SCOTUS rules North Carolina redistricting motive was race, not politics
And Clarence Thomas sided with the 5-3 majority (Gorsuch did not participate; i assume because he never heard the oral arguments, but I haven’t seen the reason stated):
This decision by Justice Kagan is a major victory for voting rights plaintiffs, who have succeeded in turning the racial gerrymandering cause of action into an effective tool to go after partisan gerrymanders in Southern states. That Justice Kagan got Justice Thomas not only to vote this way but to sign onto the opinion (giving it precedential value) is a really big deal. Despite what is written in the text of the opinion, Justice Kagan, in a couple of footnotes (footnotes 1 and 7), attempts to solve the race or party problem by moving the Court much closer to the position of treating race and party as proxies for one another in the American South…
Justice Alito, in his partial dissent for himself, the Chief Justice, and Justice Kennedy, is incensed at the decision, seeing it as inconsistent with the Court’s earlier decision in Easley v. Cromartie. He begins his dissent with: “A precedent of this Court should not be treated like a disposable household item””say, a paper plate or napkin””to be used once and then tossed in the trash. But that is what the Court does today …
I haven’t read the decision, nor am I especially familiar with the details of the case. But the fact that Justice Thomas sided with the liberal majority is highly unusual and makes me think the majority might have a point. On the other hand, party is most definitely not an automatic proxy for race, party is an entity in and of itself and more than enough motive for redistricting. It’s hard to see how any party—in the South or elsewhere in the US—could avoid racial disparities in districts drawn strictly along party lines.
The sort of reasoning of the SCOTUS majority in this case reminds me somewhat of the mind-reading that was part of the recent liberal decisions on Trump’s EO and his supposedly discriminatory motive for it. The fact that Republicans in the South tend to be more white, and Democrats more black, is a given. And I haven’t seen anything that addresses a question I have, which is whether this reasoning would work in the opposite direction if Democrats did it to favor the Democratic Party (and black voters) in their districts. I don’t like gerrymandering in general, by the way, but it’s legal and has long been used by whatever party is in power at the time of the districting.
The author of the piece at the link, Rick Hasen (who is an expert in election law), has this to say about the decision in the suit:
The harm in the racial gerrymandering cases is not vote dilution (which is separately considered under the Voting Rights Act and Constitution). The harm has been conceived of as an expressive one of sending the message that voters have been separated on the basis of race without adequate justification. It is a theory J. O’Connor invented in the 1993 Shaw v. Reno case. Liberals used to hate the theory, till this decade, when they started using the theory to attack Republican gerrymanders that Republican legislatures justified as compelled by the Voting Rights Act…
The controversy comes from the analysis of District 12. That district raises the question whether race or party predominated in redistricting. This is a particularly difficult question in the American South, because of “conjoined polarization,” race and party overlap to a great extent, so the question of which predominates is somewhat nonsensical. I make that case extensively in a forthcoming essay, Race or Party, Party as Race, or Party All the Time: Three Uneasy Approaches to Conjoined Polarization in Redistricting and Voting Cases.
It seems nonsensical to me as well, and rather pernicious. According to Hasen:
Holy cow this is a big deal. It means that race and party are not really discrete categories and that discriminating on the basis of party in places of conjoined polarization is equivalent, at least sometimes, to making race the predominant factor in redistricting. This will lead to many more successful racial gerrymandering cases in the American South and elsewhere, and allow these cases to substitute for (so far unsuccessful) partisan gerrymandering claims involving some of these districts. (Why Justice Thomas went along with all of this is a mystery to me. He joined in the opinion, and his separate opinion expresses no disagreement with these footnotes.)
Alito in his dissent argued that the redrawn lines “are readily explained by political considerations.”
The state formed new lines to comply with the lower court’s ruling, but this also faces a lawsuit that a federal court will hear in June. The groups Common Cause and the League of Women Voters of North Carolina filed the lawsuit, which questions “the breadth to which lawmakers can draw districts for partisan advantage.”
That pending case seems to involve more general questions about politics, not race.
@Neo – You mean SCOTUS in the title.
😉
Big Maq:
🙂
You mean, it wasn’t the Scouts?
Haste makes waste. Thanks, will fix.
And it is not something a spell checker would pick up.
Hilarious – the Dems pushed for years to havedistricts mapped by race because they accused the Republicans of defining the districts so that black votes were diluted by white Republicans!
Richard Saunders Says:
May 22nd, 2017 at 4:56 pm
Hilarious
* * *
Remember that the Democrat Party was for slavery before it was against it (with the caveat that they still support it under different names and with different players).
Justice Thomas was the only justice in the two cases under question- today’s and Cromartie II in 2001- who was intellectually consistent. Thomas was the writer of the dissent in 2001, while the liberal bloc at that time along with O’Connor was the majority upholding essentially the same damned district with the same set of facts and outcomes. That majority decision of 2001, which the court today basically overturned, was joined by Ginsberg and Breyer at that time, and they have now flipped to the other side. Kennedy, at least, can claim to have been following the precedent set in 2001.
Basically, Ginsberg and Breyer voted the way the Democrats wanted them to vote both times, which puts great dishonor on them, in my opinion.
It will be very amusing to watch these majority minority districts vanish along with all the African American congresscritters who only hold office because of them. They will be replaced by white Democrats for the most part. I suspect, because of this problem, that it won’t make a lot of difference in overall support for one party or the other.
Althouse has more:
http://althouse.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/a-precedent-of-this-court-should-not-be.html
From his dissent:
“In a case such as this one . . . , the party attacking the legislatively drawn boundaries must show at the least that the legislature could have achieved its legitimate political objectives in alternative ways that are comparably consistent with traditional districting principles. That party must also show that those districting alternatives would have brought about significantly greater racial balance. Appellees failed to make any such showing here.” Id., at 258.”
Ann continues:
“This case came out 5-3 because Justice Gorsuch did not participate, and Justice Thomas concurred. Thomas’s concurrence sets him apart from the rest of the majority (Kagan, Ginsburg, Breyer, and Sotomayor) because he thinks Cromartie II got it wrong and it’s “a welcome course correction” to “confine[] it to its particular facts.”
The justices who voted for Cromartie II but now against should be considered intellectual whores for Democrats. See Yancy Ward in comments:
“In 2001, which upheld the district on the same set of facts, the majority decision was the liberal bloc at that time plus Sandra Day O’Connor. Notably, that majority consisted of Ginsberg and Breyer. The dissent in that 2001 case was written by Thomas and joined by Rehnquist, Kennedy, and Scalia.
In today’s decision, you find Ginsberg and Breyer on the opposite side of the decision, Thomas on the same side, and Kennedy on the opposite side. Of those four, only Thomas gets kudos for intellectual consistency, but Kennedy can be given a pass for standing on precedent. Ginsberg and Breyer, however, are simply making the decision based on what the current Democratic Party now wants.”