SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
NATALIE E. TENNANT, WEST VIRGINIA SECRETARY OF
STATE, et al.
v. JEFFERSON COUNTY COMMISSION,
et al.
on appeal from the united states district
court for the southern district of west virginia
No. 11–1184. Decided September 25,
2012
Per Curiam.
Plaintiffs in this case claim that West
Virginia’s 2011 congressional redistricting plan violates the
“one person, one vote” principle that we have held to
be embodied in Article I, §2, of the United States
Constitution. A three-judge District Court for the Southern
District of West Virginia agreed, declaring the plan “null
and void” and enjoining West Virginia’s Secretary of
State from implementing it. App. to Juris. Statement 4. The state
defendants appealed directly to this Court. See 28
U. S. C. §1253. Because the District Court
misapplied the standard for evaluating such challenges set out in
Karcher v.
Daggett,
462 U.S.
725 (1983), and failed to afford appropriate deference to West
Virginia’s reasonable exercise of its political judgment, we
reverse.
* * *
Article I, §2, of the United States
Constitution requires that Members of the House of Representatives
“be ap- portioned among the several States . . .
according to their respective Numbers” and “chosen
every second Year by the People of the several States.” In
Wesberry v.
Sanders,
376 U.S. 1
(1964), we held that these commands require that “as nearly
as is practicable one man’s vote in a congressional election
is to be worth as much as another’s.”
Id., at
7–8. We have since explained that the “as nearly as is
practicable” standard does not require that congressional
districts be drawn with “precise mathematical
equality,” but instead that the State justify population
differences between districts that could have been avoided by
“a good-faith effort to achieve absolute equality.”
Karcher,
supra, at 730 (quoting
Kirkpatrick v.
Preisler,
394 U.S.
526, 530–531 (1969); internal quotation marks
omitted).
Karcher set out a two-prong test to
determine whether a State’s congressional redistricting plan
meets this standard. First, the parties challenging the plan bear
the burden of proving the existence of population differences that
“could practicably be avoided.” 462 U. S., at 734.
If they do so, the burden shifts to the State to “show with
some specificity” that the population differences “were
necessary to achieve some legitimate state objective.”
Id., at 741, 740. This burden is a “flexible”
one, which “depend[s] on the size of the deviations, the
importance of the State’s interests, the consistency with
which the plan as a whole reflects those interests, and the
availability of alterna- tives that might substantially vindicate
those interests yet approximate population equality more
closely.”
Id., at 741. As we recently reaffirmed,
redistricting “ordinarily involves criteria and standards
that have been weighed and evaluated by the elected branches in the
exercise of their political judgment.”
Perry v.
Perez, 565 U. S. ___, ___ (2012) (
per curiam)
(slip op., at 4). “[W]e are willing to defer to [such] state
legislative policies, so long as they are consistent with
constitutional norms, even if they require small differences in the
population of congressional districts.”
Karcher,
supra, at 740.
In this case, plaintiffs claim that West
Virginia’s redistricting plan, adopted following the 2010
decennial United States census, violates Article I, §2,
of the United States Constitution and, separately, the West
Virginia Constitution. The 2010 census did not alter West
Virginia’s allocation of three congressional seats. But due
to popula- tion shifts within the State, West Virginia nonetheless
began redistricting to comply with the requirements in our
precedents.
In August 2011, the West Virginia Legislature
convened an extraordinary session, and the State Senate formed a
17-member Select Committee on Redistricting. The committee first
considered a redistricting plan championed by its chair, Majority
Leader John Unger, and dubbed “the Perfect Plan”
because it achieved a population difference of a single person
between the largest and smallest districts. That appears, however,
to have been the only perfect aspect of the Perfect Plan. State
legislators expressed concern that the plan contravened the
State’s longstanding rule against splitting counties, placed
two incumbents’ residences in the same district, and moved
one-third of the State’s population from one district to
another.
