This suit was brought by residents of Marion and Lake Counties,
Indiana, challenging state statutes establishing Marion County as a
multi-member district for the election of state senators and
representatives. It was alleged, first, that the laws invidiously
diluted the votes of Negroes and poor persons living in the "ghetto
area" of Marion County, and, second, that voters in multi-member
districts were overrepresented, since the true test of voting power
is the ability to cast a tie-breaking vote, and the voters in
multi-member districts had a greater theoretical opportunity to
cast such votes than voters in single member districts. The
tendency of multi-member district legislators to vote as a bloc was
alleged to compound this discrimination. The three-judge court,
though not ruling squarely on the second claim, determined that a
racial minority group with specific legislative interests inhabited
a ghetto area in Indianapolis, in Marion County; that the statutes
operated to minimize and cancel out the voting strength of this
minority group; and that redistricting Marion County alone would
leave impermissible variations between Marion districts and others
in the State, thus requiring state-wide redistricting, which could
not await 1970 census figures. The court held the statutes
unconstitutional, and gave the State until October 1, 1969, to
enact reapportionment legislation. No such legislation ensued, and
the court drafted a plan using single member districts throughout
the State. The 1970 elections were ordered to be held in accordance
with the new plan. This Court granted a stay of judgment pending
final action on the appeal, thus permitting the 1970 elections to
be held under the condemned statutes. Under those statutes, based
on the 1960 census, there was a maximum variance in population of
senate districts of 28.20%, with a ratio between the largest and
smallest districts of 1.327 to 1, and a maximum variance in house
districts of 24.78%, with a ratio of 1.279 to 1.
Held: The judgment is reversed, and the case remanded.
Pp.
403 U. S.
140-170;
403 U. S.
179-180.
305 F.
Supp. 1364, reversed and remanded.
Page 403 U. S. 125
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court with
respect to Parts I-VI, finding that:
1. Although, as the Court was advised on June 1, 1971, the
Indiana legislature enacted new apportionment legislation providing
for state-wide single member house and senate districts, the case
is not moot. Pp.
403 U. S.
140-141.
2. The validity of multi-member districts is justiciable, but a
challenger has the burden of proving that such districts
unconstitutionally operate to dilute or cancel the voting strength
of racial or political groups. Pp.
403 U. S.
141-144.
3. The actual, as distinguished from theoretical, impact of
multi-member districts on individual voting power has not been
sufficiently demonstrated on this record to warrant departure from
prior cases involving multi-member districts, and neither the
findings below nor the record sustains the view that multi-member
districts overrepresent their voters as compared with voters in
single-member districts, even if the multi-member legislative
delegation tends to bloc voting. Pp.
403 U. S.
144-148.
4. Appellees' claim that the fact that the number of ghetto
residents who were legislators was not proportionate to ghetto
population proves invidious discrimination, notwithstanding the
absence of evidence that ghetto residents had less opportunity to
participate in the political process, is not valid, and, on this
record, the malproportion was due to the ghetto voters' choices'
losing the election contests. Pp.
403 U. S.
148-155.
5. The trial court's conclusion that, with respect to their
unique interests, ghetto residents were invidiously
underrepresented due to lack of their own legislative voice, was
not supported by the findings. Moreover, even assuming bloc voting
by the county delegation contrary to the ghetto majority's wishes,
there is no constitutional violation, since that situation inheres
in the political process, whether the district be single- or
multi-member. P.
403 U. S.
155.
6. Multi-member districts have not been proved inherently
invidious or violative of equal protection, but, even assuming
their unconstitutionality, it is not clear that the remedy is a
single-member system with lines drawn to ensure representation to
all sizable racial, ethnic, economic, or religious groups. Pp.
156-160.
7. The District Court erred in brushing aside the entire state
apportionment policy without solid constitutional and equitable
Page 403 U. S. 126
grounds for doing so, and without considering more limited
alternatives. Pp. 160-161.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, joined by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE
BLACK, and MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concluded, in Part VII, that it
was not improper for the District Court to order state-wide
redistricting on the basis of the excessive population variances
between the legislative districts shown by this record. That court
ordered reapportionment not because of population shifts since its
1965 decision upholding the statutory plan, but because the
disparities had been shown to be excessive by intervening decisions
of this Court. Pp.
403 U. S.
161-163.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, joined by MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR.
JUSTICE MARSHALL, concluded, with respect to redistricting the
entire State, that there were impermissible population variances
between districts under the current apportionment plan, and that
the new Marion County districts would also have impermissible
variances, thus requiring state-wide redistricting. Pp.
403 U. S.
179-180.
WHITE, J., announced the Court's judgment and delivered an
opinion, of the Court with respect to Parts I-VI, in which BURGER,
C.J., and BLACK, STEWART, and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined, and in which,
as to Part VII, BURGER, C.J., and BLACK and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined.
STEWART, J., filed a statement joining in Parts I-VI and dissenting
from Part VII,
post, p.
403 U. S. 163.
HARLAN, J., filed a separate opinion,
post, p.
403 U. S. 165.
DOUGLAS, J., filed an opinion dissenting in part and concurring in
the result in part, in which BRENNAN and MARSHALL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
403 U. S.
171.
Page 403 U. S. 127
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court with
respect to the validity of the multi-member election district in
Marion County, Indiana (Parts I-VI), together with an opinion (Part
VII), in which THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE BLACK, and MR.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN joined, on the propriety of ordering redistricting
of the entire State of Indiana, and announced the judgment of the
Court.
We have before us in this case the validity under the Equal
Protection Clause of the statutes districting and apportioning the
State of Indiana for its general assembly elections. The principal
issue centers on those provisions constituting Marion County, which
includes the city of Indianapolis, a multi-member district for
electing state senators and representatives.
I
Indiana has a bicameral general assembly consisting of a house
of representatives of 100 members and a senate of 50 members. Eight
of the 31 senatorial districts and 25 of the 39 house districts are
multi-member districts, that is, districts that are represented by
two or more
Page 403 U. S. 128
legislators elected at large by the voters of the district.
[
Footnote 1] Under the statutes
here challenged, Marion County is a multi-member district electing
eight senators and 15 members of the house.
On January 9, 1969, six residents of Indiana, five of whom were
residents of Marion County, filed a suit described by them as
"attacking the constitutionality of two statutes of the State of
Indiana which provide for multi-member districting at large of
General Assembly seats in Marion County, Indiana. . . . [
Footnote 2]"
Plaintiffs [
Footnote 3]
Chavis, Ramsey, and Bryant alleged that the two statutes
invidiously diluted the force and effect of the vote of
Page 403 U. S. 129
Negroes and poor persons living within certain Marion County
census tracts constituting what was termed "the ghetto area."
Residents of the area were alleged to have particular demographic
characteristics rendering them cognizable as a minority interest
group with distinctive interests in specific areas of the
substantive law. With single member districting, it was said, the
ghetto area would elect three members of the house and one senator,
whereas, under the present districting, voters in the area "have
almost no political force or control over legislators because the
effect of their vote is cancelled out by other contrary interest
groups" in Marion County. The mechanism of political party
organization and the influence of party chairmen in nominating
candidates were additional factors alleged to frustrate the
exercise of power by residents of the ghetto area.
Plaintiff Walker, a Negro resident of Lake County, also a
multi-member district, but a smaller one, alleged an invidious
discrimination against Lake County Negroes because Marion County
Negroes, although no greater in number than Lake County Negroes,
had the opportunity to influence the election of more legislators
than Lake County Negroes. [
Footnote
4] The claim was that Marion County was one-third larger in
population. and thus had approximately one-third more assembly
seats than Lake County, but that voter influence does not vary
inversely with population, and that permitting Marion County voters
to elect 23 assemblymen at large gave them a disproportionate
advantage over voters in Lake County. [
Footnote 5] The
Page 403 U. S. 130
two remaining plaintiffs presented claims not at issue here.
[
Footnote 6]
A three-judge court convened and tried the case on June 17 and
18, 1969. Both documentary evidence and oral testimony were taken
concerning the composition and characteristics of the alleged
ghetto area, the manner in which legislative candidates were chosen
and their residence and tenure, and the performance of Marion
County's delegation in the Indiana general assembly. [
Footnote 7]
Page 403 U. S. 131
The three-judge court filed its opinion containing its findings
and conclusions on July 28, 1969, holding for plaintiffs.
Chavis v. Whitcomb, 305 F. Supp. 134 (SD Ind.1969).
See also 305 F.
Supp. 1359 (1969) (pretrial orders) and
307
F. Supp. 1362 (1969) (state-wide reapportionment plan and
implementing order). In sum, it concluded that Marion County's
multi-member district must be disestablished, and, because of
population disparities not directly related to the phenomena
alleged in the complaint, the entire State must be redistricted.
