. . . ."
377 U.S. at
377 U.S.
565-566.
Reynolds surely indicates the
justiciability of claims going to the adequacy of representation in
state legislatures.
The issue here is, of course, different from that adjudicated in
Reynolds. It does not concern districts of unequal size.
Not only does everyone have the right to vote and to have his vote
counted, but each elector may vote for and be represented by the
same number of lawmakers. Rather, the claim is that each political
group in a State should have the same chance to elect
representatives of its choice as any other political group.
Nevertheless, the issue is one of representation, and we decline to
hold that such claims are never justiciable.
Our racial gerrymander cases such as
White v. Regester
and
Whitcomb v. Chavis indicate as much. In those cases,
there was no population variation among the districts, and no one
was precluded from voting. The claim instead was that an
identifiable racial or ethnic group had an insufficient chance to
elect a representative of its choice, and that district lines
should be redrawn to remedy this alleged defect. In both cases, we
adjudicated the merits of such claims, rejecting the claim in
Whitcomb and sustaining it in
Regester. Just as
clearly, in
Gaffney v. Cummings, where the districts also
passed muster under the
Reynolds formula, the claim was
that the legislature had manipulated district lines to afford
political groups in various districts an enhanced opportunity to
elect legislators of their choice. Although advising caution, we
said that
"we
must . . . respond to [the] claims . . . that, even
if acceptable population-wise, the . . . plan was
Page 478 U. S. 125
invidiously discriminatory because a 'political fairness
principle' was followed. . . ."
412 U.S. at
412 U. S.
751-752 (emphasis added). We went on to hold that the
statute at issue did not violate the Equal Protection Clause.
These decisions support a conclusion that this case is
justiciable. As
Gaffney demonstrates, that the claim is
submitted by a political group, rather than a racial group, does
not distinguish it in terms of justiciability. That the
characteristics of the complaining group are not immutable, or that
the group has not been subject to the same historical stigma, may
be relevant to the manner in which the case is adjudicated, but
these differences do not justify a refusal to entertain such a
case.
In fact, JUSTICE O'CONNOR's attempt to distinguish this
political gerrymandering claim from the racial gerrymandering
claims that we have consistently adjudicated demonstrates the
futility of such an effort. Her conclusion that the claim in this
case is not justiciable seems to rest on a dual concern that no
judicially manageable standards exist, and that adjudication of
such claims requires an initial policy decision that the judiciary
should not make. Yet she does not point out how the standards that
we set forth here for adjudicating this political gerrymandering
claim are less manageable than the standards that have been
developed for racial gerrymandering claims. Nor does she
demonstrate what initial policy decision -- regarding, for example,
the desirability of fair group representation -- we have made here
that we have not made in the race cases. [
Footnote 9] She merely asserts that, because
Page 478 U. S. 126
race has historically been a suspect classification, individual
minority voters' rights are more immediately related to a racial
minority group's voting strength. This, in combination with
"the greater warrant the Equal Protection Clause gives the
federal courts to intervene for protection against racial
discrimination, suffice to render racial gerrymandering claims
justiciable."
Post at
478 U. S. 151
(O'CONNOR, J., concurring in judgment).
Reliance on these assertions to determine justiciability would
transform the narrow categories of "political questions" that
Baker v. Carr carefully defined into an
ad hoc
litmus test of this Court's reactions to the desirability of, and
need for, judicial application of constitutional or statutory
standards to a given type of claim. JUSTICE O'CONNOR's own
discussion seems to reflect such an approach: she concludes that,
because political gerrymandering may be a "self-limiting
enterprise" there is no need for judicial intervention.
Post at
478 U. S. 152.
She also expresses concern that our decision today will lead to
"political instability and judicial malaise,"
post at
478 U. S. 147,
because nothing will prevent members of other identifiable groups
from bringing similar claims. To begin with, JUSTICE O'CONNOR's
factual assumptions are by no means obviously correct: it is not
clear that political gerrymandering is a self-limiting enterprise,
or that other groups will have any great incentive to bring
gerrymandering claims, given the requirement of a showing of
discriminatory intent. At a more fundamental level, however,
JUSTICE O'CONNOR's analysis is flawed because it focuses on the
perceived need for judicial review and on the potential practical
problems with allowing such review. Validation of the
consideration
Page 478 U. S. 127
of such amorphous and wide-ranging factors in assessing
justiciability would alter substantially the analysis the Court
enunciated in
Baker v. Carr, and we decline JUSTICE
O'CONNOR's implicit invitation to rethink that approach.
III
Having determined that the political gerrymandering claim in
this case is justiciable, we turn to the question whether the
District Court erred in holding that the appellees had alleged and
proved a violation of the Equal Protection Clause.
A
Preliminarily, we agree with the District Court that the claim
made by the appellees in this case is a claim that the 1981
apportionment discriminates against Democrats on a statewide basis.
Both the appellees and the District Court have cited instances of
individual districting within the State which they believe
exemplify this discrimination, but the appellees' claim, as we
understand it, is that Democratic voters over the State as a whole,
not Democratic voters in particular districts, have been subjected
to unconstitutional discrimination.
See, e.g., Complaint
of Bandemer Plaintiffs 3-7. Although the statewide discrimination
asserted here was allegedly accomplished through the manipulation
of individual district lines, the focus of the equal protection
inquiry is necessarily somewhat different from that involved in the
review of individual districts.
We also agree with the District Court that, in order to succeed,
the Bandemer plaintiffs were required to prove both intentional
discrimination against an identifiable political group and an
actual discriminatory effect on that group.
See, e.g., Mobile
v. Bolden, 446 U.S. at
446 U. S. 67-68.
Further, we are confident that, if the law challenged here had
discriminatory effects on Democrats, this record would support a
finding that the discrimination was intentional. Thus, we decline
to overturn the District Court's finding of discriminatory intent
as clearly erroneous.
Page 478 U. S. 128
Indeed, quite aside from the anecdotal evidence, the shape of
the House and Senate Districts, and the alleged disregard for
political boundaries, we think it most likely that, whenever a
legislature redistricts, those responsible for the legislation will
know the likely political composition of the new districts, and
will have a prediction as to whether a particular district is a
safe one for a Democratic or Republican candidate or is a
competitive district that either candidate might win. As we said in
Gaffney v. Cummings, 412 U.S. at
412 U. S.
753-753:
"It would be idle, we think, to contend that any political
consideration taken into account in fashioning a reapportionment
plan is sufficient to invalidate it. Our cases indicate quite the
contrary.
See White v. Regester, [
412
U.S. 755 (1973)];
Burns v. Richardson, [
384 U.S.
73 (1966)];
Whitcomb v. Chavis, [
403 U.S.
124 (1971)];
Abate v. Mundt, [
403
U.S. 182 (1971)]. The very essence of districting is to produce
a different -- a more 'politically fair' -- result than would be
reached with elections at large, in which the winning party would
take 100% of the legislative seats. Politics and political
considerations are inseparable from districting and apportionment.
The political profile of a State, its party registration, and
voting records are available precinct by precinct, ward by ward.
These subdivisions may not be identical with census tracts, but,
when overlaid on a census map, it requires no special genius to
recognize the political consequences of drawing a district line
along one street, rather than another. It is not only obvious, but
absolutely unavoidable, that the location and shape of districts
may well determine the political complexion of the area. District
lines are rarely neutral phenomena. They can well determine what
district will be predominantly Democratic or predominantly
Republican, or make a close race likely. Redistricting may pit
incumbents against one another or make very difficult the
election
Page 478 U. S. 129
of the most experienced legislator. The reality is that
districting inevitably has, and is intended to have, substantial
political consequences."
"It may be suggested that those who redistrict and reapportion
should work with census, not political, data, and achieve
population equality without regard for political impact. But this
politically mindless approach may produce, whether intended or not,
the most grossly gerrymandered results, and, in any event, it is
most unlikely that the political impact of such a plan would remain
undiscovered by the time it was proposed or adopted, in which event
the results would be both known and, if not changed, intended.
[
Footnote 10]"
As long as redistricting is done by a legislature, it should not
be very difficult to prove that the likely political consequences
of the reapportionment were intended. [
Footnote 11]
B
We do not accept, however, the District Court's legal and
factual bases for concluding that the 1981 Act visited a
sufficiently adverse effect on the appellees' constitutionally
protected rights to make out a violation of the Equal Protection
Clause. The District Court held that, because any apportionment
Page 478 U. S. 130
scheme that purposely prevents proportional representation is
unconstitutional, Democratic voters need only show that their
proportionate voting influence has been adversely affected. 603 F.
Supp. at 1492. Our cases, however, clearly foreclose any claim that
the Constitution requires proportional representation, or that
legislatures in reapportioning must draw district lines to come as
near as possible to allocating seats to the contending parties in
proportion to what their anticipated statewide vote will be.
Whitcomb v. Chavis, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 153,
403 U. S. 156,
403 U. S. 160;
White v. Regester, 412 U.S. at
412 U. S.
765-766.
The typical election for legislative seats in the United States
is conducted in described geographical districts, with the
candidate receiving the most votes in each district winning the
seat allocated to that district. If all or most of the districts
are competitive -- defined by the District Court in this case as
districts in which the anticipated split in the party vote is
within the range of 45% to 55% -- even a narrow statewide
preference for either party would produce an overwhelming majority
for the winning party in the state legislature. This consequence,
however, is inherent in winner-take-all, district-based elections,
and we cannot hold that such a reapportionment law would violate
the Equal Protection Clause because the voters in the losing party
do not have representation in the legislature in proportion to the
statewide vote received by their party candidates. As we have
said:
"[W]e are unprepared to hold that district-based elections
decided by plurality vote are unconstitutional in either single- or
multimember districts simply because the supporters of losing
candidates have no legislative seats assigned to them."
Whitcomb v. Chavis, supra, at
403 U. S. 160.
This is true of a racial, as well as a political, group.
White
v. Regester, supra, at
412 U. S.
765-766. It is also true of a statewide claim as well as
an individual district claim.
To draw district lines to maximize the representation of each
major party would require creating as many safe seats
Page 478 U. S. 131
for each party as the demographic and predicted political
characteristics of the State would permit. This, in turn, would
leave the minority in each safe district without a representative
of its choice. We upheld this "political fairness" approach in
Gaffney v. Cummings, despite its tendency to deny safe
district minorities any realistic chance to elect their own
representatives. But
Gaffney in no way suggested that the
Constitution requires the approach that Connecticut had adopted in
that case.
In cases involving individual multimember districts, we have
required a substantially greater showing of adverse effects than a
mere lack of proportional representation to support a finding of
unconstitutional vote dilution. Only where there is evidence that
excluded groups have "less opportunity to participate in the
political processes and to elect candidates of their choice" have
we refused to approve the use of multimember districts.
Rogers
v. Lodge, 458 U.S. at
458 U. S. 624.
See also United Jewish Organizations
of Williamsburgh, Inc. v. Carey, 430 U.S. at
430 U. S. 167;
White v. Regester, supra, at
412 U. S.
765-766;
Whitcomb v. Chavis, supra, at 150. In
these cases, we have also noted the lack of responsiveness by those
elected to the concerns of the relevant groups.
See Rogers v.
Lodge, supra, at
458 U. S.
625-627;
White v. Regester, supra, at 766-767.
[
Footnote 12]
These holdings rest on a conviction that the mere fact that a
particular apportionment scheme makes it more difficult for a
particular group in a particular district to elect the
representatives of its choice does not render that scheme
constitutionally infirm. This conviction, in turn, stems from a
perception
Page 478 U. S. 132
that the power to influence the political process is not limited
to winning elections. An individual or a group of individuals who
votes for a losing candidate is usually deemed to be adequately
represented by the winning candidate, and to have as much
opportunity to influence that candidate as other voters in the
district. We cannot presume in such a situation, without actual
proof to the contrary, that the candidate elected will entirely
ignore the interests of those voters. This is true even in a safe
district where the losing group loses election after election.
Thus, a group's electoral power is not unconstitutionally
diminished by the simple fact of an apportionment scheme that makes
winning elections more difficult, and a failure of proportional
representation alone does not constitute impermissible
discrimination under the Equal Protection Clause.
See Mobile v.
Bolden, 446 U.S. at
446 U. S. 111,
n. 7 (MARSHALL, J., dissenting).
As with individual districts, where unconstitutional vote
dilution is alleged in the form of statewide political
gerrymandering, the mere lack of proportional representation will
not be sufficient to prove unconstitutional discrimination. Again,
without specific supporting evidence, a court cannot presume in
such a case that those who are elected will disregard the
disproportionately underrepresented group. Rather, unconstitutional
discrimination occurs only when the electoral system is arranged in
a manner that will consistently degrade a voter's or a group of
voters' influence on the political process as a whole.
Although this is a somewhat different formulation than we have
previously used in describing unconstitutional vote dilution in an
individual district, the focus of both of these inquiries is
essentially the same. [
Footnote
13] In both contexts, the question is whether a particular
group has been unconstitutionally denied
Page 478 U. S. 133
its chance to effectively influence the political process. In a
challenge to an individual district, this inquiry focuses on the
opportunity of members of the group to participate in party
deliberations in the slating and nomination of candidates, their
opportunity to register and vote, and hence their chance to
directly influence the election returns and to secure the attention
of the winning candidate. Statewide, however, the inquiry centers
on the voters' direct or indirect influence on the elections of the
state legislature as a whole. And, as in individual district cases,
an equal protection violation may be found only where the electoral
system substantially disadvantages certain voters in their
opportunity to influence the political process effectively. In this
context, such a finding of unconstitutionality must be supported by
evidence of continued frustration of the will of a majority of the
voters or effective denial to a minority of voters of a fair chance
to influence the political process.
Based on these views, we would reject the District Court's
apparent holding that
any interference with an opportunity
to elect a representative of one's choice would be sufficient to
allege or make out an equal protection violation, unless justified
by some acceptable state interest that the State would be required
to demonstrate. In addition to being contrary to the
above-described conception of an unconstitutional political
gerrymander, such a low threshold for legal action would invite
attack on all or almost all reapportionment statutes.
