By Jack Park on 6.16.08 @ 12:07AM
Racial gerrymandering could be expanded this fall, just in time for even bigger Democratic gains in 2012.
If North Carolina prevails in a key Supreme Court case that will
be argued this fall, the resulting racial and political
gerrymandering might make 2012, not 2008, the year when a
Democratic tide floods the halls of Congress. The damage to the
Constitution, however, would be even worse than the damage to
Republican interests.
The next round of redistricting will not start before 2011,
after the results of the 2010 Census have been distributed, but the
Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case styled Bartlett v.
Strickland that may have a significant impact on that process.
In that case, North Carolina asks the Supreme Court to break new
ground and hold that Section 2 of the federal Voting Rights Act
requires the drawing of so-called "crossover districts." In such a
crossover district, the population of a racial minority, almost
always African-American, is less than 50% but still, allegedly,
large enough to elect the candidates of its choice when voters of
the racial majority join with them. North Carolina's position is
badly flawed, and the Supreme Court should reject it.
To date, the Supreme Court has not said that Section 2 requires
the drawing of crossover districts, although it has noted the issue
without resolving it. It has, however, rejected a variant of this
argument; in the post-1990 round of redistricting, some thought
that Section 2 required the drawing of a black majority district
when possible. The Supreme Court rejected a plan based on that
"max-black" theory in 1995. That rejection was part of a series of
decisions in which the Court concluded that putting voters in
districts because of their race without regard for traditional,
race-neutral redistricting criteria was unconstitutional. A
"max-crossover" theory, which is the clear implication of North
Carolina's argument, is little more than a repackaging of the
discredited "max-black" theory.
THE SUPREME COURT HAS ALSO set out a test for determining when
Section 2 requires the drawing of an African-American majority
district. The first part of that three-part test looks at whether a
minority population is "sufficiently large and compact enough to
constitute a majority in a single-member district." The Court was
concerned about claims of vote dilution; if a minority is
sufficiently large to constitute a majority in a district,
splitting it up would dilute its voting power. Applying the
three-part test, lower federal courts have consistently rejected
the contention that minority voters who would not constitute a
majority in a single-member district have the right to have a
crossover district drawn in their favor. The North Carolina Supreme
Court likewise rejected North Carolina's contention; the district
at issue in Bartlett v. Strickland has a voting age
population that is only 39.96% African-American.
The North Carolina Supreme Court's ruling is consistent with the
text of Section 2, which nowhere says that it requires the drawing
of crossover districts. To the extent that it looks at whether the
members of a protected minority "have less opportunity than other
members of the electorate...to elect representatives of their
choice," Section 2 reads contrary to North Carolina's position.
Drawing a crossover district that favors the interests of a group
that constitutes only 39.96% of the district's voting-age
population gives that group more opportunity to elect
representatives of their choice than other citizens. For everyone
else, the candidate with 39.96% of the vote loses. Section 2 also
says that "[n]othing" in it "establishes a right to have members of
a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in
the population." In short, if Section 2 says anything, what it says
does not support North Carolina's position.
Furthermore, by its terms, Section 2 is about racial minorities,
not political parties. In application, it morphs into politics
because African-Americans are exceptionally reliable Democratic
voters. If North Carolina prevails, the resulting district, with a
voting age population that is 39.96% black, is likely to result in
the election of a Democrat because that will be the representative
of the minority's choice. So will the representatives in all of the
crossover districts that will have to be created in the next round
of redistricting. The resulting warrant for racial and political
gerrymandering will turn the Voting Rights Act into a club that
beats Republicans.
A DECISION THAT Section 2 requires the drawing of crossover
districts will have other dramatic consequences in the next round
of redistricting as well. The redistricting plans that State
legislatures and local bodies drew after the 2000 Census were
premised on the understanding that Section 2 did not require the
drawing of crossover districts. If such a district must be created
where possible, the lines in many districting plans will have to
change, sometimes substantially, and election officials and voters
will have to cope with those changes.
So will courts. Properly viewed, redistricting is the job of
legislative bodies, not the courts. Courts have no business doing,
and should have no inclination to do, the fine political work
involved in calculating whether 39.96% of a district's voting age
population is sufficient to allow the minority to elect the
representative of its choice. A different percentage may be
sufficient elsewhere in the same or a different state or locality.
If anyone is to create a crossover district, it should be a
legislative body, and, when a legislative body creates one, the
resulting plan should not otherwise violate state law. If North
Carolina prevails, though, proponents of crossover districts will
have a new entitlement to use to try to create them in the courts
and to attack legislatively enacted plans they do not like.
The last thing the redistricting process needs is more
litigation, something that North Carolina's position only
encourages. That position gets no support from the text of Section
2, judicial precedent, or sound policy. The United States Supreme
Court should say as much.
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