More particularly, it first determined that a racial minority group
inhabited an identifiable ghetto area in Indianapolis. [
Footnote 8] That area, located in the
northern half of Center Township and termed the "Center Township
ghetto," comprised 28 contiguous census tracts and parts of four
others. [
Footnote 9] The area
contained a 1967 population
Page 403 U. S. 132
of 97,000 nonwhites, over 99% of whom were Negro, and 35,000
whites. The court proceeded to compare six of these tracts,
representative of the area, with tract 211, a predominantly white,
relatively wealthy suburban census tract in Washington Township
contiguous to the northwest corner of the court's ghetto area and
with tract 220, also in Washington Township, a contiguous tract
inhabited by middle class Negroes. Strong differences were found in
terms of housing conditions, income and educational levels, rates
of unemployment, juvenile crime, and welfare assistance. The
contrasting characteristics between the court's ghetto area and its
inhabitants, on the one hand, and tracts 211 and 220, on the other,
indicated the ghetto's
"compelling interests in such legislative areas as urban renewal
and rehabilitation, health care, employment training and
opportunities, welfare, and relief of the poor, law enforcement,
quality of education, and anti-discrimination measures."
305 F. Supp. at 1380. These interests were in addition to those
the ghetto shared with the rest of the county, such as metropolitan
transportation, flood control, sewage disposal, and education.
The court then turned to evidence showing the residences of
Marion County's representatives and senators
Page 403 U. S. 133
in each of the five general assemblies elected during the period
1960 through 1968. [
Footnote
10] Excluding tract 220, the middle class Negro district,
Washington Township, the relatively wealthy suburban area in which
tract 211 was located, with an average of 13.98% of Marion County's
population, was the residence of 47.52% of its senators and 34.33%
of its representatives. The court's Center Township ghetto area,
with 17.8% of the population, had 4.75% of the senators and 5.97%
of the representatives. The nonghetto area of Center Township, with
23.32% of the population, had done little better. Also, tract 220
alone, the middle class Negro district, had only O.66% of the
county's population, but had been the residence of more
representatives than had the ghetto area. The ghetto area had been
represented in the senate only once -- in 1964 by one senator --
and the house three times -- with one representative in 1962 and
1964 and by two representatives in the 1968 general assembly. The
court found the "Negro Center Township Ghetto population" to be
sufficiently large to elect two representatives and one senator if
the ghetto tracts "were specific single-member legislative
districts" in Marion County. 305 F. Supp. at 1385. From these data
the court found gross inequity of representation, as determined by
residence of legislators, between Washington Township and tract
220, on the one hand, and Center Township and the Center Township
ghetto area, on the other.
The court also characterized Marion County's general assembly
delegation as tending to coalesce and take common positions on
proposed legislation. This was
"largely the result of election at large from a common
constituency, and obviates representation of a substantial, though
minority, interest group within that common
Page 403 U. S. 134
constituency."
Ibid. Related findings were that, as a rule, a
candidate could not be elected in Marion County unless his party
carried the election; [
Footnote
11] county political organizations had substantial influence on
the selection and election of assembly candidates (an influence
that would be diminished by single member districting), as well as
upon the actions of the county's delegation in the assembly; and
that at-large elections made it difficult for the conscientious
voter to make a rational selection.
The court's conclusions of law on the merits may be summarized
as follows:
1. There exists within Marion County an identifiable racial
element, "the Negro residents of the Center Township Ghetto," with
special interests in various areas of
Page 403 U. S. 135
substantive law, diverging significantly from interests of
nonresidents of the ghetto. [
Footnote 12]
2. The voting strength of this racial group has been minimized
by Marion County's multi-member senate and house district because
of the strong control exercised by political parties over the
selection of candidates, the inability of the Negro voters to
assure themselves the opportunity to vote for prospective
legislators of their choice, and the absence of any particular
legislators who were accountable for their legislative record to
Negro voters.
3. Party control of nominations, the inability of voters to know
the candidate and the responsibility of legislators to their party
and the county at large make it difficult for any legislator to
diverge from the majority of his delegation and to be an effective
representative of minority ghetto interests.
4. Although each legislator in Marion County is arguably
responsible to all the voters, including those in the ghetto,
"[p]artial responsiveness of all legislators is [not] . . .
equal [to] total responsiveness and the informed concern of a few
specific legislators. [
Footnote
13] "
Page 403 U. S. 136
5. The apportionment statutes of Indiana as they relate to
Marion County operate to minimize and cancel out the voting
strength of a minority racial group, namely Negroes residing in the
Center Township ghetto, and to deprive them of the equal protection
of the laws.
6. As a legislative district, Marion County is large as compared
with the total number of legislators, it is not subdistricted to
insure distribution of the legislators over the county and
comprises a multi-member district for both the house and the
senate. (
See Burns v. Richardson, 384 U. S.
73,
384 U. S. 88
(1966).)
7. To redistrict Marion County alone would leave impermissible
variations between Marion County districts and other districts in
the State. Statewide redistricting was required, and it could not
await the 1970 census figures estimated to be available within a
year.
8. It may not be possible for the Indiana general assembly to
comply with the state constitutional requirement prohibiting
crossing or dividing counties for senatorial apportionment
[
Footnote 14] and still meet
the requirements of the Equal Protection Clause adumbrated in
recent cases. [
Footnote
15]
9. Plaintiff Walker's claim as a Negro voter resident of Lake
County that he was discriminated against because Lake County
Negroes could vote for only 16 assemblymen, while Marion County
Negroes could vote for 23, was deemed untenable. In his second
capacity, as a general voter in Lake County, Walker "probably has
received less effective representation" than Marion County voters,
because "he votes for fewer legislators and, therefore, has fewer
legislators to speak for him," and, since,
Page 403 U. S. 137
in theory, voting power in multi-member districts does not vary
inversely to the number of voters, Marion County voters had greater
opportunity to cast tie-breaking or "critical" votes. But the court
declined to hold that the latter ground had been proved, absent
more evidence concerning Lake County. [
Footnote 16] In this respect, consideration of
Walker's claim was limited to that to be given the uniform
districting principle in reapportioning the Indiana general
assembly. [
Footnote 17]
Turning to the proper remedy, the court found redistricting of
Marion County essential. Also, although recognizing the complaint
was directed only to Marion County, the court thought it must act
on the evidence indicating that the entire State required
reapportionment. [
Footnote
18] Judgment was withheld in all respects, however, to give the
State until October 1, 1969, to enact legislation
Page 403 U. S. 138
remedying the improper districting and malapportionment found to
exist by the court. [
Footnote
19] In so doing, the court thought the State "might wish to
give consideration to certain principles of legislative
apportionment brought out at the trial in these proceedings."
Id. at 1391. First, the court eschewed any indication that
Negroes living in the ghetto were entitled to any certain number of
legislators -- districts should be drawn with an eye that is color
blind, and sophisticated gerrymandering would not be countenanced.
Second, the legislature was advised to keep in mind the theoretical
advantage inhering in voters in multi-member districts, that is,
their theoretical opportunity to cast more deciding votes in any
legislative election. Referring to the testimony that bloc-voting,
multi-member delegations have disproportionately more power than
single member districts, the court thought that "the testimony has
application here." Also,
"as each member of the bloc delegation is responsible to the
voter majority who elected the whole, each Marion County voter has
a greater voice in the legislature, having more legislators to
speak for him than does a comparable voter"
in a single member district. Single-member districts, the court
thought, would equalize voting power among the districts, as well
as avoiding diluting political or racial groups located in
multi-member districts. The court therefore recommended that the
general assembly give consideration to the uniform district
principle in making its apportionment. [
Footnote 20]
Page 403 U. S. 139
On October 15, the court judicially noticed that the Indiana
general assembly had not been called to redistrict and reapportion
the State. Following further hearings and examination of various
plans submitted by the parties, the court drafted and adopted a
plan based on the 1960 census figures. With respect to Marion
County, the court followed plaintiffs' suggested scheme, which was
said to protect "the legally cognizable racial minority group
against dilution of its voting strength."
307
F. Supp. 1362, 1365 (SD Ind.1969). Single member districts were
employed throughout the State, county lines were crossed where
necessary, judicial notice was taken of the location of the
nonwhite population in establishing district lines in metropolitan
areas of the State and the court's plan expressly aimed at giving
"recognition to the cognizable racial minority group whose
grievance lead [
sic] to this litigation."
Id. at
1366.
The court enjoined state officials from conducting any elections
under the existing apportionment statutes, and ordered that the
1970 elections be held in accordance with the plan prepared by the
court. Jurisdiction was retained to pass upon any future claims of
unconstitutionality with respect to any future legislative
apportionments adopted by the State. [
Footnote 21]
Page 403 U. S. 140
Appeal was taken following the final judgment by the three-judge
court, we noted probable jurisdiction, 397 U.S. 984 (1970), and the
State's motion for stay of judgment was granted pending our final
action on this case, 396 U.S. 1055 (1970), thus permitting the 1970
elections to be held under the existing apportionment statutes
declared unconstitutional by the District Court. On June 1, 1971,
we were advised by the parties that the Indiana Legislature had
passed, and the Governor had signed, new apportionment legislation
soon to become effective for the 1972 elections, and that the new
legislation provides for single member house and senate districts
throughout the State, including Marion County.
II
With the 1970 elections long past and the appearance of new
legislation abolishing multi-member districts in Indiana, the issue
of mootness emerges. Neither party deems the case mooted by recent
events. Appellees, plaintiffs below, urge that, if the appeal is
dismissed as moot and the judgment of the District Court is
vacated, as is our practice in such cases, there would be no
outstanding judgment invalidating the Marion County multi-member
district, and that the new apportionment legislation would be in
conflict with the state constitutional provision forbidding the
division of Marion County for the purpose of electing senators. If
the new senatorial districts were invalidated in the state courts
in this respect, it is argued that the issue involved in the
present litigation would simply reappear for decision.