District-based elections hardly ever produce a perfect fit between
votes and representation. The one person, one vote imperative often
mandates departure from this result, as does the no-retrogression
rule required by § 5 of the Voting Rights Act. Inviting attack
on minor departures from some supposed norm would too much embroil
the judiciary in second-guessing what has consistently been
referred to as a political task for the legislature, a task that
should not be monitored too closely unless the express or tacit
goal is to effect its removal from legislative halls. We decline to
take a major
Page 478 U. S. 134
step toward that end which would be so much at odds with our
history and experience.
The view that a
prima facie case of illegal
discrimination in reapportionment requires a showing of more than a
de minimis effect is not unprecedented. Reapportionment
cases involving the one person, one vote principle such as
Gaffney v. Cummings and
White v. Regester provide
support for such a requirement. In the present, considerably more
complex context, it is also appropriate to require allegations and
proof that the challenged legislative plan has had or will have
effects that are sufficiently serious to require intervention by
the federal courts in state reapportionment decisions. [
Footnote 14]
C
The District Court's findings do not satisfy this threshold
condition to stating and proving a cause of action. In reaching its
conclusion, the District Court relied primarily on the results of
the 1982 elections: Democratic candidates for the State House of
Representatives had received 51.9% of the votes cast statewide, and
Republican candidates 48.1%; yet, out of the 100 seats to be
filled, Republican candidates won 57 and Democrats 43. In the
Senate, 53.1% of the votes were cast for Democratic candidates and
46.9% for Republicans; of the 25 Senate seats to be filled,
Republicans won 12 and Democrats 13. The court also relied upon the
use of multimember districts in Marion and Allen Counties, where
Democrats or those inclined to vote Democratic in 1982 amounted to
46.6% of the population of those counties, but Republicans won 86%
-- 18 of 21 -- seats allocated to the districts in those counties.
These disparities were enough to require a neutral
Page 478 U. S. 135
justification by the State which, in the eyes of the District
Court, was not forthcoming. [
Footnote 15]
Relying on a single election to prove unconstitutional
discrimination is unsatisfactory. The District Court observed, and
the parties do not disagree, that Indiana is a swing State. Voters
sometimes prefer Democratic candidates, and sometimes Republican.
The District Court did not find that, because of the 1981 Act, the
Democrats could not, in one of the next few elections, secure a
sufficient vote to take control of the assembly. Indeed, the
District Court declined to hold that the 1982 election results were
the predictable consequences of the 1981 Act, and expressly refused
to hold that those results were a reliable prediction of future
ones. The District Court did not ask by what percentage the
statewide Democratic vote would have had to increase to control
either the House or the Senate. The appellants argue here, without
a persuasive response from the appellees, that, had the Democratic
candidates received an additional few percentage points of the
votes cast statewide, they would have obtained a majority of the
seats in both houses. Nor was there any finding that the 1981
reapportionment would consign the Democrats to a minority status in
the Assembly throughout the 1980's, or that the Democrats would
have no hope of doing
Page 478 U. S. 136
any better in the reapportionment that would occur after the
1990 census. Without findings of this nature, the District Court
erred in concluding that the 1981 Act violated the Equal Protection
Clause.
The District Court's discussion of the multimember districts
created by the 1981 Act does not undermine this conclusion. For the
purposes of the statewide political gerrymandering claim, these
districts appear indistinguishable from safe Republican and safe
Democratic single-member districts. Simply showing that there are
multimember districts in the State, and that those districts are
constructed so as to be safely Republican or Democratic, in no way
bolsters the contention that there has been
statewide
discrimination against Democratic voters. It could be, were the
necessary threshold effect to be shown, that multimember districts
could be demonstrated to be suspect on the ground that they are
particularly useful in attaining impermissibly discriminatory ends;
at this stage of the inquiry, however, the multimember district
evidence does not materially aid the appellees' case.
Furthermore, in determining the constitutionality of multimember
districts challenged as racial gerrymanders, we have rejected the
view that
"any group with distinctive interests must be represented in
legislative halls if it is numerous enough to command at least one
seat and represents a minority living in an area sufficiently
compact to constitute a single-member district."
Whitcomb, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S. 156.
Rather, we have required that there be proof that the complaining
minority "had less opportunity . . . to participate in the
political processes and to elect legislators of their choice."
Id. at
403 U. S. 149.
In
Whitcomb, we went on to observe that there was no proof
that blacks were not allowed to register or vote, to choose the
political party they desired to support, to participate in its
affairs or to be equally represented on those occasions when
candidates were chosen, or to be included among the candidates
slated by the Democratic Party.
Page 478 U. S. 137
Against this background, we concluded that the failure of the
minority
"to have legislative seats in proportion to its population
emerges more as a function of losing elections than of built-in
bias against poor Negroes. The voting power of ghetto residents may
have been 'cancelled out' as the District Court held, but this
seems a mere euphemism for political defeat at the polls."
Id. at
403 U. S. 153.
Whitcomb accordingly rejected a challenge to multimember
districts in Marion County, Indiana. A similar challenge was
sustained in
White v. Regester, but only by employing the
same criterion, namely, that the plaintiffs must produce evidence
to support a finding
"that the political processes leading to nomination and election
were not equally open to participation by the group in question --
that its members had less opportunity than did other residents in
the district to participate in the political processes and to elect
legislators of their choice."
412 U.S. at
412 U. S.
766.
This participatory approach to the legality of individual
multimember districts is not helpful where the claim is that such
districts discriminate against Democrats, for it could hardly be
said that Democrats, any more than Republicans, are excluded from
participating in the affairs of their own party or from the
processes by which candidates are nominated and elected. For
constitutional purposes, the Democratic claim in this case, insofar
as it challenges
vel non the legality of the multimember
districts in certain counties, is like that of the Negroes in
Whitcomb who failed to prove a racial gerrymander, for it
boils down to a complaint that they failed to attract a majority of
the voters in the challenged multimember districts. [
Footnote 16]
Page 478 U. S. 138
D
In response to our approach, JUSTICE POWELL suggests an
alternative method for evaluating equal protection claims of
political gerrymandering. In his view, courts should look at a
number of factors in considering these claims: the nature of the
legislative procedures by which the challenged redistricting was
accomplished and the intent behind the redistricting; the shapes of
the districts and their conformity with political subdivision
boundaries; and "evidence concerning population disparities and
statistics tending to show vote dilution."
Post at
478 U. S. 173
(concurring in part and dissenting in part). The District Court in
this case reviewed these factors in reaching its ultimate
conclusion that unconstitutional vote dilution had occurred, and
JUSTICE POWELL concludes that its findings on these factors -- and
on the ultimate question of vote discrimination -- should be
upheld. According to JUSTICE POWELL, those findings adequately
support a conclusion that "the boundaries of the voting districts
have been distorted deliberately and arbitrarily to achieve
illegitimate ends."
Post at
478 U. S. 165.
This deliberate and arbitrary distortion of boundaries, in turn,
apparently distinguishes gerrymandering in a "loose" sense, "the
common practice of the party in power to choose the redistricting
plan that gives it an advantage at the polls,"
post at
164, from gerrymandering in an "unconstitutional" sense.
Although we are not completely clear as to the distinction
between these two categories of gerrymander, the crux of JUSTICE
POWELL's analysis seems to be that -- at least in some cases -- the
intentional drawing of district boundaries for partisan ends and
for no other reason violates the Equal Protection Clause in and of
itself. We disagree, however,
Page 478 U. S. 139
with this conception of a constitutional violation.
Specifically, even if a state legislature redistricts with the
specific intention of disadvantaging one political party's election
prospects, we do not believe that there has been an
unconstitutional discrimination against members of that party
unless the redistricting does in fact disadvantage it at the
polls.
Moreover, as we discussed above, a mere lack of proportionate
results in one election cannot suffice in this regard. We have
reached this conclusion in our cases involving challenges to
individual multimember districts, and it applies equally here. In
the individual multimember district cases, we have found equal
protection violations only where a history of disproportionate
results appeared in conjunction with strong indicia of lack of
political power and the denial of fair representation.
See
supra, at
478 U. S. 131.
In those cases, the racial minorities asserting the successful
equal protection claims had essentially been shut out of the
political process. [
Footnote
17] In the statewide political gerrymandering context, these
prior cases lead to the analogous conclusion that equal protection
violations may be found only where a history (actual or projected)
of disproportionate results appears in conjunction
Page 478 U. S. 140
with similar indicia. The mere lack of control of the General
Assembly after a single election does not rise to the requisite
level.
This requirement of more than a showing of possibly transitory
results is where we appear to depart from JUSTICE POWELL. Stripped
of its "factors" verbiage, JUSTICE POWELL's analysis turns on a
determination that a lack of proportionate election results can
support a finding of an equal protection violation, at least in
some circumstances. Here, the only concrete effect on the Democrats
in Indiana in terms of election results that the District Court had
before it was one election in which the percentage of Democrats
elected was lower than the percentage of total Democratic votes
cast. [
Footnote 18] In
JUSTICE POWELL's view, this disproportionality, when combined with
clearly discriminatory intent on the part of the 1981 General
Assembly and the manipulation of district lines in the
apportionment process, is sufficient to conclude that fair
representation has been denied.
The factors other than disproportionate election results,
however, do not contribute to a finding that Democratic voters have
been disadvantaged in fact. They support a finding that an
intention to discriminate was present, and that districts were
drawn in accordance with that intention, but they do not show any
actual disadvantage beyond that shown by the election results: it
surely cannot be an actual disadvantage in terms of fair
representation on a group level just to be placed in a district
with a supermajority of other Democratic
Page 478 U. S. 141
voters or a district that departs from preexisting political
boundaries. Only when such placement affects election results and
political power statewide has an actual disadvantage occurred.
Consequently, JUSTICE POWELL's view would allow a constitutional
violation to be found where the only proven effect on a political
party's electoral power was disproportionate results in one (or
possibly two) elections. This view, however, contains no
explanation of why a lack of proportionate election results should
suffice in these political gerrymandering cases while it does not
in the cases involving racial gerrymandering. In fact, JUSTICE
POWELL's opinion is silent as to the relevance of the substantive
standard developed in the multimember district cases to these
political gerrymandering cases.
In rejecting JUSTICE POWELL's approach, we do not mean to
intimate that the factors he considers are entirely irrelevant. The
election results obviously are relevant to a showing of the effects
required to prove a political gerrymandering claim under our view.
And the district configurations may be combined with vote
projections to predict future election results, which are also
relevant to the effects showing. The other factors, even if not
relevant to the effects issue, might well be relevant to an equal
protection claim. The equal protection argument would proceed along
the following lines: if there were a discriminatory effect and a
discriminatory intent, then the legislation would be examined for
valid underpinnings. Thus, evidence of exclusive legislative
process and deliberate drawing of district lines in accordance with
accepted gerrymandering principles would be relevant to intent, and
evidence of valid and invalid configuration would be relevant to
whether the districting plan met legitimate state interests.
This course is consistent with our equal protection cases
generally, and is the course we follow here: we assumed that there
was discriminatory intent, found that there was insufficient
Page 478 U. S. 142
discriminatory effect to constitute an equal protection
violation, [
Footnote 19] and
therefore did not reach the question of the state interests
(legitimate or otherwise) served by the particular districts as
they were created by the legislature. Consequently, the valid or
invalid configuration of the districts was an issue we did not need
to consider. [
Footnote
20]
It seems inappropriate, however, to view these separate
components of an equal protection analysis as "factors" to be
considered together, without regard for their separate functions or
meaning. This undifferentiated consideration of the various factors
confuses the import of each factor and disguises the essential
conclusion of JUSTICE POWELL's opinion: that disproportionate
election results alone are a sufficient effect to support a finding
of a constitutional violation.
In sum, we decline to adopt the approach enunciated by JUSTICE
POWELL. In our view, that approach departs from our past cases and
invites judicial interference in legislative districting whenever a
political party suffers at the polls. We recognize that our own
view may be difficult of application. Determining when an electoral
system has been "arranged
Page 478 U. S. 143
in a manner that will consistently degrade a voter's or a group
of voters' influence on the political process as a whole,"
supra at
478 U. S. 132,
is of necessity a difficult inquiry. [
Footnote 21] Nevertheless, we believe that it recognizes
the delicacy of intruding on this most political of legislative
functions, and is at the same time consistent with our prior cases
regarding individual multimember districts, which have formulated a
parallel standard. [
Footnote
22]
IV
In sum, we hold that political gerrymandering cases are properly
justiciable under the Equal Protection Clause. We also conclude,
however, that a threshold showing of discriminatory vote dilution
is required for a
prima facie case of an equal protection
violation. In this case, the findings made by the District Court of
an adverse effect on the appellees do not surmount the threshold
requirement. Consequently, the judgment of the District Court
is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Politically speaking, the State of Indiana is a "swing" State:
it has supported both the Democrats and the Republicans at various
times, often following national trends and major candidates.
Although at times within the last few decades the State has voted
up to 56% Democratic, in 1980, the Republicans took the State.
[
Footnote 2]
These bills were "vehicle bills" -- bills that had no real
content. Both bills were passed and were then referred to the other
House, and eventually to a Conference Committee, which consisted
entirely of Republican members. Four Democratic "advisers" to the
Committee were appointed, but they had no voting powers. Further,
they were excluded from the substantive work of the Committee: the
Republican State Committee funded a computerized study by an
outside firm that produced the districting map that was eventually
used, and the Democratic "advisers" were not allowed access to the
computer or to the results of the study. They nevertheless
attempted to develop apportionment proposals of their own, using
the 1980 census data. A few days before the end of the 1981
legislative session, the Conference Committee presented its plan to
the legislature. The Democratic minority also presented its
alternative plan. The majority plan was passed in both Houses, with
voting along party lines, and was signed into law by the
Governor.
[
Footnote 3]
A multitude of conflicting statistical evidence was also
introduced at the trial. The District Court, however, specifically
declined to credit any of this evidence, noting that it did not
"wish to choose which statistician is more credible or less
credible." 603 F. Supp., at 1485.
[
Footnote 4]
The court noted that various House districts combined urban and
suburban or rural voters with dissimilar interests, and that many
of the districts were unwieldy shapes. Using Marion County as one
example, the court observed that the county itself had exactly the
population to support 14 House seats; nevertheless, it was combined
with various surrounding areas to form five triple-member
districts, which maintained the county's prior 15-member delegation
even though it had in fact suffered a population decrease.