The following day, members of the Redistricting
Committee introduced seven additional plans. The committee
eventually reported to the full Senate the eighth proposal,
referred to as S. B. 1008. The full Senate rejected a ninth
proposal offered as an amendment on the floor and adopted S. B.
1008 by a vote of 27 to 4. The House of Delegates approved the bill
without debate by a vote of 90 to 5. Governor Earl Tomblin signed
the bill into law on August 18, 2011.
S. B. 1008, codified at W. Va. Code Ann.
§1–2–3 (Lexis 2012 Supp.), does not split county
lines, redistrict incumbents into the same district, or require
dramatic shifts in the population of the current districts. Indeed,
S. B. 1008’s chief selling point was that it required very
little change to the existing districts: It moved just one county,
representing 1.5% of the State’s population, from one
district to another. This was the smallest shift of any plan
considered by the legislature. S. B. 1008, however, has a
population variance of 0.79%, the second highest variance of the
plans the legislature considered. That is, the population
difference between the largest and smallest districts in S. B. 1008
equals 0.79% of the population of the average district.
The Jefferson County Commission and two of its
county commissioners sued to enjoin the State from implementing S.
B. 1008. At trial, the State conceded that it could have adopted a
plan with lower population variations. The State argued, however,
that legitimate state policies justified the slightly higher
variances in S. B. 1008, citing this Court’s statement from
Karcher that “[a]ny number of consistently applied
legislative policies might justify some variance, including, for
instance, making districts com- pact, respecting municipal
boundaries, preserving the cores of prior districts, and avoiding
contests between incumbent Representatives.” 462 U. S.,
at 740. The State noted
Karcher’s approving reference
to a District Court opinion upholding a previous West Virginia
redistricting plan with a population variance of
0.78%—virtually identical to the variance in S. B. 1008. See
id., at 740–741 (citing
West Virginia Civil
Liberties Union v.
Rockefeller,
336 F. Supp. 395 (SD W. Va. 1972)).
The District Court nonetheless granted the
injunction, holding that the State’s asserted objectives did
not justify the population variance. With respect to the objective
of not splitting counties, the District Court acknowledged that
West Virginia had never in its history divided a county between two
or more congressional districts. The court speculated, however,
that the practice of
other States dividing counties between
districts “may portend the eventual deletion” of
respecting such boundaries as a potentially legitimate
justification for population variances. App. to Juris. Statement
15, n. 6. The court also faulted the West Virginia Legislature
for failing “to create a contemporaneous record sufficient to
show that S. B. 1008’s entire 4,871-person variance—or
even a discrete, numerically precise portion thereof—was
attributable” to the State’s interest in respecting
county boundaries and noted that several other plans under
consideration also did not split counties.
Id., at 15,
16.
The court further questioned the State’s
assertion that S. B. 1008 best preserved the core of existing
districts. Preserving the core of a district, the court reasoned,
involved respecting the “ ‘[s]ocial, cultural,
racial, ethnic, and economic interests common to the population of
the area,’ ”
id., at 17 (quoting
Graham v.
Thornburgh,
207 F. Supp. 2d 1280, 1286 (Kan. 2002)), not a “dogged
insistence that change be minimized for the benefit of the delicate
citi- zenry,” App. to Juris. Statement 20. The District Court
concluded that although acclimating to a new congressional district
and Congressperson “may give rise to a modicum of anxiety and
inconvenience, avoiding constituent discomfort at the margins is
not among those policies recognized in
Karcher as capable of
legitimizing a variance.”
Ibid.
With respect to preventing contests between
incumbents, the District Court again faulted the legislature for
failing to build a record “linking all or a specific part of
the variance” to that asserted interest.
Id., at 22.
And the District Court found that although 0.79% was a minor
variation when
Karcher was decided, the feasibility of
achieving smaller variances due to improved technology meant that
the same variance must now be considered major. Because the
District Court concluded that the redistricting plan was
unconstitutional under Article I, §2, it did not reach
plaintiffs’ challenges under the West Virginia
Constitution.