Page 403 U. S. 141
The attorney general for the State of Indiana, for the
appellant, taking a somewhat different tack, urges that the issue
of the Marion County multi-member district is not moot, since the
District Court has retained jurisdiction to pass on the legality of
subsequent apportionment statutes for the purpose, among others, of
determining whether the alleged discrimination against a cognizable
minority group has been remedied, an issue that would not arise if
the District Court erred in invalidating multi-member districts in
Indiana.
We agree that the case is not moot and that the central issues
before us must be decided. We do not, however, pass upon the
details of the plan adopted by the District Court, since that plan,
in any event, would have required revision in light of the 1970
census figures.
III
The line of cases from
Gray v. Sanders, 372 U.
S. 368 (1963), and
Reynolds v. Sims,
377 U. S. 533
(1964), to
Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, 394 U.
S. 526 (1969), and
Wells v. Rockefeller,
394 U. S. 542
(1969), recognizes that
"representative government is, in essence, self-government
through the medium of elected representatives of the people, and
each and every citizen has an inalienable right to full and
effective participation in the political processes of his State's
legislative bodies."
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 565. Since most citizens find
it possible to participate only as qualified voters in electing
their representatives,
"[f]ull and effective participation by all citizens in state
government requires, therefore, that each citizen have an equally
effective voice in the election of members of his state
legislature."
Ibid. Hence, apportionment schemes "which give the same
number of representatives to unequal numbers of constituents," 377
U.S. at
377 U. S. 563,
unconstitutionally dilute the value of the votes in the larger
districts. And hence the requirement that "the seats in both houses
of a bicameral state legislature
Page 403 U. S. 142
must be apportioned on a population basis." 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 568.
The question of the constitutional validity of multi-member
districts has been pressed in this Court since the first of the
modern reapportionment cases. These questions have focused not on
population-based apportionment, but on the quality of
representation afforded by the multi-member district as compared
with single member districts. In
Lucas v. Colorado General
Assembly, 377 U. S. 713
(1964), decided with
Reynolds v. Sims, we noted certain
undesirable features of the multi-member district, but expressly
withheld any intimation
"that apportionment schemes which provide for the at-large
election of a number of legislators from a county, or any political
subdivision, are constitutionally defective."
377 U.S. at
377 U. S. 731
n. 21. Subsequently, when the validity of the multi-member
district, as such, was squarely presented, we held that such a
district is not
per se illegal under the Equal Protection
Clause.
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U.
S. 433 (1965);
Burns v. Richardson,
384 U. S. 73
(1966);
Kilgarlin v. Hill, 386 U.
S. 120 (1967).
See also Burnette v. Davis,
382 U. S. 42
(1965);
Harrison v. Schaefer, 383 U.
S. 269 (1966). [
Footnote 22] That voters in multi-member
Page 403 U. S. 143
districts vote for and are represented by more legislators than
voters in single member districts has so far not demonstrated an
invidious discrimination against the latter. But we have deemed the
validity of multi-member district systems justiciable, recognizing
also that they may be subject to challenge where the circumstances
of a particular case may "operate to minimize or cancel out the
voting strength of racial or political elements of the voting
population."
Fortson, 379 U.S. at
379 U. S. 439,
and
Burns, 384 U.S. at
384 U. S. 88.
Such a tendency, we have said, is enhanced when the district is
large and elects a substantial proportion of the seats in either
house of a bicameral legislature, if it is multi-member for
both
Page 403 U. S. 144
houses of the legislature or if it lacks provision for at-large
candidates running from particular geographical subdistricts, as in
Fortson. Burns, 384 U.S. at
384 U. S. 88.
But we have insisted that the challenger carry the burden of
proving that multi-member districts unconstitutionally operate to
dilute or cancel the voting strength of racial or political
elements. We have not yet sustained such an attack.
IV
Plaintiffs level two quite distinct challenges to the Marion
County district. The first charge is that any multi-member district
bestows on its voters several unconstitutional advantages over
voters in single member districts or smaller multi-member
districts. The other allegation is that the Marion County district,
on the record of this case, illegally minimizes and cancels out the
voting power of a cognizable racial minority in Marion County. The
District Court sustained the latter claim and considered the former
sufficiently persuasive to be a substantial factor in prescribing
uniform, single member districts as the basic scheme of the court's
own plan.
See 307 F. Supp. at 1366.
In asserting discrimination against voters outside Marion
County, plaintiffs recognize that
Fortson, Burns, and
Kilgarlin proceeded on the assumption that the dilution of
voting power suffered by a voter who is placed in a district 10
times the population of another is cured by allocating 10
legislators to the larger district instead of the one assigned to
the smaller district. Plaintiffs challenge this assumption at both
the voter and legislator level. They demonstrate mathematically
that, in theory, voting power does not vary inversely with the size
of the district, and that to increase legislative seats in
proportion to increased population gives undue voting power to the
voter in the multi-member district, since he has more chances to
determine election outcomes than
Page 403 U. S. 145
does the voter in the single member district. This consequence
obtains wholly aside from the quality or effectiveness of
representation later furnished by the successful candidates. The
District Court did not quarrel with plaintiffs' mathematics, nor do
we. But, like the District Court, we note that the position remains
a theoretical one [
Footnote
23] and, as plaintiffs' witness conceded, knowingly
Page 403 U. S. 146
avoids and does
"not take into account any political or other factors which
might affect the actual voting power of the residents, which might
include party affiliation, race, previous voting characteristics,
or any other factors which go into the entire political voting
situation. [
Footnote
24]"
The real-life impact of multi-member districts on individual
voting power has not been sufficiently demonstrated, at least on
this record, to warrant departure from prior cases.
The District Court was more impressed with the other branch of
the claim that multi-member districts inherently discriminate
against other districts. This was the assertion that, whatever the
individual voting power of Marion County voters in choosing
legislators may be, they nevertheless have more effective
representation in the Indiana general assembly for two reasons.
First, each voter is represented by more legislators, and,
therefore, in theory at least, has more chances to influence
critical legislative votes. Second, since multi-member delegations
are elected at large and represent the voters of the entire
district, they tend to vote as a bloc, which is tantamount to the
district's having one representative with several votes. [
Footnote 25] The District Court did
not squarely
Page 403 U. S. 147
sustain this position, [
Footnote 26] but it appears to have found it sufficiently
persuasive to have suggested uniform districting to the Indiana
Legislature and to have eliminated multi-member districts in the
court's own plan redistricting the State.
See 307 F. Supp.
at 1368-1383.
We are not ready, however, to agree that multi-member districts,
wherever they exist, overrepresent their voters as compared with
voters in single member districts, even if the multi-member
delegation tends to bloc voting. The theory that plural
representation itself unduly enhances a district's power and the
influence of its voters remains to be demonstrated in practice and
in the day-to-day operation of the legislature. Neither the
findings of the trial court nor the record before us sustains it,
even where bloc voting is posited.
In fashioning relief, the three-judge court appeared to embrace
the idea that each member of a bloc-voting delegation has more
influence than legislators from a single-member district. But its
findings of fact fail to deal with the actual influence of Marion
County's delegation in the Indiana Legislature. Nor did plaintiffs'
evidence make such a showing. That bloc voting tended to occur is
sustained by the record, and defendants' own witness thought it was
advantageous for Marion County's delegation to stick together. But
nothing demonstrates that senators and representatives from Marion
County counted for more in the legislature than members from
single-member districts or from smaller multi-member districts. Nor
is there anything in the court's findings indicating that what
might be true of Marion County is also true of other multi-member
districts in Indiana, or is true of
Page 403 U. S. 148
multi-member districts generally. Moreover, Marion County would
have no less advantage, if advantage there is, if it elected from
individual districts and the elected representatives demonstrated
the same bloc-voting tendency, which may also develop among
legislators representing single member districts widely scattered
throughout the State. [
Footnote
27] Of course it is advantageous to start with more than one
vote for a bill. But nothing before us shows or suggests that any
legislative skirmish affecting the State of Indiana or Marion
County in particular would have come out differently had Marion
County been subdistricted and its delegation elected from
single-member districts.
Rather than squarely finding unacceptable discrimination against
out-state voters in favor of Marion County voters, the trial court
struck down Marion County's multi-member district because it found
the scheme worked invidiously against a specific segment of the
county's voters as compared with others. The court identified an
area of the city as a ghetto, found it predominantly inhabited by
poor Negroes with distinctive substantive law interests, and
thought this group unconstitutionally underrepresented because the
proportion of legislators with residences in the ghetto elected
from 1960 to 1968 was less than the ghetto's proportion of the
population, less than the proportion of legislators elected from
Washington Township, a less populous district, and less than the
ghetto would likely have elected had the
Page 403 U. S. 149
county consisted of single member districts. [
Footnote 28] We find major deficiencies in
this approach.
First, it needs no emphasis here that the Civil War Amendments
were designed to protect the civil rights of Negroes, and that the
courts have been vigilant in scrutinizing schemes allegedly
conceived or operated as purposeful devices to further racial
discrimination. There has been no hesitation in striking down those
contrivances that can fairly be said to infringe on Fourteenth
Amendment rights.