Believing that the resulting multimember districts were suspect in
terms of compactness, the court concluded that no rational reason
could support them.
[
Footnote 5]
In addition, the court quoted from the deposition testimony of
the Speaker of the House as follows:
"MR. SUSSMAN: What I would like you to do here again is to give
me whatever reasons were operative to your mind in maintaining or
creating multimember districts with regard to (Districts) 48
through 52 [the Marion County districts]."
"MR. DAILEY: Political."
"MR. SUSSMAN: What were the political factors?"
"MR. DAILEY: We wanted to save as many incumbent Republicans as
possible."
Id. at 1484.
The court also quoted from the deposition testimony of Senator
Bosma as follows:
"MR. SUSSMAN: This (newspaper) article says further,"
"Under further questioning from Townsend about input in actual
map drawing, Bosma said 'You will have the privilege to offer a
minority map. But I will advise you in advance that it will not be
accepted.' Is that accurate?"
"MR. BOSMA: That's accurate. I might add that I don't make goals
for the opposite team."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 6]
These are familiar techniques of political gerrymandering.
Democratic (or Republican, as the case may be) votes are "stacked"
and "wasted" by creating districts where Democrats form majorities
much greater than the 50% necessary to carry those districts.
Concurrently, Republican votes are spread among districts in which
they form safe, perhaps 55%, majorities, and Democratic votes are
"cracked" or "split" by dispersing them in such a way as to be
ineffectual.
[
Footnote 7]
Judge Pell, writing in dissent, disagreed. Assuming for the
purposes of his analysis that a political gerrymandering case was
justiciable, he concluded that the appellees had not proved
discrimination. Rather, once the relative voting strengths were
properly ascertained, it was his view that the plan had advantaged
and disadvantaged both parties equally: the Democrats won more than
their voting strength in the Senate and less in the House.
See
id. at 1501-1502. Judge Pell also rejected the majority's
analysis of the multimember districts, and thought that the State
had followed rational, nondiscriminatory criteria in formulating
the 1981 plan.
[
Footnote 8]
Consolidated with this suit in the proceedings below was another
lawsuit, filed by the Indiana NAACP. The NAACP suit challenged the
plans as unconstitutional dilutions of the black vote in Indiana in
violation of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, 42 U. S. C. §1973 (as amended).
In rejecting the NAACP claims, the District Court majority
found:
"[T]he voting efficacy of the NAACP plaintiffs was impinged upon
because of their politics, and not because of their race. It is not
in dispute that blacks in this state vote overwhelmingly
Democratic."
603 F. Supp., at 1489-1490. Consequently, the majority found no
Fifteenth Amendment or Voting Rights Act violation. The dissent
concurred with this result, but gave different reasons for reaching
this conclusion.
The NAACP did not appeal these dispositions. Consequently, the
only claims now before us are the political gerrymandering
claims.
[
Footnote 9]
As to the illegitimate policy determinations that JUSTICE
O'CONNOR believes that we have made, she points to two. The first
is a preference for nonpartisan, as opposed to partisan,
gerrymanders, and the second is a preference for proportionality.
On a group level, however, which must be our focus in this type of
claim, neither of these policy determinations is "of a kind clearly
for nonjudicial discretion."
Baker v. Carr, 369 U.
S. 186,
369 U. S. 217
(1962). The first merely recognizes that nonpartisan gerrymanders
in fact are aimed at guaranteeing, rather than infringing, fair
group representation. The second, which is not a preference for
proportionality
per se, but a preference for a level of
parity between votes and representation sufficient to ensure that
significant minority voices are heard and, that majorities are not
consigned to minority status, is hardly an illegitimate
extrapolation from our general majoritarian ethic and the objective
of fair and adequate representation recognized in
Reynolds v.
Sims, 377 U. S. 533
(1964).
[
Footnote 10]
This passage from
Gaffney expresses a view similar to
that of Robert G. Dixon, Jr., one of the foremost scholars of
reapportionment, who observed:
"[W]hether or not nonpopulation factors are expressly taken into
account in shaping political districts, they are inevitably
ever-present and operative. They influence all election outcomes in
all sets of districts. The key concept to grasp is that there are
no neutral lines for legislative districts . . . every line drawn
aligns partisans and interest blocs in a particular way different
from the alignment that would result from putting the line in some
other place."
Dixon, Fair Criteria and Procedures for Establishing Legislative
Districts 7-8, in Representation and Redistricting Issues (B.
Grofman, A. Lijphart, R. McKay, & H. Scarrow eds.1982).
[
Footnote 11]
That discriminatory intent may not be difficult to prove in this
context does not, of course, mean that it need not be proved at all
to succeed on such a claim.
[
Footnote 12]
Although these cases involved racial groups, we believe that the
principles developed in these cases would apply equally to claims
by political groups in individual districts. We note, however, that
the elements necessary to a successful vote dilution claim may be
more difficult to prove in relation to a claim by a political
group. For example, historical patterns of exclusion from the
political processes, evidence which would support a vote dilution
claim, are in general more likely to be present for a racial group
than for a political group.
[
Footnote 13]
Although this opinion relies on our cases relating to challenges
by racial groups to individual multimember districts, nothing
herein is intended in any way to suggest an alteration of the
standards developed in those cases for evaluating such claims.
[
Footnote 14]
The requirement of a threshold showing is derived from the
peculiar characteristics of these political gerrymandering claims.
We do not contemplate that a similar requirement would apply to our
Equal Protection cases outside of this particular context.
[
Footnote 15]
The District Court apparently thought that the political group
suffering discrimination was all those voters who voted for
Democratic Assembly candidates in 1982. Judge Pell, in dissent,
argued that the allegedly disfavored group should be defined as
those voters who could be counted on to vote Democratic from
election to election, thus excluding those who vote the Republican
ticket from time to time. He would have counted the true believers
by averaging the Democratic vote cast in two different elections
for those statewide offices for which party-line voting is thought
to be the rule and personality and issue-oriented factors are
relatively unimportant. Although accepting Judge Pell's definition
of Democratic voters would have strongly suggested that the 1981
reapportionment had no discriminatory effect at all, there was no
response to his position. The appellees take up the challenge in
this Court, claiming that Judge Pell chose the wrong election years
for the purpose of averaging the Democratic votes. The dispute need
not now be resolved.
[
Footnote 16]
It should be noted that, even if the District Court correctly
identified constitutional shortcomings in the House districting,
this did not automatically call for invalidating the provisions for
the Senate. The only relevant fact about the Senate appearing in
the District Court's findings is that, in the 1982 elections to
fill 25 Senate seats, Democrats won 53.1% of the statewide vote and
elected 13 of their candidates. That, on its face, is hardly
grounds for invalidating the Senate districting, and we have
counselled before against striking down an entire apportionment
statute when the constitutional evil could be cured by lesser
means.
Whitcomb v. Chavis, 403 U.S. at
403 U. S.
160-161.
[
Footnote 17]
Although JUSTICE POWELL asserts that we mischaracterize these
cases, and that any effects in addition to disproportionality were
required to be demonstrated only to prove discriminatory intent, we
note that the effects test we cite was initially set forth in
White v. Regester, 412 U. S. 755
(1973), which was decided before the Court expressly determined
that proof of discriminatory intent was a necessary component of an
equal protection claim. Moreover, the Voting Rights Act, which to a
large extent borrowed the effects test from
White,
explicitly declined to require any showing of discriminatory
intent. It may be true that our more recent cases have turned on
the question of discriminatory intent, but that does not imply that
we have abandoned the effects discussion we adopted earlier.
Moreover, we believe that JUSTICE POWELL incorrectly asserts that
more than one election must pass before a successful racial or
political gerrymandering claim may be brought.
Post at
478 U. S.
171-172, n. 10 (concurring in part and dissenting in
part).
Projected election results based on district
boundaries and past voting patterns may certainly support this type
of claim, even where no election has yet been held under the
challenged districting.
[
Footnote 18]
JUSTICE POWELL proffers additional election results from the
1984 elections in support of his conclusion. These results were not
considered by the District Court, and we decline to determine their
significance without the benefit of any factual development as to
their meaning in terms of Democratic power overall or in the long
run. Nevertheless, we note that, in terms of actual percentages,
the 1984 House election results cited by JUSTICE POWELL exhibited
less of a discrepancy between Democratic votes cast and Democratic
representatives elected than did the 1982 results (5% as opposed to
8%). This casts at least some doubt on the import of the 1982
results.
[
Footnote 19]
In most equal protection cases, it is true, a discriminatory
effect will be readily apparent, and no heightened effect will be
required,
see n 14,
supra, but that is the only real difference between this
type of equal protection claim and others.
[
Footnote 20]
Thus, we have rejected none of the District Court's subsidiary
factual conclusions. We have merely, based on our view of the
applicable law, disregarded those that were irrelevant in this
case, and held insufficient those that inadequately supported the
District Court's ultimate legal conclusions. Specifically, we have
not rejected the District Court's finding of discriminatory intent.
Nor have we rejected the District Court's findings as to any of the
election results or the contours of particular districts. We have
simply determined that, aside from the election results, none of
the facts found by the District Court were relevant to the question
of discriminatory effects. Consequently, since we did not need to
progress beyond that point, given our conclusion that no
unconstitutional discriminatory effects were shown as a matter of
law, we did not need to consider the District Court's factual
findings on the other "factors" addressed by JUSTICE POWELL.
[
Footnote 21]
Although we recognize the difficulty of this inquiry, we do not
share JUSTICE O'CONNOR's apparent lack of faith in the lower
courts' abilities to distinguish between disproportionality
per
se and the lack of fair representation that continued
disproportionality in conjunction with other indicia may
demonstrate.
See post at
478 U. S. 157
(opinion concurring in judgment).
[
Footnote 22]
We are puzzled by JUSTICE POWELL's conclusion that we
contemplate a test under which only the "one person, one vote"
requirement has any relevance. This opinion clearly does not adopt
such a limited review.
CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, concurring in the judgment.
I join JUSTICE O'CONNOR's opinion.
It is not surprising that citizens who are troubled by
gerrymandering turn first to the courts for redress. De
Tocqueville, that perceptive commentator on our country, observed
that "[s]carcely any question arises in the United States which
does not become, sooner or later, a subject of judicial debate." 1
A. De Tocqueville, Democracy in America 330 (H. Reeve trans.1961).
What I question is the Court's urge
Page 478 U. S. 144
to craft a judicial remedy for this perceived "injustice." In my
view, the Framers of the Constitution envisioned quite a different
scheme. They placed responsibility for correction of such flaws in
the people, relying on them to influence their elected
representatives. As Justice Frankfurter wrote when the Court
entered this political arena:
"The Framers carefully and with deliberate forethought refused
so to enthrone the judiciary. In this situation, as in others of
like nature, appeal for relief does not belong here. Appeal must be
to an informed, civically militant electorate. In a democratic
society like ours, relief must come through an aroused popular
conscience that sears the conscience of the people's
representatives. In any event, there is nothing judicially more
unseemly nor more self-defeating than for this Court to make
in
terrorem pronouncements, to indulge in merely empty rhetoric,
sounding a word of promise to the ear, sure to be disappointing to
the hope."
Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186,
369 U.S. 270 (1962)
(dissenting opinion).
JUSTICE O'CONNOR, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE
REHNQUIST join, concurring in the judgment.
Today the Court holds that claims of political gerrymandering
lodged by members of one of the political parties that make up our
two-party system are justiciable under the Equal Protection Clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment. Nothing in our precedents compels us
to take this step, and there is every reason not to do so. I would
hold that the partisan gerrymandering claims of major political
parties raise a nonjusticiable political question that the
judiciary should leave to the legislative branch, as the Framers of
the Constitution unquestionably intended. Accordingly, I would
reverse the District Court's judgment on the grounds that
appellees' claim is nonjusticiable.
There can be little doubt that the emergence of a strong and
stable two-party system in this country has contributed
Page 478 U. S. 145
enormously to sound and effective government. The preservation
and health of our political institutions, state and federal,
depends to no small extent on the continued vitality of our
two-party system, which permits both stability and measured change.
The opportunity to control the drawing of electoral boundaries
through the legislative process of apportionment is a critical and
traditional part of politics in the United States, and one that
plays no small role in fostering active participation in the
political parties at every level. Thus, the legislative business of
apportionment is fundamentally a political affair, and challenges
to the manner in which an apportionment has been carried out -- by
the very parties that are responsible for this process -- present a
political question in the truest sense of the term.
To turn these matters over to the federal judiciary is to inject
the courts into the most heated partisan issues. It is predictable
that the courts will respond by moving away from the nebulous
standard a plurality of the Court fashions today and toward some
form of rough proportional representation for all political groups.
The consequences of this shift will be as immense as they are
unfortunate. I do not believe, and the Court offers not a shred of
evidence to suggest, that the Framers of the Constitution intended
the judicial power to encompass the making of such fundamental
choices about how this Nation is to be governed. Nor do I believe
that the proportional representation towards which the Court's
expansion of equal protection doctrine will lead is consistent with
our history, our traditions, or our political institutions.
The Court pays little heed to these considerations, which should
inform any sensible jurisprudence of Article III and of the Equal
Protection Clause. The Court's reflexive application of precedent
ignores the maxim that,
"[p]articularly in dealing with claims under broad provisions of
the Constitution, which derive content by an interpretative process
of inclusion and exclusion, it is imperative that generalizations,
based on and qualified by the concrete situations that gave
Page 478 U. S. 146
rise to them, must not be applied out of context in disregard of
variant controlling facts."
Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U.
S. 339,
364 U. S.
343-344 (1960). In cases such as this one, which may
profoundly affect the governance of this Nation, it is not enough
to cite precedent: we should examine it for possible limits, and,
if they are lacking, for possible flaws.
I
Appellees are Indiana Democrats who claim that Indiana's 1981
state apportionment discriminates against Democrats on a statewide
basis by diluting their votes, thereby depriving them of "their
proportionate share of political influence."
Baker v.
Carr, 369 U. S. 186,
369 U.S. 299 (1962)
(Frankfurter, J., dissenting). The Court, relying principally on
Baker v. Carr, supra, Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533 (1964),
Gaffney v. Cummings,
412 U. S. 735
(1973), and the line of racial gerrymandering cases including
Rogers v. Lodge, 458 U. S. 613
(1982), and
White v. Regester, 412 U.
