New York Times (By Adam Liptak): The Supreme Court on Friday rejected elections maps drawn by a federal court in Texas that had favored Democratic candidates there.
The unanimous decision said that redistricting is primarily a job for elected state officials and that the lower court had not paid enough deference to maps drawn by the State Legislature, which is controlled by Republicans. The justices sent the case back to the lower court, extending the uncertainty surrounding this major voting-rights case.
The new maps to be drawn by the lower court could play a role in determining control of the House of Representatives. Democrats need a net gain of 25 seats to take back the House from Republican control, and both parties are fighting for every advantage in the battle for the House majority. Experts in election administration said the new maps could influence outcomes in perhaps three Texas districts.
“A district court should take guidance from the state’s recently enacted plan in drafting an interim plan,” the Supreme Court’s unsigned decision said. “That plan reflects the state’s policy judgments on where to place new districts and how to shift existing ones in response to massive population growth.”
The changes to the electoral maps were required because Texas grew by more than four million people in the last decade, with about 65 percent of that growth coming in the Hispanic population. The growth entitled the state to four additional House seats. In rejecting significant aspects of the Legislature’s maps, the lower court said it had tried to ensure that Hispanic voters had adequate opportunities to elect candidates of their choice, adding that political considerations had played no role.
Justice Clarence Thomas concurred only in the result and said he would have instructed the elections to proceed under the Legislature’s maps.
In a second development on Friday, the justices blocked a decision of a federal court in West Virginia in another election case while the justices consider an appeal. The West Virginia case concerns whether that state’s three House districts must be absolutely equal in population.
In the Texas case, the justices acted just 11 days after hearing arguments. Primaries in Texas had already been moved back to April. For those primaries to proceed, officials there said, an answer from the courts was needed by Feb. 1.
“This is a big win for Texas, and will require the drawing of districts much more likely to favor Texas’s interim plan,” Richard L. Hasen, an election law expert at the University of California, Irvine, said in an e-mail. The new maps, Professor Hasen said, would “favor Republicans over Democrats” as compared with the lower court’s original maps.
Greg Abbott, the attorney general of Texas, expressed satisfaction with the decision.
“The Supreme Court confirmed that the San Antonio court drew illegal maps, without regard for the policy decisions of elected leaders,” Mr. Abbott said in a statement.
State Representative Trey Martinez Fischer, a Democrat and the chairman of the Texas Mexican American Legislative Caucus, which challenged the Legislature’s maps, said that he, too, was “very pleased with this state of affairs,” adding that he expected a favorable set of new maps from the lower court.
“We could very likely have the exact same maps, just with a better explanation,” he said.
Much of the language in the Supreme Court’s opinion was conditional, and its criticism of the lower court was mostly indirect.
“To the extent the district court exceeded its mission to draw interim maps that do not violate the Constitution or the Voting Rights Act, and substituted its own concept of ‘the collective public good’ for the Texas Legislature’s determination of which policies serve ‘the interests of the citizens of Texas,’ the court erred,” the opinion said, quoting from the lower court’s ruling.
But the message and music of the opinion was that significantly more weight should have been given to the Legislature’s maps.
The two competing sets of maps set out the borders of election districts in Texas for the State Legislature and the United States House of Representatives on the basis of the most recent 10-year census.
The maps drawn by the Legislature, which is controlled by Republicans, seemed to favor Republican candidates. The ones drawn by the lower court, a special three-judge federal court in San Antonio, increased the voting power of Hispanic voters and seemed to help Democratic candidates.
Under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, changes in voting procedures in states with a history of discrimination cannot take effect until they have been approved by either the Justice Department or a special three-judge court in Washington.
Texas sought approval from the special Washington court, but it has not yet received an answer, though the special court has indicated that it is unlikely to approve at least some of the Legislature’s map. Because there were no approved maps as the first primaries in Texas loomed, the San Antonio court, which was hearing challenges to the Legislature’s maps under a different part of the Voting Rights Act, drew the competing set of maps.
The Supreme Court indicated that the San Antonio court had overstepped its authority.
“Section 5 prevents a state plan from being implemented if it has not been pre-cleared,” the opinion said. “But that does not mean that the plan is of no account or that the policy judgments it reflects can be disregarded by a district court drawing an interim plan.”
“On the contrary,” the opinion continued, “the state plan serves as a starting point for the district court. It provides important guidance that helps ensure that the district court appropriately confines itself to drawing interim maps that comply with the Constitution and the Voting Rights Act, without displacing legitimate state policy judgments with the court’s own preferences.”
The justices instructed the San Antonio court to use the Legislature’s plan as a “starting point” except where legal challenges to aspects of it were likely to succeed.
The decision said the San Antonio court had paid “adequate attention to the state’s policies” in some places. In others, though, the justices said the lower court “appears to have unnecessarily ignored the state’s plans in drawing certain individual districts.”
The opinion was particularly critical of an aspect of the court-drawn maps that appeared to create “a ‘minority coalition opportunity district’ in which the court expected two different minority groups to band together to form an electoral majority.”
The three cases decided Friday were Perry v. Perez, No 11-713, on the Texas House, Perry v. Davis, No. 11-714, on redistricting the State Senate, and Perry v. Perez, No. 11-715, on the House of Representatives.
The constitutionality of Section 5 itself was not at issue in the case, but the opinion said its “intrusion on state sovereignty” raises “serious constitutional questions,” quoting in part from a 2009 decision.