Sims v. Baggett, 247 F. Supp.
96 (MD Ala.1965);
Smith v. Paris, 257 F.
Supp. 901 (MD Ala.1966),
aff'd, 386 F.2d 979 (CA5
1967);
and see Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U.
S. 339 (1960).
See also Allen v. State Board of
Elections, 393 U. S. 544
(1969). But there is no suggestion here that Marion County's
multi-member district, or similar districts throughout the State,
were conceived or operated as purposeful devices to further racial
or economic discrimination. As plaintiffs concede, "there was no
basis for asserting that the legislative districts in Indiana were
designed to dilute the vote of minorities." Brief of Appellees
(Plaintiffs) 229. Accordingly, the circumstances here lie outside
the reach of decisions such as
Sims v. Baggett, supra.
Nor does the fact that the number of ghetto residents who were
legislators was not in proportion to ghetto population
satisfactorily prove invidious discrimination absent evidence and
findings that ghetto residents had less opportunity than did other
Marion County residents to participate in the political processes
and to elect legislators of their choice. We have discovered
nothing in the record or in the court's findings indicating that
poor Negroes 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
legislative candidates were chosen. Nor did
Page 403 U. S. 150
the evidence purport to show or the court find that inhabitants
of the ghetto were regularly excluded from the slates of both major
parties, thus denying them the chance of occupying legislative
seats. [
Footnote 29] It
appears reasonably clear that the Republican Party won four of the
five elections from 1960 to 1968, that Center Township ghetto voted
heavily Democratic. and that ghetto votes were critical to
Democratic Party success. Although we cannot be sure of the facts
since the court ignored the question, it seems unlikely that the
Democratic Party could afford to overlook the ghetto in slating its
candidates. [
Footnote 30]
Clearly, in 1964 -- the one election that the
Page 403 U. S. 151
Democrats won -- the party slated and elected one senator and
one representative from Center Township ghetto as well as one
senator and four representatives from other
Page 403 U. S. 152
parts of Center Township and two representatives from census
tract 220, which was within the ghetto area described by plaintiff.
[
Footnote 31] Nor is there
any indication that the party failed to slate candidates
satisfactory to the ghetto in other years. Absent evidence or
findings, we are not sure, but it seems reasonable to infer, that,
had the Democrats won all of the elections, or even most of them,
the ghetto would have had no justifiable complaints about
representation. The fact is, however, that four of the five
elections were won by Republicans, which was not the party of the
ghetto and which would not always slate ghetto candidates --
although, in 1962, it nominated and elected one representative and,
in 1968, two representatives, from that area. [
Footnote 32]
Page 403 U. S. 153
If this is the proper view of this case, the failure of the
ghetto 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.
On the record before us, plaintiffs' position comes to this:
that, although they have equal opportunity to participate in and
influence the selection of candidates and legislators, and although
the ghetto votes predominantly Democratic and that party slates
candidates satisfactory to the ghetto, invidious discrimination
nevertheless results when the ghetto, along with all other
Democrats, suffers the disaster of losing too many elections. But
typical American legislative elections are district-oriented,
head-on races between candidates of two or more parties. As our
system has it, one candidate wins, the others lose. Arguably, the
losing candidates' supporters are without representation, since the
men they voted for have been defeated; arguably, they have been
denied equal protection of the laws, since they have no legislative
voice of their own. This is true of both single member and
multi-member districts. But we have not yet deemed it a denial of
equal protection to deny legislative seats to losing candidates,
even in those so-called "safe" districts where the same party wins
year after year.
Plainly, the District Court saw nothing unlawful about the
impact of typical single member district elections. The court's own
plan created districts giving both Republicans and Democrats
several predictably safe general assembly seats, with political,
racial or economic minorities in those districts being
"unrepresented" year after year. But similar consequences flowing
from Marion County multi-member district elections were viewed
differently. Conceding that all Marion County voters could fairly
be said to be represented by the entire delegation,
Page 403 U. S. 154
just as is each voter in a single member district by the winning
candidate, the District Court thought the ghetto voters' claim to
the partial allegiance of eight senators and 15 representatives was
not equivalent to the undivided allegiance of one senator and two
representatives; nor was the ghetto voters' chance of influencing
the election of an entire slate as significant as the guarantee of
one ghetto senator and two ghetto representatives. [
Footnote 33] As the trial court saw it,
ghetto voters could not be adequately and equally represented
unless some of Marion County's general assembly seats were reserved
for ghetto residents serving the interests of the ghetto majority.
But are poor Negroes of the ghetto any more underrepresented than
poor ghetto whites who also voted Democratic and lost, or any more
discriminated against than other interest groups or voters in
Marion County with allegiance to the Democratic Party, or,
conversely, any less represented than Republican areas or voters in
years of Republican defeat? We think not. The mere fact that one
interest group or another concerned with the outcome of Marion
County elections has found itself
Page 403 U. S. 155
outvoted and without legislative seats of its own provides no
basis for invoking constitutional remedies where, as here, there is
no indication that this segment of the population is being denied
access to the political system.
There is another gap in the trial court's reasoning. As noted by
the court, the interest of ghetto residents in certain issues did
not measurably differ from that of other voters. Presumably, in
these respects, Marion County's assemblymen were satisfactorily
representative of the ghetto. As to other matters, ghetto residents
had unique interests not necessarily shared by others in the
community, and, on these issues, the ghetto residents were
invidiously underrepresented absent their own legislative voice to
further their own policy views.
Part of the difficulty with this conclusion is that the findings
failed to support it. Plaintiffs' evidence purported to show
disregard for the ghetto's distinctive interests; defendants
claimed quite the contrary. We see nothing in the findings of the
District Court indicating recurring poor performance by Marion
County's delegation with respect to Center Township ghetto, nothing
to show what the ghetto's interests were in particular legislative
situations, and nothing to indicate that the outcome would have
been any different if the 23 assemblymen had been chosen from
single member districts. Moreover, even assuming bloc voting by the
delegation contrary to the wishes of the ghetto majority, it would
not follow that the Fourteenth Amendment had been violated unless
it is invidiously discriminatory for a county to elect its
delegation by majority vote based on party or candidate platforms,
and so, to some extent, predetermine legislative votes on
particular issues. Such tendencies are inherent in government by
elected representatives, and surely elections in single member
districts visit precisely the same consequences on the supporters
of losing candidates whose views are rejected at the polls.
Page 403 U. S. 156
V
The District Court's holding, although, on the facts of this
case, limited to guaranteeing one racial group representation, is
not easily contained. It is expressive of the more general
proposition 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 majority living in an
area sufficiently compact to constitute a single member district.
[
Footnote 34] This approach
would make it difficult to reject claims of Democrats, Republicans,
or members of any political organization in Marion County who live
in what would be safe districts in a single member district system
but who, in one year or another, or year after year, are submerged
in a one-sided multi-member district vote. [
Footnote 35] There are also union-oriented
workers, the university community, religious or ethnic groups
occupying identifiable areas of our heterogeneous cities and urban
areas. Indeed, it would be difficult for a great many, if not most,
multi-member districts to survive analysis under the District
Court's view unless combined with some voting arrangement such as
proportional representation or cumulative voting aimed
Page 403 U. S. 157
at providing representation for minority parties or interests.
[
Footnote 36] At the very
least, affirmance of the District Court would spawn endless
litigation concerning the multi-member district systems now widely
employed in this country. [
Footnote 37]
We are not insensitive to the objections long voiced to
multi-member district plans. [
Footnote 38] Although not as prevalent as they were in
our early history, they have been
Page 403 U. S. 158
with us since colonial times, and were much in evidence both
before and after the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment.
[
Footnote 39] Criticism is
rooted in their winner-take-all
Page 403 U. S. 159
aspects, their tendency to submerge minorities and to
overrepresent the winning party as compared with the party's
state-wide electoral position, a general preference for
legislatures reflecting community interests as closely as possible
and disenchantment with political parties and elections as devices
to settle policy differences between contending interests. The
chance of winning or significantly influencing intraparty fights
and issue-oriented elections has seemed to some inadequate
protection to minorities, political, racial, or economic; rather,
their voice, it is said, should also be heard in the legislative
forum, where public policy is finally fashioned. In our view,
however, experience and insight have not yet demonstrated
Page 403 U. S. 160
that multi-member districts are inherently invidious and
violative of the Fourteenth Amendment. Surely the findings of the
District Court do not demonstrate it. Moreover, if the problems of
multi-member districts are unbearable, or even unconstitutional, it
is not at all clear that the remedy is a single member district
system with its lines carefully drawn to ensure representation to
sizable racial, ethnic, economic, or religious groups, and with its
own capacity for overrepresenting and underrepresenting parties and
interests, and even for permitting a minority of the voters to
control the legislature and government of a State. The short of it
is that we are unprepared to hold that district-based elections
decided by plurality vote are unconstitutional in either single- or
multi-member districts simply because the supporters of losing
candidates have no legislative seats assigned to them. As presently
advised, we hold that the District Court misconceived the Equal
Protection Clause in applying it to invalidate the Marion County
multi-member district.