S. 755 (1973), holds that appellees"'purely political
equal protection claim,"
ante at 119, does not present a
political question, and is therefore justiciable. Specifically, the
Court holds that the fact that a vote dilution claim "is submitted
by a political group, rather than a racial group, does not
distinguish it in terms of justiciability."
Ante at
478 U. S.
125.
A plurality of the Court recognizes, however, that
"[i]nviting attack on minor departures from some supposed norm
would too much embroil the judiciary in second-guessing what has
consistently been referred to as a political task for the
legislature, a task that should not be monitored too closely unless
the express or tacit goal is to effect its removal from legislative
halls."
Ante at
478 U. S. 133.
Accordingly, although the plurality's analysis is generally modeled
on the racial gerrymandering cases, the plurality would require a
somewhat different threshold showing that the apportionment has
discriminatory effects:
"unconstitutional discrimination occurs only when the electoral
system is arranged in a
Page 478 U. S. 147
manner that will consistently degrade a voter's or a group of
voters' influence on the political process as a whole."
Ante at
478 U. S.
132.
The step taken today is a momentous one which, if followed in
the future, can only lead to political instability and judicial
malaise. If members of the major political parties are protected by
the Equal Protection Clause from dilution of their voting strength,
then members of every identifiable group that possesses distinctive
interests and tends to vote on the basis of those interests should
be able to bring similar claims. Federal courts will have no
alternative but to attempt to recreate the complex process of
legislative apportionment in the context of adversary litigation in
order to reconcile the competing claims of political, religious,
ethnic, racial, occupational, and socioeconomic groups. Even if
there were some way of limiting such claims to organized political
parties, the fact remains that the losing party or the losing group
of legislators in every reapportionment will now be invited to
fight the battle anew in federal court. Apportionment is so
important to legislators and political parties that the burden of
proof the plurality places on political gerrymandering plaintiffs
is unlikely to deter the routine lodging of such complaints.
Notwithstanding the plurality's threshold requirement of
discriminatory effects, the Court's holding that political
gerrymandering claims are justiciable has opened the door to
pervasive and unwarranted judicial superintendence of the
legislative task of apportionment. There is simply no clear
stopping point to prevent the gradual evolution of a requirement of
roughly proportional representation for every cohesive political
group.
In my view, this enterprise is flawed from its inception. The
Equal Protection Clause does not supply judicially manageable
standards for resolving purely political gerrymandering claims, and
no group right to an equal share of political power was ever
intended by the Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court
rests its case on precedent, but
Page 478 U. S. 148
the cases on which the Court relies do not require that we take
this next and most far-reaching step into the "political thicket."
Colegrove v. Green, 328 U. S. 549,
328 U. S. 556
(1946) (opinion of Frankfurter, J.).
Baker v. Carr reaffirmed that a lawsuit will be held to
involve a political question where there is "a lack of judicially
discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it," or where
"the impossibility of deciding without an initial policy
determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion" is
apparent. 369 U.S. at
369 U. S. 217.
The Court first found a workable constitutional standard for
applying the Equal Protection Clause to state legislative
districting in
Reynolds v. Sims, supra. But, until today,
the Court has not extended the principles of
Baker v. Carr
and
Reynolds v. Sims to test a legislative districting
plan on grounds of partisan political gerrymandering. Indeed, one
year after
Reynolds v. Sims, the Court was unanimous in
summarily affirming a judgment determining that a political
gerrymandering challenge was nonjusticiable; as Justice Harlan
pointed out, the Court's action constituted a rejection of
"contentions that . . . partisan 'gerrymandering' may be subject
to federal constitutional attack under the Fourteenth
Amendment."
WMCA, Inc. v. Lomenzo, 382 U. S.
4,
382 U. S. 6 (1965)
(concurring opinion).
The question raised again today, 21 years later, is whether a
court can apply the familiar "[j]udicial standards under the Equal
Protection Clause,"
Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. at
369 U. S. 226,
without being forced to make a nonjudicial policy determination or
to resort to a standard that is not judicially manageable. In order
to answer that question, it is necessary to interpret the Equal
Protection Clause. As Justice Harlan pointed out in his dissent in
Baker v. Carr,
"[t]he suggestion . . . that courts lack standards by which to
decide such cases as this is relevant not only to the question of
'justiciability,' but also, and perhaps more fundamentally, to the
determination whether any cognizable constitutional claim has been
asserted in this case."
Id. at
369 U.S.
337.
Baker v. Carr
Page 478 U. S. 149
itself involved just such an initial interpretation of the Equal
Protection Clause: the Court in effect ruled that an arbitrary and
capricious discrimination against individual voters with respect to
the weight of their votes would state a cognizable claim under the
Equal Protection Clause.
See id. at
369 U. S. 226;
id. at
369 U.S.
338-339 (Harlan, J., dissenting). That threshold
determination about the reach and meaning of the Equal Protection
Clause was the basis for the Court's holding that the complaint of
the Tennessee voters was justiciable. Even this "arbitrary and
capricious" standard threatened to prove unmanageable, but the
difficulty was pretermitted when a relatively simple and judicially
manageable requirement of population equality among districts was
adopted the following Term in
Reynolds v. Sims.
See Bickel, The Supreme Court and Reapportionment, in
Reapportionment in the 1970's, pp. 57, 64 (N. Polsby ed.1971).
Baker v. Carr does not require that we hold that the
right asserted in this case is similarly within the intendment of
the Equal Protection Clause and determinable under the standards
developed to enforce that Clause. The right asserted in
Baker
v. Carr was an individual right to a vote whose weight was not
arbitrarily subjected to "debasement," 369 U.S. at
369 U. S. 194.
The rights asserted in this case are
group rights to an
equal share of political power and representation, and the
"arbitrary and capricious" standard discussed in
Baker v.
Carr cannot serve as the basis for recognizing such rights.
Indeed, the Court today does not rely on such a standard.
Instead, the Court justifies the extension of vote dilution
claims to mainstream political groups with the pronouncement that
"
Reynolds surely indicates the justiciability of claims
going to the adequacy of representation in state legislatures."
Ante at
478 U. S. 124.
But
Reynolds makes plain that the one person, one vote
principle safeguards the individual's right to vote, not the
interests of political groups:
"To the extent that a citizen's right to vote is debased, he is
that much less a citizen. The fact that an individual lives here
or
Page 478 U. S. 150
there is not a legitimate reason for overweighting or diluting
the efficacy of his vote."
377 U.S. at
377 U.S.
567. For that reason,
"an individual's right to vote for state legislators is
unconstitutionally impaired when its weight is in a substantial
fashion diluted when compared with votes of citizens living in
other parts of the State."
Id.. at
377 U.S.
568. Thus, the right guaranteed by the Equal Protection
Clause as interpreted in
Reynolds is "the right of
each voter to
have his vote weighted equally with
those of all other citizens.'" Mobile v. Bolden,
446 U. S. 55,
446 U. S. 78
(1980) (plurality opinion).
In the case of mainstream political groups, the Court has not
accepted the argument that an "asserted entitlement to group
representation,"
Bolden, 446 U.S. at
446 U. S. 77,
can be traced to the one person, one vote principle:
"It is, of course, true that the right of a person to vote on an
equal basis with other voters draws much of its significance from
the political associations that its exercise reflects, but it is an
altogether different matter to conclude that political groups
themselves have an independent constitutional claim to
representation. And the Court's decisions hold squarely that they
do not."
Id. at
446 U. S. 78-79
(citing
United Jewish Organizations of Williamsburgh, Inc. v.
Carey, 430 U. S. 144
(1977);
White v. Regester, 412 U.
S. 755 (1973); and
Whitcomb v. Chavis,
403 U. S. 124
(1971)). Where representation is apportioned substantially on a
population basis, it is "obvious that nobody's vote has been
diluted' in the sense in which that word was used in the
Reynolds case." Bolden, supra, at 446 U. S. 78.
Thus, the individual's right to vote does not imply that political
groups have a right to be free from discriminatory impairment of
their group voting strength. Treating the vote dilution claims of
political groups as cognizable would effectively collapse
the
"fundamental distinction between state action that inhibits an
individual's right to vote and state action that affects the
political strength of various groups that compete for
leadership
Page 478 U. S. 151
in a democratically governed community."
Bolden, supra, at
446 U. S. 83
(STEVENS, J., concurring in judgment).
Nor do this Court's racial gerrymandering cases require the
recognition of any such group right outside the context of racial
discrimination. As Justice Frankfurter observed:
"The cases involving Negro disfranchisement are no exception to
the principle of avoiding federal judicial intervention into
matters of state government in the absence of an explicit and clear
constitutional imperative. For here the controlling command of
Supreme Law is plain and unequivocal. An end of discrimination
against the Negro was the compelling motive of the Civil War
Amendments. The Fifteenth expresses this in terms, and it is no
less true of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth.
Slaughter-House Cases, 16
Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 67-72;
Strauder v.
West Virginia, 100 U. S. 303,
100 U. S.
306-307;
Nixon v. Herndon, 273 U. S.
536,
273 U. S. 541."
Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. at
369 U.S. 285-286 (dissenting
opinion).
In my view, where a racial minority group is characterized by
"the traditional indicia of suspectness" and is vulnerable to
exclusion from the political process,
San Antonio Independent
School District v. Rodriguez, 411 U. S.
1,
411 U. S. 28
(1973);
see also Johnson v. Robison, 415 U.
S. 361,
415 U. S. 375,
n. 14 (1974), individual voters who belong to that group enjoy some
measure of protection against intentional dilution of their group
voting strength by means of racial gerrymandering. As a matter of
past history and present reality, there is a direct and immediate
relationship between the racial minority's group voting strength in
a particular community and the individual rights of its members to
vote and to participate in the political process. In these
circumstances, the stronger nexus between individual rights and
group interests, and the greater warrant the Equal Protection
Clause gives the federal courts to intervene for protection against
racial discrimination, suffice to render racial gerrymandering
claims justiciable. Even so, the individual's right is infringed
only if the racial minority
Page 478 U. S. 152
group can prove that it has "essentially been shut out of the
political process."
Ante at
478 U. S.
139.
Clearly, members of the Democratic and Republican Parties cannot
claim that they are a discrete and insular group vulnerable to
exclusion from the political process by some dominant group: these
political parties
are the dominant groups, and the Court
has offered no reason to believe that they are incapable of fending
for themselves through the political process. Indeed, there is good
reason to think that political gerrymandering is a self-limiting
enterprise.
See B. Cain, The Reapportionment Puzzle
151-159 (1984). In order to gerrymander, the legislative majority
must weaken some of its safe seats, thus exposing its own
incumbents to greater risks of defeat -- risks they may refuse to
accept past a certain point.
Id. at 154-155. Similarly, an
overambitious gerrymander can lead to disaster for the legislative
majority: because it has created more seats in which it hopes to
win relatively narrow victories, the same swing in overall voting
strength will tend to cost the legislative majority more and more
seats as the gerrymander becomes more ambitious.
Id. at
152. More generally, each major party presumably has ample weapons
at its disposal to conduct the partisan struggle that often leads
to a partisan apportionment, but also often leads to a bipartisan
one. There is no proof before us that political gerrymandering is
an evil that cannot be checked or cured by the people or by the
parties themselves. Absent such proof, I see no basis for
concluding that there is a need, let alone a constitutional basis,
for judicial intervention.
The plurality agrees that it would be unwise to "embroil the
judiciary in second-guessing what has consistently been referred to
as a political task for the legislature."
Ante at
478 U. S. 133.
Moreover, the plurality is willing to presume that elected
candidates will not ignore the interests of voters for the losing
candidate, and it correctly observes that "the power to influence
the political process is not limited to winning
Page 478 U. S. 153
elections."
Ante at
478 U. S. 132.
But these propositions support my position -- that the costs of
judicial intervention will be severe, and that political
gerrymandering simply does not cause intolerable harm to the
ability of major political groups to advance their interests.
Moreover, the new group right created by today's decision is
particularly unjustifiable in the context of the claim here, which
is founded on a supposed diminution of the
statewide
voting influence of a political group. None of the elections for
the Indiana Legislature are statewide. Voters in each district
elect their representatives from that district. To treat the loss
of candidates nominated by the party of a voter's choice as a harm
to the individual voter, when that voter cannot vote for such
candidates and is not represented by them in any direct sense,
clearly exceeds the limits of the Equal Protection Clause. On the
Court's reasoning, members of a political party in one State should
be able to challenge a congressional districting plan adopted in
any other State, on the grounds that their party is unfairly
represented in that State's congressional delegation, thus injuring
them as members of the national party.
The Court's reliance on
Gaffney v. Cummings,
412 U. S. 735
(1973), is insufficient to overcome these objections to a general
group right to equal political representation. Although
Gaffney treated a political gerrymandering claim as
justiciable, the opinion's observation that "districting inevitably
has and is intended to have substantial political consequences,"
id. at
412 U. S. 753, and
its reluctance to undertake "the impossible task of extirpating
politics from what are the essentially political processes of the
sovereign States,"
id. at
412 U. S. 754,
would equally support a holding that whatever harms political
gerrymandering may sometimes occasion should be tolerated as
inextricably associated with the legislative business of
redistricting. In addition, since
Gaffney rejected the
challenge to bipartisan gerrymandering out of hand, the Court
simply did not confront the difficulties in framing a
Page 478 U. S. 154
manageable standard for adjudicating such claims. Accordingly,
Gaffney should not bar a full consideration of those
difficulties here.
Furthermore, the Court fails to explain why a bipartisan
gerrymander -- which is what was approved in
Gaffney --
affects individuals any differently than a partisan gerrymander,
which the Court makes vulnerable to constitutional challenge today.
In
Gaffney, Connecticut, as part of a bipartisan effort,
had drawn up a plan intended to "provide a rough sort of
proportional representation,"
id. at
412 U. S. 754,
for the two major political parties. The Court declined to
invalidate this plan, which undertook "not to minimize or eliminate
the political strength of any group or party, but to recognize it,"
ibid., and suggested that
"judicial interest should be at its lowest ebb when a State
purports fairly to allocate political power to the parties in
accordance with their voting strength and, within quite tolerable
limits, succeeds in doing so."