In his concurrence, Justice Thomas went further, repeating his view that “Section 5 is unconstitutional.”
The unanimous decision said that redistricting is primarily a job for elected state officials and that the lower court had not paid enough deference to maps drawn by the State Legislature, which is controlled by Republicans. The justices sent the case back to the lower court, extending the uncertainty surrounding this major voting-rights case.
The new maps to be drawn by the lower court could play a role in determining control of the House of Representatives. Democrats need a net gain of 25 seats to take back the House from Republican control, and both parties are fighting for every advantage in the battle for the House majority. Experts in election administration said the new maps could influence outcomes in perhaps three Texas districts.
“A district court should take guidance from the state’s recently enacted plan in drafting an interim plan,” the Supreme Court’s unsigned decision said. “That plan reflects the state’s policy judgments on where to place new districts and how to shift existing ones in response to massive population growth.”
The changes to the electoral maps were required because Texas grew by more than four million people in the last decade, with about 65 percent of that growth coming in the Hispanic population. The growth entitled the state to four additional House seats. In rejecting significant aspects of the Legislature’s maps, the lower court said it had tried to ensure that Hispanic voters had adequate opportunities to elect candidates of their choice, adding that political considerations had played no role.
Justice Clarence Thomas concurred only in the result and said he would have instructed the elections to proceed under the Legislature’s maps.
In a second development on Friday, the justices blocked a decision of a federal court in West Virginia in another election case while the justices consider an appeal. The West Virginia case concerns whether that state’s three House districts must be absolutely equal in population.
In the Texas case, the justices acted just 11 days after hearing arguments. Primaries in Texas had already been moved back to April. For those primaries to proceed, officials there said, an answer from the courts was needed by Feb. 1.
“This is a big win for Texas, and will require the drawing of districts much more likely to favor Texas’s interim plan,” Richard L. Hasen, an election law expert at the University of California, Irvine, said in an e-mail. The new maps, Professor Hasen said, would “favor Republicans over Democrats” as compared with the lower court’s original maps.
Greg Abbott, the attorney general of Texas, expressed satisfaction with the decision.
“The Supreme Court confirmed that the San Antonio court drew illegal maps, without regard for the policy decisions of elected leaders,” Mr. Abbott said in a statement.
State Representative Trey Martinez Fischer, a Democrat and the chairman of the Texas Mexican American Legislative Caucus, which challenged the Legislature’s maps, said that he, too, was “very pleased with this state of affairs,” adding that he expected a favorable set of new maps from the lower court.
“We could very likely have the exact same maps, just with a better explanation,” he said.
Much of the language in the Supreme Court’s opinion was conditional, and its criticism of the lower court was mostly indirect.
“To the extent the district court exceeded its mission to draw interim maps that do not violate the Constitution or the Voting Rights Act, and substituted its own concept of ‘the collective public good’ for the Texas Legislature’s determination of which policies serve ‘the interests of the citizens of Texas,’ the court erred,” the opinion said, quoting from the lower court’s ruling.
But the message and music of the opinion was that significantly more weight should have been given to the Legislature’s maps.
The two competing sets of maps set out the borders of election districts in Texas for the State Legislature and the United States House of Representatives on the basis of the most recent 10-year census.
The maps drawn by the Legislature, which is controlled by Republicans, seemed to favor Republican candidates. The ones drawn by the lower court, a special three-judge federal court in San Antonio, increased the voting power of Hispanic voters and seemed to help Democratic candidates.
Under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, changes in voting procedures in states with a history of discrimination cannot take effect until they have been approved by either the Justice Department or a special three-judge court in Washington.
Texas sought approval from the special Washington court, but it has not yet received an answer, though the special court has indicated that it is unlikely to approve at least some of the Legislature’s map. Because there were no approved maps as the first primaries in Texas loomed, the San Antonio court, which was hearing challenges to the Legislature’s maps under a different part of the Voting Rights Act, drew the competing set of maps.
The Supreme Court indicated that the San Antonio court had overstepped its authority.
“Section 5 prevents a state plan from being implemented if it has not been pre-cleared,” the opinion said. “But that does not mean that the plan is of no account or that the policy judgments it reflects can be disregarded by a district court drawing an interim plan.”
“On the contrary,” the opinion continued, “the state plan serves as a starting point for the district court. It provides important guidance that helps ensure that the district court appropriately confines itself to drawing interim maps that comply with the Constitution and the Voting Rights Act, without displacing legitimate state policy judgments with the court’s own preferences.”
The justices instructed the San Antonio court to use the Legislature’s plan as a “starting point” except where legal challenges to aspects of it were likely to succeed.
The decision said the San Antonio court had paid “adequate attention to the state’s policies” in some places. In others, though, the justices said the lower court “appears to have unnecessarily ignored the state’s plans in drawing certain individual districts.”
The opinion was particularly critical of an aspect of the court-drawn maps that appeared to create “a ‘minority coalition opportunity district’ in which the court expected two different minority groups to band together to form an electoral majority.”
The three cases decided Friday were Perry v. Perez, No 11-713, on the Texas House, Perry v. Davis, No. 11-714, on redistricting the State Senate, and Perry v. Perez, No. 11-715, on the House of Representatives.
The constitutionality of Section 5 itself was not at issue in the case, but the opinion said its “intrusion on state sovereignty” raises “serious constitutional questions,” quoting in part from a 2009 decision.
In his concurrence, Justice Thomas went further, repeating his view that “Section 5 is unconstitutional.”
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