VI
Even if the District Court was correct in finding
unconstitutional discrimination against poor inhabitants of the
ghetto, it did not explain why it was constitutionally compelled to
disestablish the entire county district and to intrude upon state
policy any more than necessary to ensure representation of ghetto
interests. The court entered judgment without expressly putting
aside on supportable grounds the alternative of creating
single-member districts in the ghetto and leaving the district
otherwise intact, as well as the possibility that the Fourteenth
Amendment could be satisfied by a simple requirement that some of
the at-large candidates each year must reside in the ghetto.
Cf. Fortson v. Dorsey, supra.
We are likewise at a loss to understand how, on the court's own
findings of fact and conclusions of law, it
Page 403 U. S. 161
was justified in eliminating every multi-member district in the
State of Indiana. It did not forthrightly sustain the theory that
multi-member districts always overrepresent their voters to the
invidious detriment of single-member residents. Nor did it examine
any multi-member district aside from Marion County for possible
intradistrict discrimination.
The remedial powers of an equity court must be adequate to the
task, but they are not unlimited. Here, the District Court erred in
so broadly brushing aside state apportionment policy without solid
constitutional or equitable grounds for doing so.
VII
At the same time, however, we reject defendant's suggestion that
the court was wrong in ordering state-wide reapportionment. After
determining that Marion County required reapportionment, the court
concluded that
"it becomes clear beyond question that the evidence adduced in
this case and the additional apportionment requirements set forth
by the Supreme Court call for a redistricting of the entire state
as to both houses of the General Assembly."
305 F. Supp. at 1391. This evidence, based on 1960 census
figures, showed that Senate district 20, with one senator for
80,496, was overrepresented by 13.68%, while district 5, with one
senator for 106,790, was underrepresented by 14.52%, for a total
variance of 28.20% and a ratio between the largest and smallest
districts of 1.327 to 1. The house figures were similar. The
variation ranged from one representative for 41,449 in district 39
to one for 53,003 in district 35, for a variance of 24.78% and a
ratio of 1.279 to 1. [
Footnote
40] These
Page 403 U. S. 162
variations were in excess of, or very nearly equal to, the
variation of 25.65% and the ratio of 1.30 to 1 which we held
excessive for state legislatures [
Footnote 41] in
Swann v. Adams, 385 U.
S. 440 (1967). Even with this convincing showing of
malapportionment, the court refrained from action in order to allow
the Indiana Legislature to call a special session for the purpose
of redistricting. When the legislature ignored the court's findings
and suggestion, it was not improper for the court to order
state-wide redistricting, as district courts have done from the
time
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533
(1964), and its companion cases were decided. [
Footnote 42]
And see Maryland Committee for
Fair Representation v. Tawes, 377 U.
S. 656,
377 U. S. 673
(1964).
Nor can we accept defendant's argument that the statutory plan
was beyond attack because the District Court had held in 1965 that,
at that time, the plan met the "substantial equality" test of
Reynolds. Stout v. Bottorff,
Page 403 U. S. 163
249 F.
Supp. 488 (SD Ind.1965). Defendant does not argue that the 1969
variances were acceptable under the
Reynolds test, which
has been considerably refined since that decision,
see Swann v.
Adams, supra. Rather, he contends that, because
Reynolds indicated that decennial reapportionment would be
a "rational approach" to the problem, a State cannot be compelled
to reapportion itself more than once in a 10-year period. Such a
reading misconstrues the thrust of
Reynolds in this
respect. Decennial reapportionment was suggested as a presumptively
rational method to avoid "daily, monthly, annual or biennial
reapportionment" as population shifted throughout the State.
[
Footnote 43] Here, the
District Court did not order reapportionment as a result of
population shifts since the 1965
Stout decision, but only
because the disparities among districts which were thought to be
permissible at the time of that decision had been shown by
intervening decisions of this Court to be excessive.
We therefore reverse the judgment of the District Court and
remand the case to that court for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[For Appendix to opinion of the Court,
see post, p.
403 U. S.
164.]
MR. JUSTICE STEWART joins in Part I through VI of the Court's
opinion, holding that the multi-member districting scheme here in
issue did not violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. He dissents from Part
403 U. S.
Colorado General Assembly,@
377 U. S. 713,
377 U. S.
744.
Page 403 U. S. 164
[
Footnote 1]
As later indicated, shortly before announcement of this opinion,
the Court was informed that the statutes at issue here will soon be
superseded by new apportionment legislation recently adopted by the
Indiana Legislature and signed by the Governor. That legislation
provides for single member districts throughout the State,
including Marion County. For the reasons stated below, the
controversy is not moot, and, as will be evident, this opinion
proceeds as though the state statutes before us remain undisturbed
by new legislation.
[
Footnote 2]
The provisions attacked, contained in Acts 1965 (2d Spec.Sess.),
c. 5, § 3, and c. 4, § 3, and appearing in Ind.Ann.Stat. §§ 34-102
and 34-104 (1969) were as follows:
"34-102.
Apportionment of representatives. --
Representatives shall be elected from districts comprised of one
[1] or more counties and having one [1] or more representatives, as
follows: . . . Twenty-sixth District Marion County: fifteen [15]
representatives. . . ."
"34-104.
Apportionment of senators. -- Senators shall
be elected from districts, comprised of one or more counties and
having one or more senators, as follows: . . . Nineteenth District
-- Marion County: eight [8] senators, two [2] to be elected in
1966."
The District Court denied plaintiffs' motion to have the suit
declared a class action under Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 23(b).
305 F.
Supp. 1359, 1363 (SD Ind.1969).
See n 17,
infra.
[
Footnote 3]
Plaintiffs in the trial court are appellees here and defendant
Whitcomb is the appellant. We shall refer to the parties in this
opinion as they stood in the trial court.
[
Footnote 4]
Walker also alleged that,
"in both Lake and Marion County, Indiana, there are a sufficient
number of negro [
sic] voters and inhabitants for a bloc
vote by the said inhabitants to change the result of any election
recently held."
[
Footnote 5]
The mathematical basis for the assertion was set out in detail
in the complaint.
See also n 23,
infra. It was also alleged that
"[b]oth Marion County . . . and Lake County . . . are the sole
matter for consideration before two separate state legislative
committees, one directed to the affair of each county. The laws
enacted . . . which directly effect [
sic] Marion or Lake
County typically apply to only one county or the other."
App. 15.
[
Footnote 6]
Plaintiff Marilyn Hotz, a Republican and a resident of what she
described as the white suburban belt of Marion County lying outside
the city of Indianapolis, alleged that malapportionment of
precincts in party organization together with multi-member
districting invidiously diluted her vote.
Plaintiff Rowland Allan (spelled "Allen" in the District Court's
opinion), an independent voter, alleged that multi-member
districting deprived him of any chance to make meaningful judgments
on the merits of individual candidates because he was confronted
with a list of 23 candidates of each party.
[
Footnote 7]
In their final arguments and proposed findings of fact and
conclusions of law, plaintiffs urged that the Center Township
ghetto was largely inhabited by Negroes who had distinctive
interests and whose bloc voting potential was canceled out by
opposing interest groups in the at-large elections held in Marion
County's multi-member district, that the few Negro legislators,
including the three then serving the general assembly from Marion
County, were chosen by white voters and were unrepresentative of
ghetto Negroes, and that Negroes should be given the power and
opportunity to choose their own assemblymen. It was also urged that
the power of political as well as racial elements was canceled out,
in that, in every assembly election since 1922, one party or the
other had won all the seats, with two minor exceptions; hence, many
voters, in numbers large enough and geographically so located as to
command control over one or more general assembly seats if Marion
County were subdistricted, were wholly without representation
whichever way an assembly election turned out.
The defendants argued that Marion County's problems were
countywide, and that its delegation could better represent the
various interests in the county if elected at large and responsible
to the county as a whole, rather than being elected in single
member districts and thus fragmented by parochial interests and
jealousies. They also urged that the 1960 census figures were an
unreliable basis for redistricting Marion County, and opposed the
court's suggestion that the apportionment of the whole State was an
issue properly before the court on the pleadings and the
evidence.
[
Footnote 8]
A ghetto was defined as a residential area with a higher density
of population and greater proportion of substandard housing than in
the overall metropolitan area and inhabited primarily by racial or
other minority groups with lower than average socioeconomic status
and whose residence in the area is often the result of a social,
legal, or economic restriction or custom. 305 F. Supp. at 1373.
[
Footnote 9]
The court's ghetto area was not congruent with that alleged in
the complaint. It included five census tracts and parts of four
others not within the ghetto area alleged in the complaint, but it
omitted census tract 220, which the complaint had included. 305 F.
Supp. at 1379-1381. That district, which was contiguous to both
tract 211 and the ghetto area, was inhabited primarily by Negroes,
but was found to be a middle class district differing substantially
in critical elements from the remainder of the ghetto. The court
also made it unmistakably clear that its ghetto area
"does not represent the entire ghettoized portion of Center
Township, but only the portion which is predominantly inhabited by
Negroes and which was alleged in the complaint."
305 F. Supp. at 1380-1381. Although census tract 563, a tract
"randomly selected to typify tracts . . . within the predominantly
white ghetto portion of Center Township,"
id. at 1374, was
shown to have characteristics very similar to the tracts in the
court's ghetto area except for the race of its inhabitants, the
size and configuration of the white ghetto area were not revealed
by the findings.