Ibid. (citations omitted).
A bipartisan gerrymander employs the same technique, and has the
same effect on individual voters, as does a partisan gerrymander.
In each instance, groups of individuals are assigned to districts
with an eye towards promoting the ends of a political party and its
incumbent legislators. Some groups within each party will lose any
chance to elect a representative who belongs to their party,
because they have been assigned to a district in which the opposing
party holds an overwhelming advantage. Independent voters may lose
any chance to influence the outcome of elections in their district,
if one party has a sufficiently strong majority. As the plurality
acknowledges, the scheme upheld in
Gaffney tended to "deny
safe district minorities any realistic chance to elect their own
representatives."
Ante at
478 U. S. 131.
If this bipartisan arrangement between two groups of
self-interested legislators is constitutionally permissible, as I
believe and as the Court held in
Gaffney, then -- in terms
of the rights of individuals -- it should be equally permissible
for a legislative majority
Page 478 U. S. 155
to employ the same means to pursue its own interests over the
opposition of the other party.
The Court's determination to treat the claims of mainstream
political parties as justiciable thus emerges as precisely the sort
of "initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial
discretion" that
Baker v. Carr recognized as
characteristic of political questions. 369 U.S. at
369 U. S. 217.
The Court has in effect decided that it is constitutionally
acceptable for both parties to "waste" the votes of individuals
through a bipartisan gerrymander, so long as the parties themselves
are not deprived of their group voting strength to an extent that
will exceed the plurality's threshold requirement. This choice
confers greater rights on powerful political groups than on
individuals; that cannot be the meaning of the Equal Protection
Clause.
II
The standard the plurality proposes exemplifies the intractable
difficulties in deriving a judicially manageable standard from the
Equal Protection Clause for adjudicating political gerrymandering
claims. The plurality rejects any standard that would require
drawing
"district lines to come as near as possible to allocating seats
to the contending parties in proportion to what their anticipated
statewide vote will be,"
ante at
478 U. S. 130,
and states that
"unconstitutional discrimination occurs only when the electoral
system is arranged in a manner that will consistently degrade a
voter's or a group of voters' influence on the political process as
a whole."
Ante at
478 U. S. 132.
In my view, this standard will, over time, either prove
unmanageable and arbitrary or else evolve towards some loose form
of proportionality.
Cf. Shapiro, Gerrymandering,
Unfairness, and the Supreme Court, 33 UCLA L.Rev. 227, 252-256
(1985). Either outcome would be calamitous for the federal courts,
for the States, and for our two-party system.
Page 478 U. S. 156
Vote dilution analysis is far less manageable when extended to
major political parties than if confined to racial minority groups.
First, an increase in the number of competing claims to equal group
representation will make judicial review of apportionment vastly
more complex. Designing an apportionment plan that does not impair
or degrade the voting strength of several groups is more difficult
than designing a plan that does not have such an effect on one
group for the simple reason that, as the number of criteria the
plan must meet increases, the number of solutions that will satisfy
those criteria will decrease. Even where it is not impossible to
reconcile the competing claims of political, racial, and other
groups, the predictable result will be greater judicial intrusion
into the apportionment process.
Second, while membership in a racial group is an immutable
characteristic, voters can -- and often do -- move from one party
to the other or support candidates from both parties. Consequently,
the difficulty of measuring voting strength is heightened in the
case of a major political party. It is difficult enough to measure
"a voter's or a group of voters' influence on the political process
as a whole,"
ante at
478 U. S. 132,
when the group is a racial minority in a particular district or
community. When the group is a major political party, the
difficulty is greater, and the constitutional basis for intervening
far more tenuous.
Moreover, any such intervention is likely to move in the
direction of proportional representation for political parties.
This is clear by analogy to the problem that arises in racial
gerrymandering cases:
"in order to decide whether an electoral system has made it
harder for minority voters to elect the candidates they prefer, a
court must have an idea in mind of how hard it 'should' be for
minority voters to elect their preferred candidates under an
acceptable system."
Thornburg v. Gingles, ante at
478 U. S. 88
(O'CONNOR, J., concurring in judgment). Any such norm must make
some reference, even if only a loose one, to the relation between
the racial
Page 478 U. S. 157
minority group's share of the electorate and its share of the
elected representatives. In order to implement the plurality's
standard, it will thus be necessary for courts to adopt an
analogous norm, in order to assess whether the voting strength of a
political party has been "degraded" by an apportionment, either on
a statewide basis or in particular districts. Absent any such norm,
the inquiry the plurality proposes would be so standardless as to
make the adjudication of political gerrymandering claims
impossible.
Implicit in the plurality's opinion today is at least some use
of simple proportionality as the standard for measuring the normal
representational entitlements of a political party. That is why the
plurality can say that "a history (actual or projected) of
disproportionate results," together with proof of "the denial of
fair representation" and of "lack of political power," will
constitute an equal protection violation.
Ante at
478 U. S. 139.
To be sure, the plurality has qualified its use of a
standard of proportional representation in a variety of
ways so as to avoid a
requirement of proportional
representation. The question is whether these qualifications are
likely to be enduring in the face of the tremendous political
pressures that courts will confront when called on to decide
political gerrymandering claims. Because the most easily measured
indicia of political power relate solely to winning and losing
elections, there is a grave risk that the plurality's various
attempts to qualify and condition the group right the Court has
created will gradually pale in importance. What is likely to remain
is a loose form of proportionality, under which some deviations
from proportionality are permissible, but any significant,
persistent deviations from proportionality are suspect. Courts will
be forced to look for some form of "undue" disproportionality with
respect to electoral success if political gerrymandering claims are
justiciable, because otherwise they will find their decisions
turning on imponderables such as whether the legislators of one
party have fairly represented the voters of the other.
Page 478 U. S. 158
Of course, in one sense, a requirement of proportional
representation, whether loose or absolute, is judicially
manageable. If this Court were to declare that the Equal Protection
Clause required proportional representation within certain fixed
tolerances, I have no doubt that district courts would be able to
apply this edict. The flaw in such a pronouncement, however, would
be the use of the Equal Protection Clause as the vehicle for making
a fundamental policy choice that is contrary to the intent of its
Framers and to the traditions of this Republic. The political
question doctrine, as articulated in
Baker v. Carr,
rightly requires that we refrain from making such policy choices in
order to evade what would otherwise be a lack of judicially
manageable standards.
See 369 U.S. at
369 U. S.
217.
Unfortunately, a drift towards proportional representation is
apparent even in the plurality opinion. Although at times the
plurality seems to require that the political party be "essentially
. . . shut out of the political process" before a constitutional
violation will be found,
ante at
478 U. S. 139,
the plurality's explanation of the deficiencies in the District
Court's approach focuses not on access to the political process as
a whole, but entirely on statewide electoral success. Thus, the
critical inquiry appears to be into whether the complaining
political party could be expected to regain control of the state
legislature in the next few elections if backed by a majority of
voters.
Ante at
478 U. S.
135-136. As an aid in this inquiry, courts must
apparently also ask "by what percentage the statewide . . . vote"
for the complaining political party would have to increase to
control the legislature or one of its Houses.
Ibid.
Under the plurality's approach, where it is shown that, under a
challenged apportionment plan, one party will consistently fail to
gain control of the legislature even if it wins a majority of the
votes, a court would be justified in finding the "threshold
showing" met, at which point "the legislation would be examined for
valid underpinnings."
Ante at
478 U. S.
141.
Page 478 U. S. 159
It may fairly be doubted that this last step is anything more
than a formality, except perhaps in the case of bipartisan
gerrymanders that have proved unexpectedly favorable to one party.
Consequently, although the plurality criticizes JUSTICE POWELL for
effectively concluding that "disproportionate election results
alone are a sufficient effect to support a finding of a
constitutional violation,"
ante at
478 U. S. 142,
the plurality itself arrives at the conclusion that foreseeable,
disproportionate long-term election results suffice to prove a
constitutional violation.
Thus, the plurality opinion ultimately rests on a political
preference for proportionality -- not an outright claim that
proportional results are required, but a conviction that, the
greater the departure from proportionality, the more suspect an
apportionment plan becomes. This preference for proportionality is
in serious tension with essential features of state legislative
elections. Districting itself represents a middle ground between
winner-take-all statewide elections and proportional representation
for political parties. If there is a constitutional preference for
proportionality, the legitimacy of districting itself is called
into question: the voting strength of less evenly distributed
groups will invariably be diminished by districting as compared to
at-large proportional systems for electing representatives.
Moreover, one implication of the districting system is that voters
cast votes for candidates in their districts, not for a statewide
slate of legislative candidates put forward by the parties.
Consequently, efforts to determine party voting strength presuppose
a norm that does not exist -- statewide elections for
representatives along party lines.
The plurality's theory is also internally inconsistent. The
plurality recognizes that, given a normal dispersion of party
strength and winner-take-all, district-based elections, it is
likely that even a narrow statewide preference for one party will
give that party a disproportionately large majority in the
legislature.
Ante at
478 U. S. 130.
The plurality is prepared to tolerate
Page 478 U. S. 160
this effect because not to do so would spell the end of
district-based elections, or require reverse gerrymandering to
ensure greater proportionality for the minority party. But this
means that the plurality would extend greater protection to a party
that can command a majority of the statewide vote than to a party
that cannot: the explanation, once again, is that the plurality has
made a political judgment -- in this instance, that district-based
elections must be taken as a given.
Because a statewide majority for a party's candidates will
frequently result only if the "winning" party attracts independent
voters and voters from the other party, under the plurality's
approach, a great deal will turn on whether the support of these
voters is included as part of the party's voting strength. The
plurality would reserve this question, but, however it is
ultimately answered, anomalies will result. To measure a party's
voting strength by including voters who only occasionally vote for
that party's candidates is arbitrary; to ignore the role these
voters play will be to further discriminate against parties that do
not command a permanent majority of the electorate in a given
State.
I would avoid the difficulties generated by the plurality's
efforts to confine the effects of a generalized group right to
equal representation by not recognizing such a right in the first
instance. To allow district courts to strike down apportionment
plans on the basis of their prognostications as to the outcome of
future elections or future apportionments invites "findings" on
matters as to which neither judges nor anyone else can have any
confidence. Once it is conceded that "a group's electoral power is
not unconstitutionally diminished by the simple fact of an
apportionment scheme that makes winning elections more difficult,"
ante at
478 U. S. 132,
the virtual impossibility of reliably predicting how difficult it
will be to win an election in 2, or 4, or 10 years should, in my
view, weigh in favor of holding such challenges nonjusticiable.
Racial gerrymandering should remain justiciable, for the harms it
engenders
Page 478 U. S. 161
run counter to the central thrust of the Fourteenth Amendment.
But no such justification can be given for judicial intervention on
behalf of mainstream political parties, and the risks such
intervention poses to our political institutions are unacceptable.
"Political affiliation is the keystone of the political trade.
Race, ideally, is not."
United Jewish Organizations of
Williamsburgh, Inc. v. Carey, 430 U.S. at
430 U. S. 171,
n. 1 (BRENNAN, J., concurring).
JUSTICE POWELL, with whom JUSTICE STEVENS joins, concurring in
part and dissenting in part.
This case presents the question whether a state legislature
violates the Equal Protection Clause by adopting a redistricting
plan designed solely to preserve the power of the dominant
political party, when the plan follows the doctrine of "one person,
one vote" but ignores all other neutral factors relevant to the
fairness of redistricting. [
Footnote
2/1]
In answering this question, the plurality expresses the view,
with which I agree, that a partisan political gerrymander violates
the Equal Protection Clause only on proof of "both intentional
discrimination against an identifiable political group and an
actual discriminatory effect on that group."
Ante at
478 U. S. 127.
The plurality acknowledges that the record in this case supports a
finding that the challenged redistricting plan was adopted for the
purpose of discriminating against Democratic voters.
Ibid.
The plurality argues, however,
Page 478 U. S. 162
that appellees failed to establish that their voting strength
was diluted statewide despite uncontradicted proof that certain key
districts were grotesquely gerrymandered to enhance the election
prospects of Republican candidates. This argument appears to rest
solely on the ground that the legislature accomplished its
gerrymander consistent with "one person, one vote," in the sense
that the legislature designed voting districts of approximately
equal population and erected no direct barriers to Democratic
voters' exercise of the franchise. Since the essence of a
gerrymandering claim is that the members of a political party as a
group have been denied their right to "fair and effective
representation,"
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533,
377 U.S.
565 (1964), I believe that the claim cannot be tested solely
by reference to "one person, one vote." Rather, a number of other
relevant neutral factors must be considered. Because the plurality
ignores such factors and fails to enunciate standards by which to
determine whether a legislature has enacted an unconstitutional
gerrymander, I dissent.
I
The facts are exhaustively described in the District Court's
opinion, and may be briefly restated here. In 1981, the Republican
Party controlled both houses of the Indiana General Assembly, and
its candidate held the Governor's seat. Pursuant to the
requirements of the State Constitution, the General Assembly
undertook legislative redistricting based on 1980 census data. A
Conference Committee, all of whose members were Republicans, was
assigned the task of drawing district maps with the assistance of a
private computer firm. The information fed into the computer
primarily concerned the political complexion of the State's
precincts. The redistricting process was conducted in secret.
Democratic legislators were not afforded
any participation
in designing the district maps that were adopted. There were no
hearings where members of the public were invited to express
Page 478 U. S. 163
their views. The Republican Committee revealed its proposed
redistricting plan two days before the end of the legislative
session, and the Democrats hurriedly presented an alternative plan.
On the last day of the session, the Republican plan was adopted by
party line vote in both Houses of the General Assembly. The
Governor signed the plan into law.
In 1982 and 1984, elections were held under the new
redistricting plan. Prior to the 1982 election, this lawsuit was
commenced by appellees, a group of Indiana Democrats who claimed
that the plan constitutes a partisan political gerrymander designed
to disenfranchise Democratic voters in violation of the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. [
Footnote 2/2] Since trial was completed after the
1982 election, appellees relied in part on the disparity between
votes cast for Democratic legislative candidates in that election
and seats captured by Democrats. The case was heard by a
three-judge panel in the District Court for the Southern District
of Indiana. The District Court, over the dissent of Judge Pell,
made extensive findings of fact and determined that appellees had
established an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander.