Chief Judge Bailey dissented. He argued that the
record demonstrated the legitimacy of the State’s concerns,
and that no other plan satisfied all those concerns as well as S.
B. 1008. He also took issue with the majority’s disregard for
Karcher’s characterization of 0.78% as an acceptable
disparity. App. to Juris. Statement 39.
We stayed the District Court’s order
pending appeal to this Court, 565 U. S. ___ (2012), and now
reverse.
Given the State’s concession that it could
achieve smaller population variations, the remaining question under
Kar- cher is whether the State can demonstrate that
“the population deviations in its plan were necessary to
achieve some legitimate state objective.” 462 U. S., at
740. Considering, as
Karcher instructs, “the size of
the deviations, the importance of the State’s interests, the
consistency with which the plan as a whole reflects those
interests, and the availability of alternatives that might substan-
tially vindicate those interests,”
id., at 741, it is
clear that West Virginia has carried its burden.
As an initial matter, the District Court erred
in concluding that improved technology has converted a
“minor” variation in
Karcher into a
“major” variation today. Nothing about technological
advances in redistricting and mapping software has, for example,
decreased population variations between a State’s counties.
See
id., at 733, n. 5. Thus, if a State wishes to
maintain whole counties, it will inevitably have population
variations between districts reflecting the fact that its districts
are composed of un- evenly populated counties. Despite
technological advances, a variance of 0.79% results in no more (or
less) vote dilution today than in 1983, when this Court said that
such a minor harm could be justified by legitimate state
objectives.
Moreover, our cases leave little doubt that
avoiding contests between incumbents and not splitting political
subdivisions are valid, neutral state districting policies. See,
e.g.,
id., at 740. The majority cited no precedent
for requiring legislative findings on the “discrete,
numerically precise portion” of the variance attributable to
each factor, and we are aware of none.
The District Court dismissed the State’s
interest in limiting the shift of population between old and new
districts as “ham-handed,”
id., at 19, because
the State considered only “discrete bounds of
geography,” rather than “ ‘[s]ocial,
cultural, racial, ethnic, and economic interests common to the
population of the area.’ ”
Id., at 17
(quoting
Graham v.
Thornburgh,
supra, at
1286). According to the District Court, that did not qualify as
“preserving the cores of prior districts” under
Karcher, 462 U. S., at 740–741.
Regardless of how to read that language from
Karcher, however, our opinion made clear that its list of
possible justifications for population variations was not
exclusive. See
id., at 740 (“Any number of
consistently applied legislative policies might justify some
variance, including, for instance, . . .”). The desire to
minimize population shifts between districts is clearly a valid,
neutral state policy. See,
e.g.,
Turner v.
Arkansas,
784 F. Supp. 585, 588–589 (ED Ark. 1991), summarily
aff’d, 504 U.S. 952 (1992). S. B. 1008 achieves
significantly lower population shifts than the alternative
plans—more than four times lower than the closest
alternative, and more than 25 times lower than others.
None of the alternative plans came close to
vindicating all three of the State’s legitimate objectives
while achieving a lower variance. All other plans failed to serve
at least one objective as well as S. B. 1008 does; several were
worse with respect to two objectives; and the Perfect Plan failed
as to all three of the State’s objectives. See App. to Juris.
Statement 43–45. This is not to say that anytime a State must
choose between serving an additional le- gitimate objective and
achieving a lower variance, it may choose the former. But here,
given the small “size of the deviations,” as balanced
against “the importance of the State’s interests, the
consistency with which the plan as a whole reflects those
interests,” and the lack of available “alternatives
that might substantially vindicate those in- terests yet
approximate population equality more closely,”
Karcher,
supra, at 741, S. B. 1008 is justified by
the State’s legitimate objectives.
Because the District Court did not reach
plaintiffs’ claims under the West Virginia Constitution and
the issue has not been briefed by the parties, we leave it to the
District Court to address the remaining claims in the first
instance. The judgment of the United States District Court for the
Southern District of West Virginia is reversed, and the case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.