[
Footnote 10]
See Appendix to opinion,
post, p.
403 U. S.
164.
[
Footnote 11]
A striking but typical example of the importance of party
affiliation and the "winner take all" effect is shown by the 1964
House of Representatives election.
Democrats Votes Republicans Votes
Neff. . . . . . . . 151,822 Cox. . . . . . . . 144,336
Bridwell. . . . . . 151,756 Hadley . . . . . . 144,235
Murphy. . . . . . . 151,746 Baker. . . . . . . 144,032
Dean. . . . . . . . 151,702 Burke. . . . . . . 143,989
Creedon . . . . . . 151,573 Borst. . . . . . . 143,972
Jones . . . . . . . 151,481 Madmger. . . . . . 143,918
DeWitt. . . . . . . 151,449 Clark. . . . . . . 143,853
Logan . . . . . . . 151,360 Bosma. . . . . . . 143,810
Roland. . . . . . . 151,343 Brown. . . . . . . 143,744
Walton. . . . . . . 151,282 Durnil . . . . . . 143,588
Huber . . . . . . . 151,268 Gallagher. . . . . 143,553
Costelo . . . . . . 151,153 Cope . . . . . . . 143,475
Fruits. . . . . . . 151,079 Elder. . . . . . . 143,436
Lloyd . . . . . . . 150,862 Zerfas . . . . . . 143,413
Ricketts. . . . . . 150,797 Allen. . . . . . . 143,369
Though nearly 300,000 Marion County voters cast nearly 4 1/2
million votes for the House, the high and low candidates within
each party varied by only about a thousand votes. And, as these
figures show, the Republicans lost every seat, though they received
48.69 of the vote. Plaintiffs' Exhibit 10.
[
Footnote 12]
"The first requirement implicit in
Fortson v. Dorsey
and
Burns v. Richardson, that of an identifiable racial or
political element within the multi-member district, is met by the
Negro residents of the Center Township Ghetto. These Negro
residents have interests in areas of substantive law such as
housing regulations, sanitation, welfare programs (aid to families
with dependent children, medical care, etc.), garnishment statutes,
and unemployment compensation, among others, which diverge
significantly from the interests of nonresidents of the
Ghetto."
305 F. Supp. at 1386.
[
Footnote 13]
Ibid. The District Court implicitly, if not expressly,
rejected the testimony of defendants' witnesses, including a
professor of political science, to the effect that Marion County's
problems and all its voters would be better served by a delegation
sitting and voting as a team and responsible to the district at
large, than by a delegation elected from single member districts
and split into groups representing special interests.
[
Footnote 14]
Article 4, § 6, of the Indiana Constitution provides:
"A Senatorial or Representative district, where more than one
county shall constitute a district, shall be composed of contiguous
counties;
and no county, for Senatorial apportionment, shall
ever be divided."
(Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 15]
See Part
403 U. S.
infra.
[
Footnote 16]
"In his second status, we find that plaintiff Walker is a voter
of Indiana who resides outside Marion County. Applying the uniform
district principle, discussed
infra in the remedy section,
we find that he probably has received less effective representation
than Marion County voters. It has been shown that he votes for
fewer legislators and therefore has fewer legislators to speak for
him. He also, theoretically, casts fewer critical votes than Marion
County voters, but we decline to so hold in the absence of
sufficient evidence as to other factors such as bloc and party
voting in Lake County. We hold that, in the absence of stronger
evidence of dilution, his remedy is limited to the consideration
which should be given to the uniform district principle in any
subsequent reapportionment of the Indiana General Assembly."
305 F. Supp. at 1390.
[
Footnote 17]
The court found a failure of proof on behalf of plaintiff Hotz,
a resident of the white suburban belt, and on behalf of plaintiff
Allan, an independent voter. Two other plaintiffs were entitled to
no relief, plaintiff Chavis because he resided outside the Center
Township ghetto and plaintiff Ramsey because he failed to show that
he was a resident of that area. Only plaintiff Bryant, in addition
to the qualified recognition given Walker, was found to have
standing to sue and to be entitled to the relief prayed for.
[
Footnote 18]
See 403 U. S.
infra.
[
Footnote 19]
The Governor appealed here following this opinion. Since, at
that time, no judgment had been entered and no injunction had been
granted or denied, we do not have jurisdiction of that appeal, and
it is therefore dismissed.
Gunn v. University Committee,
399 U. S. 383
(1970).
[
Footnote 20]
The trial court's discussion of this subject may be found in 305
F. Supp. at 1391-1392.
[
Footnote 21]
The court also provided for the possibility that the legislature
would fail to redistrict in time for the 1972 elections:
"The Indiana constitutional provision for staggering the terms
of senators, so that one-half of the Senate terms expire every two
years, is entirely proper and valid, and would be mandatory in a
legislatively devised redistricting plan."
"However, the plan adopted herein is provisional in nature, and
probably will be applicable for only the 1970 election and the
subsequent 2-year period. This is true since the 1970 census will
have been completed in the interim, and the legislature can very
well redistrict itself prior to the 1972 election. On the other
hand, it is conceivable that the legislature may fail to redistrict
before the 1972 elections. In such event, all fifty senatorial
seats shall be up for election every two years until such time as
the legislature properly redistricts itself. It will then properly
be the province of the legislature in redistricting to determine
which senatorial districts shall elect senators to 4-year terms,
and which shall elect senators to 2-year terms to reinstate the
staggering of terms."
307 F. Supp. at 1367.
[
Footnote 22]
In
Fortson, the Court reversed a three-judge District
Court which found a violation of the Equal Protection Clause in
that voters in single member districts were allowed to "select
their own senator," but that voters in multi-member districts were
not. The statutory scheme in
Fortson provided for
subdistricting within the county, so that each subdistrict was the
residence of exactly one senator. However, each senator was elected
by the county at large. The Court said,
"Each [sub]district's senator must be a resident of that
[sub]district, but, since his tenure depends upon the county-wide
electorate, he must be vigilant to serve the interests of all the
people in the county, and not merely those of people in his home
[sub]district; thus in fact, he is the county's, and not merely the
[sub]district's, senator."
379 U.S. at
379 U. S. 438.
The question of whether the scheme "operate[d] to minimize or
cancel out the voting strength of racial or political elements of
the voting population" was not presented.
In
Burnette, we summarily affirmed a three-judge
District Court ruling,
Mann v. Davis, 245 F.
Supp. 241 (ED Va.1965), which upheld a multi-member district
consisting of the city of Richmond, Va., and suburban Henrico
County over the objections of both urban Negroes and suburban
whites. Since the urban Negroes did not appeal here, the affirmance
is of no weight as to them, but, as to the suburbanites, it
represents an adherence to
Fortson. Similarly, Harrison
summarily affirmed a District Court reapportionment plan,
Schaefer v. Thomson, 251 F.
Supp. 450 (Wyo.1965), where multi-member districts in Wyoming
were held necessary to keep county splitting at a minimum.
Burns vacated a three-judge court decree which required
single-member districts except in extraordinary circumstances. The
Court in
Burns noted that "the demonstration that a
particular multi-member scheme effects an invidious result must
appear from evidence in the record." 384 U.S. at
384 U. S.
88.
In
Kilgarlin, the Court affirmed, per curiam, a
district court ruling
"insofar as it held that appellants had not proved their
allegations that [the Texas House of Representatives
reapportionment plan] was a racial or political gerrymander
violating the Fourteenth Amendment, that it unconstitutionally
deprived Negroes of their franchise and that, because of its
utilization of single member, multi-member and floterial districts,
it was an unconstitutional 'crazy quilt.'"
386 U.S. at
386 U. S.
121.
[
Footnote 23]
The mathematical backbone of this theory is as follows: in a
population of
n voters, where each voter has a choice
between two alternatives (candidates), there are 2
n
possible voting combinations. For example, with a population of
three voters, A, B, and C, and two candidates, X and Y, there are
eight combinations:
A B C
#1. X X X
#2. X X Y
#3. X Y X
#4. X Y Y
#5. Y X X
#6. Y X Y
#7. Y Y X
#8. Y Y Y
The theory hypothesizes that the true test of voting power is
the ability to cast a tie-breaking, or "critical" vote. In the
population of three voters, as shown above, any voter can cast a
critical vote in four situations; in the other four situations, the
vote is not critical, since it cannot change the outcome of the
election. For example, C can cast a tie-breaking vote only in
situations 3, 4, 5, and 6. The number of combinations in which a
voter can cast a tie-breaking vote is
(
n-1)!
2 x ---------------------
n-1
n-1
--- ! x ---!
2 2
where
n is the number of voters. Dividing this result
(critical votes) by 2
n (possible combinations), one
arrives at that fraction of possible combinations in which a voter
can cast a critical vote. This is the theory's measure of voting
power. In District K, with three voters, the fraction is 4/8, or
50%. In District L with nine voters, the fraction is 140/512, or
28%. Conventional wisdom would give District K one representative
and District L three. But, under the theory, a voter in District L
is not 1/3 as powerful as the voter in District K, but more than
half as powerful. District L deserves only two representatives, and
by giving it three the State causes voters therein to be
overrepresented. For a fuller explanation of this theory,
see Banzhaf, Multi-Member Electoral Districts -- Do They
Violate the "One Man, One Vote" Principle, 75 Yale L.J. 1309
(1966).