603
F. Supp. 1479 (SD Ind.1984). The
Page 478 U. S. 164
Court today reverses the District Court, without concluding that
any of its findings was clearly erroneous.
II
A
Gerrymandering is "the deliberate and arbitrary distortion of
district boundaries and populations for partisan or personal
political purposes."
Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, 394 U.
S. 526,
394 U. S. 538
(1969) (Fortas, J., concurring). [
Footnote 2/3] As JUSTICE STEVENS correctly observed,
gerrymandering violates the Equal Protection Clause only when the
redistricting plan serves "no purpose other than to favor one
segment -- whether racial, ethnic, religious, economic, or
political -- that may occupy a position of strength at a particular
time, or to disadvantage a politically weak segment of the
community."
Karcher v. Daggett, 462 U.
S. 725,
462 U. S. 748
(1983) (concurring opinion).
The term "gerrymandering," however, is also used loosely to
describe the common practice of the party in power to choose the
redistricting plan that gives it an advantage at the polls. An
intent to discriminate in this sense may be present whenever
redistricting occurs.
See Gaffney v. Cummings,
412 U. S. 735,
412 U. S. 753
(1973);
Cousins v. City Council of Chicago, 466 F.2d 830,
847 (CA7) (Stevens, J., dissenting),
cert. denied, 409
U.S. 893 (1972). Moreover, since legislative
Page 478 U. S. 165
bodies rarely reflect accurately the popular voting strength of
the principal political parties, the effect of any particular
redistricting may be perceived as unfair.
See 412 U.S. at
412 U. S.
752-754. Consequently, only a sensitive and searching
inquiry can distinguish gerrymandering in the "loose" sense from
gerrymandering that amounts to unconstitutional discrimination.
Because it is difficult to develop and apply standards that will
identify the unconstitutional gerrymander, courts may seek to avoid
their responsibility to enforce the Equal Protection Clause by
finding that a claim of gerrymandering is nonjusticiable. I agree
with the Court that such a course is mistaken, and that the
allegations in this case raise a justiciable issue. [
Footnote 2/4]
Moreover, I am convinced that appropriate judicial standards can
and should be developed. Justice Fortas' definition of
unconstitutional gerrymandering properly focuses on whether the
boundaries of the voting districts have been distorted deliberately
and arbitrarily to achieve illegitimate ends.
Kirkpatrick v.
Preisler, supra, at
394 U. S. 538.
Under this definition, the merits of a gerrymandering claim must be
determined by reference to the configurations of the districts, the
observance of political subdivision lines, and other criteria that
have independent relevance to the fairness of redistricting.
See Karcher v. Daggett, supra, at
462 U. S.
755-759 (STEVENS, J., concurring). In this case, the
District Court examined the redistricting in light of such factors
and found, among other facts, that the boundaries of a number of
districts were deliberately distorted to deprive Democratic voters
of an equal opportunity to participate in the State's legislative
processes. The plurality makes no reference to any of these
findings of fact. It rejects the District Court's
Page 478 U. S. 166
ultimate conclusion with no explanation of the respects in which
appellees' proof fell short of establishing discriminatory effect.
A brief review of the Court's jurisprudence in the context of
another kind of challenge to redistricting, a claim of
malapportionment, demonstrates the pressing need for the Court to
enunciate standards to guide legislators who redistrict and judges
who determine the constitutionality of the legislative effort.
B
The Equal Protection Clause guarantees citizens that their State
will govern them impartially.
See Karcher v. Daggett,
supra, at
462 U. S. 748
(STEVENS, J., concurring). In the context of redistricting, that
guarantee is of critical importance, because the franchise provides
most citizens their only voice in the legislative process.
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U. S.
561-562,
377 U.S.
565-566. Since the contours of a voting district powerfully
may affect citizens' ability to exercise influence through their
vote, district lines should be determined in accordance with
neutral and legitimate criteria. When deciding where those lines
will fall, the State should treat its voters as standing in the
same position, regardless of their political beliefs or party
affiliation.
Chapman v. Meier, 420 U. S.
1,
420 U. S. 17
(1975);
Gaffney v. Cummings, supra, at
412 U. S.
751.
The first cases in which this Court entertained equal protection
challenges to redistricting involved allegations that state
legislatures had refused to redesign States' voting districts to
eliminate gross population disparities among those districts.
E.g., Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186
(1962);
Reynolds v. Sims, supra. The Court's decision in
Reynolds v. Sims illustrates two concepts that are vitally
important in evaluating an equal protection challenge to
redistricting. First, the Court recognized that equal protection
encompasses a guarantee of equal
representation, requiring
a State to seek to achieve, through redistricting, "fair and
effective representation for all citizens."
Reynolds v. Sims,
supra, at
Page 478 U. S. 167
377 U.S. 565-566;
see Gaffney v. Cummings, 412 U.S. at
412 U. S. 748.
The concept of "representation" necessarily applies to groups:
groups of voters elect representatives, individual voters do not.
Gross population disparities violate the mandate of equal
representation by denying voters residing in heavily populated
districts,
as a group, the opportunity to elect the number
of representatives to which their voting strength otherwise would
entitle them. While population disparities do dilute the weight of
individual votes, their discriminatory effect is felt only when
those individual votes are combined. Thus, the fact that individual
voters in heavily populated districts are free to cast their ballot
has no bearing on a claim of malapportionment.
Second, at the same time that it announced the principle of "one
person, one vote" to compel States to eliminate gross disparities
among district populations, the Court plainly recognized that
redistricting should be based on a number of neutral criteria, of
which districts of equal population was only one.
Reynolds v.
Sims identified several of the factors that should guide a
legislature engaged in redistricting. For example, the Court
observed that districts should be compact and cover contiguous
territory, precisely because the alternative, "[i]ndiscriminate
districting," would be "an open invitation to partisan
gerrymandering." 377 U.S. at
377
U.S. 578-579. Similarly, a State properly could choose to
give "independent representation" to established political
subdivisions. Adherence to community boundaries, the Court
reasoned, would both "deter the possibilities of gerrymandering"
and allow communities to have a voice in the legislature that
directly controls their local interests.
Id. at
377 U.S. 580-581.
See
also Mahan v. Howell, 410 U. S. 315,
410 U. S.
325-326 (1973). Thus,
Reynolds v. Sims
contemplated that "one person, one vote" would be only one among
several neutral factors that serve the constitutional mandate of
fair and effective representation.
Page 478 U. S. 168
See Gaffney v. Cummings, supra, at
412 U. S.
748-749. It was not itself to be the only goal of
redistricting. [
Footnote 2/5]
A standard that judges the constitutionality of a districting
plan solely by reference to the doctrine of "one person, one vote"
may cause two detrimental results. [
Footnote 2/6] First, as a perceived way to avoid
litigation, legislative bodies may place undue emphasis on
mathematical exactitude, subordinating or ignoring entirely other
criteria that bear directly on the fairness of redistricting.
See Karcher v. Daggett, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 753
(STEVENS, J., concurring);
id. at
462 U. S. 774
(WHITE, J., dissenting);
Gaffney v. Cummings, supra, at
412 U. S. 749.
Second, as this case illustrates, and as
Reynolds v. Sims
anticipated, exclusive or primary reliance on "one person, one
vote" can betray the constitutional promise of fair and effective
representation by enabling a legislature to engage intentionally in
clearly discriminatory gerrymandering.
See Wells v.
Rockefeller, 394 U. S. 542,
394 U. S. 551
(1969) (Harlan, J., dissenting).
Page 478 U. S. 169
C
In light of the foregoing principles, I believe that the
plurality's opinion is seriously flawed in several respects. First,
apparently to avoid the forceful evidence that some district lines
indisputably were designed to and did discriminate against
Democrats, the plurality describes appellees' claim as alleging
that "Democratic voters over the State as a whole, not Democratic
voters in particular districts, have been subjected to
unconstitutional discrimination."
Ante at
478 U. S. 127.
This characterization is not inconsistent with appellees' proof,
and the District Court's finding, of statewide discriminatory
effect resulting from "individual districting" that "exemplif[ies]
this discrimination."
Ibid. If Democratic voters in a
number of critical districts are the focus of unconstitutional
discrimination, as the District Court found, the
effect of
that discrimination will be felt over the State as a whole.
The plurality also erroneously characterizes the harm members of
the losing party suffer as a group when they are deprived, through
deliberate and arbitrary distortion of district boundaries, of the
opportunity to elect representatives of their choosing. [
Footnote 2/7] It may be, as the plurality
suggests, that
Page 478 U. S. 170
representatives will not "entirely ignore the interests" of
opposition voters.
Ante at
478 U. S. 132.
But it defies political reality to suppose that members of a losing
party have as much political influence over state government as do
members of the victorious party. Even the most conscientious state
legislators do not disregard opportunities to reward persons or
groups who were active supporters in their election campaigns.
Similarly, no one doubts that partisan considerations play a major
role in the passage of legislation and the appointment of state
officers. Not surprisingly, therefore, the District Court expressly
found that "[c]ontrol of the General Assembly is crucial" to
members of the major political parties in Indiana. 603 F. Supp. at
1483. [
Footnote 2/8] In light of
those findings, I cannot accept the plurality's apparent conclusion
that loss of this "crucial" position is constitutionally
insignificant as long as the losers are not "entirely ignored" by
the winners.
The plurality relies almost exclusively on the "one person, one
vote" standard to reject appellees' convincing proof that the
redistricting plan had a seriously discriminatory effect on their
voting strength in particular districts. The plurality properly
describes the claim in this case as a denial of fair and effective
"representation,"
ante at
478 U. S. 124,
but it does not provide any explanation of how complying with "one
person, one
Page 478 U. S. 171
vote" deters or identifies a gerrymander that unconstitutionally
discriminates against a cognizable group of voters. While that
standard affords some protection to the voting rights of
individuals, "it protects groups only indirectly at best,"
Karcher v. Daggett, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S. 752
(STEVENS, J., concurring), even when the group's identity is
determined solely by reference to the fact that its members reside
in a particular voting district. "One person, one vote" alone does
not protect the voting rights of a group made up of persons
affiliated with a particular political party who seek to achieve
representation through their combined voting strength. Thus, the
facts that the legislature permitted each Democratic voter to cast
his or her one vote, erected no direct barriers to Democratic
voters' exercise of the franchise, and drew districts of equal
population, are irrelevant to a claim that district lines were
drawn for the purpose and with the effect of substantially debasing
the strength of votes cast by Democrats as a group. [
Footnote 2/9]
The final and most basic flaw in the plurality's opinion is its
failure to enunciate any standard that affords guidance to
legislatures and courts. [
Footnote
2/10] Legislators and judges are left to
Page 478 U. S. 172
wonder whether compliance with "one person, one vote" completely
insulates a partisan gerrymander from constitutional scrutiny, or
whether a fairer but as yet undefined standard applies. The failure
to articulate clear doctrine in this area
Page 478 U. S. 173
places the plurality in the curious position of inviting further
litigation even as it appears to signal the "constitutional green
light" [
Footnote 2/11] to
would-be gerrymanderers.
III
In
Karcher v. Daggett, JUSTICE STEVENS, echoing the
decision in
Reynolds v. Sims, described factors that I
believe properly should guide both legislators who redistrict and
judges who test redistricting plans against constitutional
challenges. 462 U.S. at
462 U. S.
753-761. The most important of these factors are the
shapes of voting districts and adherence to established political
subdivision boundaries. [
Footnote
2/12] Other relevant considerations include the nature of the
legislative procedures by which the apportionment law was adopted
and legislative history reflecting contemporaneous legislative
goals. To make out a case of unconstitutional partisan
gerrymandering, the plaintiff should be required to offer proof
concerning these factors, which bear directly on the fairness of a
redistricting plan, as well as evidence concerning population
disparities and statistics tending to show vote dilution. No one
factor should be dispositive. [
Footnote 2/13]
Page 478 U. S. 174
In this case, appellees offered convincing proof of the ease
with which mapmakers, consistent with the "one person, one vote"
standard, may design a districting plan that purposefully
discriminates against political opponents as well as racial
minorities. Computer technology now enables gerrymanderers to
achieve their purpose while adhering perfectly to the requirement
that districts be of equal population. Relying on the factors
correctly described by JUSTICE STEVENS in
Karcher v.
Daggett, the District Court carefully reviewed appellees'
evidence and found that the redistricting law was intended to, and
did, unconstitutionally discriminate against Democrats as a group.
We have held that a district court's ultimate determination that a
redistricting plan was "being maintained for discriminatory
purposes," as well as its "subsidiary findings of fact," may not be
set aside by a reviewing court unless they are clearly erroneous.
Rogers v. Lodge, 458 U. S. 613,
458 U. S.
622-623 (1982);
see, e.g., White v. Regester,
412 U. S. 755,
412 U. S.
769-770 (1973). The plurality ignores these precedents.
[
Footnote 2/14] The plurality
also disregards the various factors discussed by the District Court
as adequate indicia of unconstitutional gerrymandering.
Page 478 U. S. 175
A
A court should look first to the legislative process by which
the challenged plan was adopted. Here, the District Court found
that the procedures used in redistricting Indiana were carefully
designed to exclude Democrats from participating in the legislative
process. In February, 1981, both Houses of the General Assembly
passed reapportionment bills with no substantive content, and
referred them to the other chamber, where conflicting amendments
were made. The purpose of this process was to send "vehicle bills"
to a Conference Committee whose task was to apportion
representation. Four conferees and four advisers served on the
Committee. The conferees, all Republicans, were responsible for
designing the voting districts, and were entitled to vote on the
result of their own efforts. The advisers, Democrats, were excluded
from the mapmaking process and were given no Committee vote. 603 F.
Supp. at 1483.
The legislative process consisted of nothing more than the
majority party's private application of computer technology to
mapmaking. The Republican State Committee engaged the services of a
computer firm to aid the conferees in their task.
Id. at
1483-1484. According to the Conference Committee Chairman, the only
data used in the computer program were precinct population, race of
precinct citizens, precinct political complexion, and statewide
party voting trends. Access to the mapmaking process was strictly
limited. No member of the Democratic Party and no member of the
public was provided with any of the information used in or
generated by the computer program. When questioned about the lack
of minority party participation in the redistricting process, the
Chairman of the Conference Committee stated that the Democrats
would "have the privilege to offer a minority map. But I will
advise you in advance that it will not be accepted."