[
Footnote 24]
Tr. 39. Plaintiffs' brief in this Court recognizes the
issue:
"The obvious question which the foregoing presentation gives
rise to is that of whether the fact that a voter in a large
multi-member district has a greater mathematical chance to cast a
crucial vote has any practical significance."
Brief of Appellees (Plaintiffs) 14.
[
Footnote 25]
Cf. Banzhaf, Weighted Voting Doesn't Work: A
Mathematical Analysis, 19 Rutgers L.Rev. 317 (1965).
[
Footnote 26]
It is apparent that the District Court declined to rule as a
matter of law that a multi-member district was
per se
illegal as giving an invidious advantage to multi-member district
voters over voters in single member districts or smaller
multi-member districts.
See 305 F. Supp. at 1391-1392.
[
Footnote 27]
The so-called urban-rural division has been much talked about.
Antagonistic bloc voting by the two camps may occur, but it has
perhaps been overemphasized.
See White & Thomas, Urban
and Rural Representation and State Legislative Apportionment, 17
W.Pol.Q. 724 (1964). Legislation dealing with uniquely urban
problems may be routinely approved when urban delegations are in
agreement but encounter insuperable difficulties when the
delegations are split internally.
See Kovach, Some Lessons
of Reapportionment, 37 Reporter 26, 31 (Sept. 21, 1967).
[
Footnote 28]
See Appendix to opinion,
post, p.
403 U. S.
164.
[
Footnote 29]
It does not appear that the Marion County multi-member district
always operated to exclude Negroes or the poor from the
legislature. In the five general assemblies from 1960-1968, the
county's Center Township ghetto had one senator and four
representatives. The remainder of the township, which includes a
white ghetto, elected one senator and eight representatives. Census
tract 220, inhabited predominantly by Negroes but having different
economic and social characteristics according to the trial court,
elected one senator and five representatives.
Ibid.
Plaintiffs' evidence indicated that Marion County as a whole
elected two Negro senators and seven representatives in those
years. Plaintiffs' Exhibit 10.
[
Footnote 30]
Plaintiffs' Exhibit 10 purported to list the names and race of
both parties' general assembly candidates from 1920 through 1968.
For the 1960-1968 period which concerned the District Court, the
exhibit purported to show that the Democratic Party slated one
Negro representative in 1960; one in 1962; one senator and two
representatives in 1964; three representatives in 1966; and one
senator and two representatives in 1968. The Republican Party
slated one Negro senator in 1960; two representatives in 1966; and
three representatives in 1968. The racial designations on the
exhibit, however, were excluded as hearsay.
The Brief of Appellees (Plaintiffs), at 23 n. 7, indicates that,
in the 1970 elections:
"[O]ne of the major political parties in Marion County held
district 'mini-slating conventions' for purposes of determining its
legislative candidates. All of the slated candidates were
subsequently nominated in the primary. Black candidates filed in
the slating conventions in six of the fifteen Marion County
'districts' including the five that contain parts of the ghetto
area. Only two black candidates were slated and nominated,
including one in the district that contains only a very small part
of the ghetto area where the black candidate overwhelmingly
defeated the white candidate in a head-on race notwithstanding a
very substantial white voting majority. In a district that was
almost entirely ghetto, a white candidate won almost all of the
vote in a head-on race against a black candidate who campaigned
primarily on the basis of skin color. All five of the candidates in
the 'ghetto districts,' however, avowed a substantial commitment to
the substantive interests of black people and the poor."
The record shows that plaintiff Chavis was slated by the
Democratic Party and elected to the state senate in 1964. Exhibit
10. Also, plaintiffs Ramsey and Bryant were both slated by the same
party as candidates for the House of Representatives in 1968, but
were defeated in the general election.
Ibid.; see also Tr.
131 (Ramsey), Tr. 133 (Bryant).
One of plaintiffs' witnesses, an attorney and political figure
in the Republican Party, testified as follows:
"Q. In your experience, Mrs. Allen, aren't tickets put together
by party organization to appeal [to] the various interest groups
throughout Marion County?"
"A. Yes."
"Q. Among these interest groups, are economic groups, racial
groups, and others?"
"A Yes."
"
* * * *"
"Q. I show you exhibit 5B that is in evidence, showing the
location of the elected Republican representatives' homes at the
time they filed in the party primary; does it to you somehow
reflect an interest in making an appeal to each conceivable faction
in the family, in the county area, each geographical interest?"
"A. Yes, it does, if I can explain."
"Q. Yes, you may."
"A. Back in 1966, as I stated, we had a real primary fight, and,
at the time, we selected our candidates in the primary, Republican
Action Committee was not real, real strong in some geographical
areas, and we felt that necessary to come up with a 15-man slate,
many of the people who lived in Center Township, including myself,
did not feel ready to run for public office, and therefore there
was a hiatus in Center Township residents. However, many of the
Washington Township residents, I believe at least two Washington
Township residents, had a number of family and historical ties in
this Center Township Area, even though they did not live there,
and, to the best of the Committee's ability, they tried to achieve
racial, geographical, economical and social diversity on the
ticket. I can't say they were entirely successful, but they made a
real good attempt, and this is a result of their attempts."
"Q. And the real hard-driving effort to put the Action
Committees through did take place by the residents of Center
Township, did it not?"
"A. It was an over-all drive. Center Township, having the
population it has, could not be ignored."
Tr. 145-148.
Plaintiffs' lawyer was, at the time of the trial, the Marion
County Democratic chairman, Tr. 256; plaintiff Chavis was a ward
chairman and a long-time precinct committeeman, Tr. 77.
[
Footnote 31]
See Appendix to opinion, p.
403 U. S.
164.
[
Footnote 32]
See ibid. In addition, the Republicans nominated and
elected one senator (1960), and three representatives (1960, 1966,
1968) from census tract 220, and four representatives (three in
1962, one in 1966) from the non-ghetto area of Center Township.
Ibid.
Although plaintiffs asserted it, there was no finding by the
District Court that Republican legislators residing in the ghetto
were not representative of the area or had failed properly to
represent ghetto interests in the general assembly.
[
Footnote 33]
The comparative merits of the two approaches to metropolitan
representation has been much mooted, and is still in contention.
See the authorities cited in
n 38,
infra particularly the piece by Kovach and
the series of studies by Collins, Dauer, David, Lacy, & Mauer.
And, of course, witnesses in the trial court differed on this very
issue.
E.g., Tr. 209-214, 223-229, 235-238, 256-258. David
& Eisenberg, in their study,
infra, n 38, concluded that the case for rigid
insistence on single member districting has not been proved. They
would prefer a system of small multi-member districts in
metropolitan areas to either the larger multi-member district or
the single-member district, thereby minimizing the acknowledged
shortcomings of each. More generally, still in suspense is
definitive judgment about the long-range impact of voting systems
and malapportionment on legislative output. Sokolow, After
Reapportionment: Numbers or Policies?, 19 W.Pol.Q.Supp. 21 (1966);
T. Dye, Politics, Economics, and the Public 260-277 (1966); D.
Lockard, The Politics of State and Local Government 290-293 (2d
ed.1969).
[
Footnote 34]
Interestingly enough, in
Wright v. Rockefeller,
376 U. S. 52
(1964), challenge was to a single member district plan with
districts allegedly drawn on racial lines and designed to limit
Negroes to voting for their own candidates in safe Negro districts.
We rejected the challenge for failure of proof, but noted in
passing that
"some of these voters . . . would prefer a more even
distribution of minority groups among the four congressional
districts, but others, like the intervenors in this case, would
argue strenuously that the kind of districts for which appellants
contended would be undesirable and, because based on race or place
of origin, would themselves be unconstitutional."
376 U.S. at
376 U. S.
57-58.
[
Footnote 35]
Plaintiffs' final arguments in the District Court asserted
political as well as racial and economic discrimination in the
workings of the Marion County district, in that the "political
minority," whether Republicans or Democrats, is "always shut out"
when the opposing party wins. Tr. 254.
See n 11,
supra.
[
Footnote 36]
For discussions of voting systems designed to achieve minority
representation,
see Dixon,
infra, n 38, at 516-527; Black, The Theory of
Elections in Single-member Constituencies, 15 Can.J. of Economics
and Pol.Sci. 158 (1949); Silva, Relation of Representation and the
Party System to the Number of Seats Apportioned to a Legislative
District, 17 W.Pol.Q. 742, 744
et seq. (1964); S. Bedford,
The Faces of Justice (1961); E. Lakeman & J. Lambert, Voting in
Democracies (1959); Blair, Cumulative Voting: An Effective
Electoral Device in Illinois Politics, 45 Ill.Studies in the Social
Sciences (1960).
[
Footnote 37]
As of November 1970, 46% of the upper houses and 62% of the
lower houses in the States contained some multi-member districts.
National Municipal League, Apportionment in the Nineteen Sixties
(Rev. Nov.1970). In 1955, it was reported that the figures were 33%
and 75%, respectively. Klain, A New Look at the Constituencies: The
Need for a Recount and a Reappraisal, 49 Am.Pol.Sci.Rev. 1105
(1955). Though the overall effect of the reapportionment cases on
this phenomenon is necessarily somewhat speculative, there is no
doubt that some States switched to multi-member districts as a
result of those decisions. Prior to the decisions, for example,
Vermont's lower house was composed entirely of single member
districts.