Id.
at 1484.
Page 478 U. S. 176
Republicans promised to hold public hearings on redistricting.
No hearing was held during the mapmaking process, the only time
during which voters' views could be expected to influence their
legislators.
Ibid. Two days before the end of the General
Assembly's regular session, during the first and only public
hearing on reapportionment, the Conference Committee revealed for
the first time the result of its mapmaking effort. This timing gave
the Democrats but 40 hours in which to review the districting of
more than 4,000 precincts.
Ibid. On the last day of the
session, April 30, 1981, the Conference Committee report was
introduced for a vote and was adopted by party line vote in both
Houses of the General Assembly. [
Footnote 2/15]
Ibid.
B
Next, the District Court found that the maps "conspicuously
ignore[d] traditional political subdivisions, with no concern for
any adherence to principles of community interest."
Id. at
1493. The court carefully described how the mapmakers carved up
counties, cities, and even townships in their effort to draw lines
beneficial to the majority party. Many districts meander through
several counties, picking up a number of townships from each.
[
Footnote 2/16] The District
Court explained why this failure to honor county boundaries could
be expected to have a detrimental impact on citizens' exercise of
their vote. In Indiana, the county government is the seat of local
affairs.
Id. at 1494. The redistricting dissects counties
into strange shapes lacking in common interests, on one occasion
even placing the seat of one county in a voting district
Page 478 U. S. 177
composed of townships from other counties.
Id. at 1487;
see House Districts 45, 46,
infra. Under these
conditions, the District Court expressly found that "the potential
for voter disillusion and nonparticipation is great," as voters are
forced to focus their political activities in artificial electoral
units. 603 F. Supp. at 1494. Intelligent voters, regardless of
party affiliation, resent this sort of political manipulation of
the electorate for no public purpose.
Deposition testimony of the Chairman of the Conference Committee
revealed that the mapmakers gave no consideration to the interests
of communities. In the Chairman's view, the concept of honoring
community interests meant only that mapmakers should refuse to
divide a small, suburban community. The shapes of the voting
districts and the manner in which the districts divide established
communities, from the county to the township level, illustrate that
community interests were ignored by appellants. As the District
Court observed, for example,
"it is difficult to conceive the interests shared by blacks in
Washington Township and white suburbanites in Hamilton and Boone
Counties, or the shared interest of Allen and Noble County farmers
with residents of downtown Fort Wayne."
Id. at 1487.
C
In addition to the foregoing findings that apply to both the
House and Senate plans, the District Court also noted the
substantial evidence that appellants were motivated solely by
partisan considerations.
Id. at 1484. There is no evidence
that the public interest in a fair electoral process was given any
consideration by appellants. Indeed, as noted above, the mapmakers'
partisan goals were made explicitly clear by contemporaneous
statements of Republican leaders who openly acknowledged that their
goal was to disadvantage Democratic voters. As one Republican House
member concisely put it, "[t]he name of the game is to keep
Page 478 U. S. 178
us in power." [
Footnote 2/17]
NAACP Plaintiffs' Exhibit 232 (Indianapolis Star, Mar. 22, 1981,
section 2, p. 3). When the plan was completed, Republican leaders
announced that the House map was designed to yield 56 "safe"
Republican seats and 30 Democratic seats, with the remainder being
"tossups." NAACP Plaintiffs' Exhibit 242 (Post-Tribune, Gary, Ind.,
Apr. 29, 1981, p. 1). Republicans expected that their Senate map
would regularly produce 30 Republican seats and 8 to 10 Democratic
seats, so that Republicans would maintain their grip on the Senate
even if Democrats won the remaining seats. NAACP Plaintiffs'
Exhibit 241 (Post-Tribune, Gary, Ind., Apr. 29, 1981, p. 1). In
short, the record unequivocally demonstrates that, in 1981, the
Republican-dominated General Assembly deliberately sought to design
a redistricting plan under which members of the Democratic Party
would be deprived of a fair opportunity to win control of the
General Assembly at least until 1991, the date of the next
redistricting.
IV
A
I turn now to the District Court's findings with respect
particularly to the gerrymandering of the House districts. The
court found that the plan contained voting districts whose
irrational shapes called for justification.
E.g., House
Districts 20, 22, 25, 45, 46, 48, 62, 66, 70, 73. The findings
concerning the district configurations reflect the panel's
familiarity with Indiana geography and the particular
characteristics of the State's political subdivisions. As the
District Court noted, the voter confusion generated by irrational
district
Page 478 U. S. 179
boundaries is exacerbated in this case by the fact that the
lines in the House plan were drawn independently of those in the
Senate plan. 603 F. Supp. at 1484-1485. When the Senate voting
districts are overlaid on the House districts, the potential for
voter confusion becomes readily apparent as lines and districts
intersect in a crazy quilt. [
Footnote
2/18]
The District Court carefully considered the multimember
districts contained in the House plan and found that they were
intentionally employed to minimize Democratic voting power. This
Court has expressly recognized that
"[a] districting plan may create multimember districts perfectly
acceptable under equal population standards, but invidiously
discriminatory because they are employed 'to minimize or cancel out
the voting strength of racial or political elements of the voting
population.'"
Gaffney v. Cummings, 412 U.S. at
412 U. S. 751
(quoting
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U.
S. 433,
379 U. S. 439
(1965)). [
Footnote 2/19] In this
case, invidious purpose may be inferred from the mapmakers'
selection of areas to be divided into multimember districts. These
districts appear in some areas where they had been used previously,
and not in others, in some urban areas, and not in others, and in
some areas where
Page 478 U. S. 180
their use required combining rural townships with urban areas
from another county. [
Footnote
2/20] The only discernible pattern is the appearance of these
districts in areas where their winner-take-all aspects can best be
employed to debase Democratic voting strength. The District Court
determined that the multimember districts diluted Democratic voting
strength by "stacking" Democrats into districts "where their
majority would be overwhelming" and by fragmenting populations of
Democratic voters among other districts where their voting strength
would be reduced. 603 F. Supp. at 1488-1489, 1494. For example, the
mapmakers split Fort Wayne, a city with a demonstrated tendency to
vote for Democratic candidates, and associated each of the halves
with areas from outlying counties whose residents had a pattern of
voting for Republican candidates.
Id. at 1488, 1494;
see House Districts 19, 20. Similarly, the redistricting
of Marion County presents a clear example of dilution of Democrats'
voting strength through the use of multimember districts. Though
population figures entitled the county to elect exactly 14 House
members, the mapmakers decided to tack on portions of two
neighboring counties in order artificially to create a population
base entitled to elect 15 representatives. Then they carved that
artificial geographical unit into five three-member districts whose
irregular shapes were designed to fence Democrats into one heavily
Democratic district and scatter pockets of Democratic strength
among the other four districts.
Id. at 1487, 1489;
see House Districts 48, 49, 50, 51, 52. [
Footnote 2/21]
Page 478 U. S. 181
Appellees further demonstrated through a statistical showing
that the House plan debased the effectiveness of their votes. In
1982, all 100 House seats were up for election.
Page 478 U. S. 182
Democratic candidates received about 51.9 percent of the vote,
and Republican candidates received about 48.1 percent. Forty-three
Democratic representatives were elected; 57 Republicans were
elected. [
Footnote 2/22]
Appellees offered startling statistics with respect to House
results in Marion and Allen Counties, two areas in which
multimember districts were used. In these counties, Democratic
candidates earned 46.3 percent of the vote, but won only 3 of 21
House seats. As the District Court observed, "such a disparity
speaks for itself."
Id. at 1489. [
Footnote 2/23]
B
Since half of the Senate membership is up for election every two
years, the only election results under the challenged plan
available at trial related to 25 of the 50 Senate seats. Those
results showed that, of the seats up for election in 1982,
Democrats were elected to 13 seats and Republicans to 12.
Democratic candidates earned about 53.1 percent of the vote, and
Republicans received about 46.9 percent. At trial, it was
appellees' contention that most of the Senate seats won by
Democrats in 1982 were "safe" Democratic seats, so that their
party's success at the polls in that year was fully consistent with
the statewide Republican gerrymander. This contention is borne out
by the results of the 1984 Senate election. In that election,
Democratic candidates received 42.3 percent of the vote, and
Republicans 57.7
Page 478 U. S. 183
percent. Yet, of the 25 Senate positions up for election, only 7
were captured by Democrats. [
Footnote
2/24]
Page 478 U. S. 184
C
The District Court found, and I agree, that appellants failed to
justify the discriminatory impact of the plan by showing that the
plan had a rational basis in permissible neutral criteria.
Appellants' primary justification was that the plan comports with
the principle of "one person, one vote." Their plan did adhere to
that objective, with population deviations between House districts
of 1.05 percent and between Senate districts of 1.15 percent. But
reliance on "one person, one vote" does not sufficiently explain or
justify the discrimination the plan inflicted on Democratic voters
as a group. The District Court expressly found that the irregular
district shapes could not be justified on the basis of population
distribution.
Id. at 1494. Nor does adherence to "one
person, one vote" excuse the mapmakers' failure to honor
established political or community boundaries. It does not excuse
the irrational use of multimember districts, with their devastating
impact on the voting strength of Democrats. The only other
justification offered by appellants, for which the District Court
found some support as a contemporaneous goal, was that the
mapmakers sought to maintain "the black representation in the
General Assembly that existed prior to the new districting plan."
But the court further determined that the impact of the
redistricting fell most harshly on black voters, who predominantly
are Democrats.
Id. at 1488, 1489-1490. None of these
critical findings was found by the plurality today to be clearly
erroneous.
V
In conclusion, I want to make clear the limits of the standard
that I believe the Equal Protection Clause imposes on legislators
engaged in redistricting. Traditionally, the determination of
electoral districts within a State has been a matter left to the
legislative branch of the state government. Apart from the doctrine
of separation of powers and the federal system prescribed by the
Constitution, federal
Page 478 U. S. 185
judges are ill-equipped generally to review legislative
decisions respecting redistricting. As the Court's opinion makes
clear, however, our precedents hold that a colorable claim of
discriminatory gerrymandering presents a justiciable controversy
under the Equal Protection Clause. Federal courts, in exercising
their duty to adjudicate such claims, should impose a heavy burden
of proof on those who allege that a redistricting plan violates the
Constitution. In light of
Baker v. Carr, Reynolds v. Sims,
and their progeny, including such comparatively recent decisions as
Gaffney v. Cummings, this case presents a paradigm example
of unconstitutional discrimination against the members of a
political party that happened to be out of power. The well-grounded
findings of the District Court to this effect have not been, and I
believe cannot be, held clearly erroneous.
Accordingly, I would affirm the judgment of the District Court.
[
Footnote 2/25]
[Maps of the Indiana House and Senate Districts
omitted.]
[
Footnote 2/1]
This opinion uses the term "redistricting" to refer to the
process by which state legislators draw the boundaries of voting
districts. The terms "redistricting," "apportionment," and
"reapportionment" frequently are used interchangeably. Backstrom,
Robins, & Eller, Issues in Gerrymandering: An Exploratory
Measure of Partisan Gerrymandering Applied to Minnesota, 62
Minn.L.Rev. 1121, 1121, n. 1 (1978); Grofman, Criteria for
Districting: A Social Science Perspective, 33 UCLA L.Rev. 77, 78,
n. 6 (1985). Technically, the words "apportionment" and
"reapportionment" apply to the "allocation of a finite number of
representatives among a fixed number of preestablished areas,"
while "districting" and "redistricting" refer to the drawing of
district lines. Backstrom, Robins, & Eller,
supra at
1121, n. 1;
see Grofman,
supra, at 78, n. 6.
[
Footnote 2/2]
In the District Court, appellees' lawsuit was consolidated with
a suit brought by the Indiana NAACP. The plaintiffs in the NAACP
suit argued that the redistricting intentionally fragmented
concentrations of black voters in violation of the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Amendments, and of § 2 of the Voting Rights Act of
1965, 42 U.S.C. § 1973. The District Court determined that the
plan discriminated against black voters, not because of their race,
but because blacks had a demonstrated and overwhelming tendency to
vote as a bloc for Democratic candidates. Indeed, the District
Court explicitly found that the "disadvantaging effect of the
plan's multi-member districts falls particularly hard and harsh
upon black voters in the state."
603
F. Supp. 1479, 1488 (SD Ind.1984). Rather than taking a
cross-appeal challenging the District Court's rejection of their
constitutional and statutory claims, the NAACP plaintiffs have
filed a brief in this Court urging affirmance of the District
Court's judgment that the plan unconstitutionally discriminates
against Democratic voters as a group and against blacks as members
of that group.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Webster's Third New International Dictionary (unabridged
ed.1961) defines "gerrymander" as
"to divide (a territorial unit) into election districts in an
unnatural and unfair way with the purpose of giving one political
party an electoral majority in a large number of districts while
concentrating the voting strength of the opposition in as few
districts as possible."
The term "gerrymander" was coined by combining the last name of
Elbridge Gerry with the word "salamander" in order to describe
the
"fancied resemblance to a salamander . . . of the irregularly
shaped outline of an election district in northeastern
Massachusetts that had been formed for partisan purposes in 1812
during Gerry's governorship"
of that State.
Ibid. Though many of the voting
districts appearing in the plans challenged here have bizarre
shapes, House District 66 perhaps most closely resembles a
salamander.
See the redistricting maps appended to this
opinion. [Omitted.] These maps were reproduced from trial exhibits
provided by the parties.
[
Footnote 2/4]
As the Court properly explains, our prior decisions make clear
that an equal protection challenge to redistricting does not
present a nonjusticiable political question.
See Baker v.
Carr, 369 U. S. 186
(1962);
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533 (1964);
Gaffney v. Cummings,
412 U. S. 735
(1973). Accordingly, I join Part II of JUSTICE WHITE's opinion.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The doctrine of "one person, one vote" originally was regarded
as a means to prevent discriminatory gerrymandering, since
"opportunities for gerrymandering are greatest when there is
freedom to construct unequally populated districts."
Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, 394 U. S. 526,
394 U. S. 534,
n. 4 (1969). Advances in computer technology achieved since the
doctrine was announced have drastically reduced its deterrent value
by permitting political cartographers to draw districts of equal
population that intentionally discriminate against cognizable
groups of voters.
See Karcher v. Daggett, 462 U.
S. 725,
462 U. S. 752,
n. 10 (1983) (STEVENS, J., concurring). For "one person, one vote"
to serve its intended purpose of implementing the constitutional
mandate of fair and effective representation, therefore,
consideration also must be given to other neutral factors.
[
Footnote 2/6]
In decisions concerning congressional redistricting, the Court
has focused its attention almost exclusively on whether a
challenged plan satisfies "one person, one vote."
See Karcher
v. Daggett, supra; White v. Weiser, 412 U.
S. 783 (1973);
Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, supra.
In cases involving state legislative redistricting, such as the
case before us today, the Court has refused to limit a legislature
to the single goal of precise population equality.
Gaffney v.
Cummings, 412 U.S. at
412 U. S. 745;
Mahan v. Howell, 410 U.
S. 315,
410 U. S.
322-325 (1973).
[
Footnote 2/7]
The plurality correctly concludes that a redistricting plan is
not unconstitutional merely because the plan makes it more
difficult for a group of voters to elect the candidate of its
choice or merely because the plan does not provide proportional
representation.
Ante at
478 U. S. 132.
While the "Equal Protection Clause confers a substantive right to
participate in elections on an equal basis with other qualified
voters,"
Mobile v. Bolden, 446 U. S.
55.
446 U. S. 77
(1980) (plurality opinion), the Constitution does not guarantee
proportional representation or protect any group from defeat at the
polls,
id. at
446 U. S. 77-80;
see White v. Regester, 412 U. S. 755,
412 U. S.
765-766 (1973). But the plurality leaps from that
conclusion to the assumption that
"[a]n individual or a group of individuals who votes for a
losing candidate is usually deemed to be adequately represented by
the winning candidate, and to have as much opportunity to influence
that candidate as other voters in the district."
Ante at
478 U. S. 132.
Thus, the plurality apparently believes that effects on election
results are of little import, as long as the losers have some
access to their representatives. Though effects on election results
do not suffice to establish an unconstitutional gerrymander, they
certainly are relevant to such a claim, and they may suffice to
show that the claimants have been injured by the redistricting they
challenge.
[
Footnote 2/8]
The District Court found:
"Control of the General Assembly is crucial to a political party
for a number of reasons. The majority party elects the Speaker of
the House, a person who wields considerable power in the assigning
of bills to committees, the conduct of the actual legislative
sessions, and is empowered, under legislative rules, to prevent
bills from reaching the floor for debate or vote. Similarly, the
majority party elects floor leaders in both houses who control the
flow of legislation, the assignment of members to committees, and
the appointment of committee chairmen. All of these powers are
important to the achievement of a party's legislative goals. There
is little doubt that the minority party plays a less substantial
role in the drafting and enactment of legislation."
603 F. Supp. at 1483.
[
Footnote 2/9]
As was said in the context of a constitutional challenge by
black voters to an at-large voting scheme,
"[t]he absence of official obstacles to registration, voting,
and running for office heretofore has never been deemed to insulate
an electoral system"
from constitutional attack.
Mobile v. Bolden, supra, at
446 U. S. 102
(WHITE, J., dissenting).
[
Footnote 2/10]
The plurality describes its standard as requiring a "threshold"
showing that the
"electoral system is arranged in a manner that will consistently
degrade a voter's or a group of voters' influence in the political
process as a whole."
Ante at
478 U. S. 132;
see ante at
478 U. S. 134,
n. 14. Plaintiffs apparently can meet the plurality's "threshold"
only after a number of elections have been held under the
challenged plan.
Ante at
478 U. S.
135-136. At one point, the plurality acknowledges that
this formulation is "somewhat different" from any standard we have
previously used to test an electoral plan against an equal
protection challenge,
ante at
478 U. S. 132,
and also takes pains to say that its opinion here does not suggest
any "alteration of the standards developed" for evaluating racial
challenges,
ante at
478 U. S. 132,
n. 13;
see ante at
478 U. S. 134,
n. 14. Curiously, the plurality then goes on to claim that its
standard is consistent with that used when a racial group
challenges an electoral scheme,
ante at
478 U. S.
139-140, and with our "equal protection cases
generally,"
ante at
478 U. S. 141.
This claim is simply incorrect.
Our cases have construed the Equal Protection Clause to require
proof of intentional discrimination, placing the burden on
plaintiffs to trace the "
invidious quality of a law claimed to
be racially discriminatory . . . to a racially discriminatory
purpose.'" Rogers v. Lodge, 458 U.
S. 613, 458 U. S. 616
(1982), quoting Washington v. Davis, 426 U.
S. 229, 426 U. S. 240
(1976). In none of those cases was the Court willing to assume
discriminatory intent, as the plurality suggests today is the
proper course. Ante at 478 U. S. 141.
While the plurality correctly observes that our prior decisions
have held that disproportionate election results alone do not
violate the Constitution, it erroneously suggests that those
holdings flowed solely from the "perception that the power to
influence the political process is not limited to winning
elections." Ante at 478 U. S.
131-132. The plurality wholly ignores the basic problem
underlying all of those prior decisions, namely, that the
plaintiffs came into court with no direct proof of discriminatory
intent. In those cases, the Court concluded that proof of
discriminatory effect, including disproportionate election results,
if serious enough, could give rise to an inference of purposeful
discrimination. See Rogers v. Lodge, supra, at
458 U. S. 618.
As JUSTICE WHITE has explained, the Court's decisions in both
White v. Regester, 412 U. S. 755
(1973), and Whitcomb v. Chavis, 403 U.
S. 124 (1971), rested on the proposition that the
requisite "invidious discriminatory purpose" can be inferred from
proof of "objective factors" concerning discriminatory effect.
Mobile v. Bolden, 446 U.S. at 446 U. S. 95;
see id. at 446 U. S. 94-97,
446 U. S.
102-103 (dissenting opinion); see also White v.
Regester, supra, at 412 U. S. 765
(multimember districts are unconstitutional where "used invidiously
to cancel out" racial groups' voting strength). I cannot agree, as
the plurality suggests, that a standard requiring proof of
"heightened effect," where invidious intent has been established
directly, has support in any of our cases, or that an equal
protection violation can be established "only where a history
(actual or projected) of disproportionate results appears."
Ante at 478 U. S. 139.
If a racial minority established that the legislature adopted a
redistricting law for no purpose other than to disadvantage that
group, the plurality's new and erroneous standard would require
plaintiffs to wait for the results of several elections, creating a
history of discriminatory effect, before they can challenge the law
in court. Ante at
478 U. S. 135-136.
[
Footnote 2/11]
Edwards, The Gerrymander and "One Man, One Vote," 46
N.Y.U.L.Rev. 879, 880 (1971).
[
Footnote 2/12]
In some cases, proof of grotesque district shapes may, without
more, provide convincing proof of unconstitutional gerrymandering.
In addition to the maps appended to this opinion [omitted],
see the redistricting maps appended to the Court's
opinions in
Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U.
S. 339,
364 U. S. 348
(1960), and in
Karcher v. Daggett, 462 U.S. at
462 U. S.
744.
[
Footnote 2/13]
Groups may consistently fail to elect representatives under a
perfectly neutral election scheme. Thus, a test that turns only on
election results, as the plurality's standard apparently does,
likely would identify an unconstitutional gerrymander where none
existed. The test that I would adopt requires consideration of all
the circumstances surrounding the plan, including factors initially
identified in
Reynolds v. Sims, to determine if a
constitutional violation has occurred. Since democracy can work
well and fairly only when citizens have an opportunity to become
familiar with their voting districts, where they must focus their
political activities, district boundaries must have some
rationality. Confusion inevitably follows, as clearly will be the
case in Indiana, when a citizen finds himself or herself forced to
associate with several artificial communities, depending on which
office is on the ballot. Thus, irrational lines themselves affect
the ability of all voters to exercise their political influence,
with disproportionate election results illustrating the effect of a
plan that was deliberately designed to serve no purpose other than
to minimize the voting strength of a disfavored group.
[
Footnote 2/14]
The plurality ignores the "clearly erroneous" standard of Rule
52(a), by saying that it has not rejected any of the District
Court's findings of fact, but has
"merely . . . disregarded those that were irrelevant in this
case and held insufficient those that inadequately supported the
District Court's ultimate legal conclusions."
Ante at
478 U. S. 142,
n. 20. In a gerrymandering case, the facts as to how, where, and
why the legislature drew the district boundaries are at the heart
of the equal protection violation. Beyond stating that appellees'
statistical proof failed to satisfy its proposed threshold, the
plurality makes no effort to explain its flat assertions that the
District Court's careful findings were "irrelevant" or
"insufficient."
[
Footnote 2/15]
Presumably as a result of the haste with which the redistricting
law was pushed through the General Assembly, parts of the State
were "wholly omitted in the 1981 legislation." 603 F. Supp. at
1484. In the 1982 legislative session, therefore, amendments were
passed to assign the omitted areas to voting districts.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 2/16]
E.g., House Districts 20, 22, 25, 28, 42, 45, 46, 55,
57, 62, 66, 70, 73, 74; Senate Districts 7, 24, 37, 39, 45, 47.
See the redistricting maps appended to this opinion
[omitted].
[
Footnote 2/17]
Evidence of partisan sparring during the redistricting process,
of course, is not sufficient to establish an equal protection
violation or to show that the legislature pursued no legitimate
objectives in adopting the plan. But such evidence is probative of
contemporaneous legislative goals, adding support to the objective
facts showing that the legislature adopted the plan for the sole
purpose of disadvantaging members of the political party that
happened to be out of power.
[
Footnote 2/18]
Since the Indiana House of Representatives has 100 members and
the Senate has 50, the mapmakers readily could have designed a
"nested" plan, that is, a plan that included "two House districts
within one Senate district." 603 F. Supp. at 1484-1485. By
permitting voters readily to identify their voting districts and
corresponding representatives, a nested plan can be expected to
foster voter participation.
See Grofman, 33 UCLA L.Rev. at
88, 92. Instead, as the District Court observed, the mapmakers drew
House districts that were "not at all relevant to the Senate
districts." 603 F. Supp. at 1484.
[
Footnote 2/19]
In the context of racial gerrymandering claims, the Court has
refused to adopt a
per se rule barring the use of
multimember districts.
White v. Regester, 412 U.S. at
412 U. S. 765.
But the Court has repeatedly recognized that the characteristics of
multimember districts, namely, their tendency to submerge the
voting strength of the minority by allowing the majority to capture
all of the district's assigned seats, make them a ready means for
legislative discrimination against racial groups or political
opponents.
E.g., Rogers v. Lodge, 458 U.S. at
458 U. S.
616.
[
Footnote 2/20]
The multimember districts are House Districts 7, 9, 10, 11, 12,
14, 15, 19, 20, 31, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 75.
[
Footnote 2/21]
The District Court found that the multimember districts employed
in Marion County were "particularly suspect with respect to
compactness." 603 F. Supp. at 1487. Of all the districts in the
challenged plan, the court determined that House District 48
"presents the most grievous example of the political cartographer's
handiwork in this case."
Ibid. That district "forms the
letter
C' around the central city of Indianapolis" and
"includes portions of the urban southwest side of the city, the
airport and suburban area around Ben Davis High School on the west
side, and the Meridian Hills area at the northern part of the
county."
Ibid. The court expressly determined that, even though
House District 48 satisfies "one person, one vote," there was
"simply no conceivable justification for this kind of district."
Ibid.
The following map, taken from an exhibit provided by the
parties, shows this grotesque gerrymandering. The legislature first
proceeded to disregard Marion County's boundary lines, which
essentially form a square, and then carved the area it created into
oddly shaped multimember districts.
[Map omitted.]
The District Court also noted the discriminatory purpose served
by the Marion County House Districts, including District 48:
"[T]he powerful Marion County delegation forced neighboring
counties to cede turf to permit a preservation of the multimember
districts which had consistently returned Republicans to the
Statehouse."
Id. at 1487, n. 1. Moreover, as appellees' statistical
showing of vote dilution plainly demonstrates, these gerrymandered
districts had a discriminatory impact on the votes of Democrats as
a group.
[
Footnote 2/22]
In the 1984 election, Democratic candidates earned approximately
44 percent of the vote, and Republicans earned approximately 56
percent. Thirty-nine Democrats were elected to the House, and 61
Republicans were elected. The figures for the 1984 elections cited
in this opinion were provided by the Elections Research Center,
Washington, D.C. A supplemental statement filed by appellants in
the District Court following trial also quoted some of the 1984
election results, including the fact that, in 1984, the Democratic
candidate for Governor won 48 percent of the vote.
[
Footnote 2/23]
The 1984 House election in the Marion and Allen County House
districts reflected a similar disparity, when Republicans again
captured 18 of the 21 House seats and the Democrats 3, despite the
fact that Democratic candidates earned approximately 38 percent of
the vote in these counties.
[
Footnote 2/24]
The District Court's discussion of district shapes focused
primarily on the House plan. As the following map of the Senate
districts in the Marion County area illustrates, the Senate plan
also contains districts with unusual shapes. Although the
population of Marion County, whose boundary lines form a square,
was entitled to elect exactly seven Senators, 603 F. Supp. at 1487,
n. 1, the mapmakers ignored both that population figure and the
county boundaries, and created eight wholly irrational voting
districts. As one Democratic voter remarked when the Senate plan
was unveiled:
"People who live near the [district line separating Senate
districts 33 and 34] are going to need an Indian guide and a
compass to figure out which district they're in."
NAACP Plaintiffs' Exhibit 252 (Indianapolis Star, May 10, 1981,
section 2, p. 3).
[Map omitted.]
[
Footnote 2/25]
As is evident from the several opinions filed today, there is no
"Court" for a standard that properly should be applied in
determining whether a challenged redistricting plan is an
unconstitutional partisan political gerrymander. The standard
proposed by the plurality is explicitly rejected by two Justices,
and three Justices also have expressed the view that the
plurality's standard will "prove unmanageable and arbitrary."
Ante at
478 U. S. 155
(O'CONNOR, J., joined by BURGER, C.J., and REHNQUIST, J.,
concurring in judgment).