Id. at 1109. This resulted in the colorful
situation of one representative for a town of 33,155 and another
for a town of 38 in 1962. National Municipal League, Apportionment
in the Nineteen Sixties, pt. I(b). Reapportioned and redistricted
in light of
Reynolds, Vermont's lower house now has 36
multi-member and 36 single member districts.
Buckley v.
Hoff, 243 F.
Supp. 873 (Vt.1965). Reapportionment has also been credited
with abolishing Maryland's tradition of single member districts in
its senate. Burdette, Maryland Reapportionment, in Apportionment in
the Nineteen Sixties,
supra.
[
Footnote 38]
The relative merits of multi-member and single member plans have
been much debated, and the general preference for single member
districts has not gone unchallenged. For representative treatment
of the subject,
see: R. Dixon, Democratic Representation:
Reapportionment in Law and Politics 461-463, 470-472, 476-490,
503-507 (1968); P. David & R. Eisenberg, State Legislative
Redistricting: Major Issues in the Wake of Judicial Decision
(1962); Barnett, Unitary-Multiple Election Districts, 39
Am.Pol.Sci.Rev. 65 (1945); Silva, Compared Values of the Single-
and the Multi-member Legislative District, 17 W.Pol.Q. 504 (1964);
Hamilton, Legislative Constituencies: Single-member Districts,
Multi-member Districts, and Floterial Districts, 20 W.Pol.Q. 321
(1967) (includes a discussion of districting in Indiana); Silva,
Relation of Representation and the Party System to the Number of
Seats Apportioned to a Legislative District, 17 W.Pol.Q. 742
(1964); Lindquist, Socioeconomic Status and Political
Participation, 17 W.Pol.Q. 608 (1964); Klain, A New Look at the
Constituencies: The Need for a Recount and a Reappraisal, 49
Am.Pol.Sci.Rev. 1105 (1955); Kovach, Some Lessons of
Reapportionment, 37 Reporter 26 (Sept. 21, 1967); and M. Collins,
M. Dauer, P. David, A. Lacy, & G. Mauer, Evolving Issues and
Patterns of State Legislative Redistricting in Large Metropolitan
Areas (1966).
Interesting material with respect to the relative merits of
single- and multi-member districts may be found in the
congressional debates surrounding the passage in 1842 of the
statute requiring representatives to be elected in single member
districts.
See n
39,
infra. Though the racial considerations present here
were, not surprisingly, absent in these pre-Civil War Amendments
debates, the concern voiced by congressmen over the submergence of
minorities, bloc voting, and party control shows, at least, that
the plaintiffs' apprehensions are not entirely new ones.
See,
e.g., Cong.Globe, 27th Cong., 2d Sess., 445-448, 452-453,
463-464.
[
Footnote 39]
In colonial days, "[m]ultiple districts were the rule, single
ones the exception," and,
"[f]or nearly a century and a half after the Declaration of
Independence, the American states elected by far the greater part
of their lawmakers in multiple constituencies."
Klain,
supra, n
38, at 1112, 1113. Although a trend toward single member districts
began long ago, multiple districts are still much in evidence.
See n 37,
supra. See also David & Eisenberg,
supra, n 38, at 20;
Dixon,
supra, n 38,
at 504.
In 1842, Congress by statute required single member districts
for congressional elections. Act of June 25, 1842, § 2, 5 Stat.
491. The substance of the restriction was continued in Rev.Stat. §
23, and in apportionment legislation in this century until 1929. In
1941, Congress enacted a law that required that, until a State is
redistricted in a manner provided by law after decennial
reapportionment of the House, representatives were to be elected
from the districts prescribed by the law of the State, and that,
"if any of them are elected from the State at large, they shall
continue to be so elected," provided that, if reapportionment of
the House following a census shows that a State is entitled to an
increase in the number of representatives, the additional
representatives shall be elected at large until the State is
redistricted, and if there is a decrease in the number of
representatives and the number of districts in the State exceeds
the number of representatives newly apportioned, all
representatives shall be elected at large. Act of Nov. 15, 1941, 55
Stat. 762, amending § 22(c) of the Act of June 18, 1929, 46 Stat.
27, 2 U.S.C. § 2a(c). In 1967, Congress reinstated the single
member district requirement,
"except that a State which is entitled to more than one
Representative and which has in all previous elections elected its
Representatives at Large may elect its Representatives at Large to
the Ninety-first Congress."
81 Stat. 581, 2 U.S.C. § 2c (1964 ed., Supp. V). Hawaii was the
only State to take advantage of this exception. It has districted
for the 92d Congress. Hawaii Rev.Stat. § 12-32.5 (Supp. 1969).
Congress has not purported to exercise Fourteenth Amendment
powers to regulate or prohibit multi-member districts in state
elections.
[
Footnote 40]
The court was also impressed by the 1967 Indiana Board of Health
Vital Statistics population estimates which showed a senate
variance of 36.83% and a house variance of 37.30%. It did not base
its order on these interim figures, however.
See 307 F.
Supp. 1362, 1366.
[
Footnote 41]
See also Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, 394 U.
S. 526 (1969), and
Wells v. Rockefeller,
394 U. S. 542
(1969), in which the Court held that variances of 5.97% and
13.096%, respectively, were impermissible for congressional
redistricting.
[
Footnote 42]
In redistricting the State, the District Court divided some
counties into several districts, and defendant attacks this as an
unwarranted violation of Indiana Const., Art. 4, § 6, which says
"no county, for Senatorial apportionment, shall ever be divided."
Defendant concedes that "[t]he error . . . is not the
per
se violation" of the constitution, but rather that the court
drew its plan "without having meaningfully considered" the dictates
of the constitution. Brief for Appellant (Defendant) 49. But the
contrary appears to us to be true. The court announced that it
"would strive to preserve the integrity of county and township
lines" wherever possible, 307 F. Supp. at 1364, though it
ultimately concluded that the
"difficulty of devising . . . compact and contiguous . . .
districts within that framework [of mathematical equality] has, in
large part, precluded preservation of county lines."
Id. at 1366. We note that none of the state-wide
redistricting plans that were submitted for the court's
consideration, including those of the house and senate minority
leaders and the chairman of the senate majority caucus committee,
followed the state constitution in this respect. R. 57-137,
198-228.
[
Footnote 43]
In any event, the Court was careful to note that "we do not mean
to intimate that more frequent reapportionment would not be
constitutionally permissible or practicably desirable." 377 U.S. at
377 U.S. 584.
|
403
U.S. 124app|
The following table was included in the trial court's
findings:
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT
TABLE No. 7
bwm:
===============================================================================================================
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
1960-69
Av. Pop. Senators Represent-
Residence of as Percent- Elected Representatives atives
Legislators 1960-69 age of Marion Senators Elected as Per-
Elected Elected as
Elected (By Average County Aver- ------------------ cent of
--------------------- Percent of
Marion County Popula- age Pop. 60- 1960-68 60- 1960-68
Area) tion 1960 60 62 64 66 68 68 Total 60 62 64 66 68 68
Total
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Washington Twp. ex-
cluding Tract 220. .103,615 13.98 3 1 2 1 3 10 47.52 6 2 5 5 5
23 34.33
Census Tract 220. . . . 4,866 0.66 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.75 1 0 2 1 1 5
7.46
Center Twp. excluding
Ghetto. . . . . . . .172,876 23.32 0 0 1 0 0 1 4.75 0 3 4 1 0 8
11.94
Center Twp. Ghetto. . .132,000 17.81 0 0 1 0 0 1 4.75 0 1 1 0 2
4 5.97
Pike Twp. . . . . . . . 11,031 1.49 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1
1.49
Wayne Twp. . . . . . .105,961 14.30 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 2 2 7
10.45
Decatur Twp. . . . . . 13,755 1.86 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2
2.99
Perry Twp. . . . . . . 59,778 8.07 1 0 1 0 2 4 19.01 0 0 1 1 1 3
4.48
Franklin Twp. . . . . . 8,929 1.21 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0
Lawrence Twp. . . . . . 49,553 6.69 0 0 1 0 1 2 9.51 2 2 0 3 2 9
13.44
Warren Twp. . . . . . . 78,872 10.64 0 0 0 1 1 2 9.51 1 1 2 1 0
5 7.46
Marion County . . . . .741,234 [100%] 5 1 6 2 7 21 [100%] 11 11
15 15 15 67 [100%]
===============================================================================================================
Page 403 U. S. 165
ewm:
305 F. Supp. at 1383.
Separate opinion of MR. JUSTICE HARLAN.
Earlier this Term, I remarked on "the evident malaise among the
members of the Court" with prior decisions in the field of voter
qualifications and reapportionment.
Oregon v. Mitchell,
400 U. S. 112,
400 U. S. 218
(1970) (separate opinion of this writer).
Today's opinions in this and two other voting cases now decided
[
Footnote 2/1] confirm that
diagnosis.
I
Past decisions have held that districting in local governmental
units must approach equality of voter population "as far as is
practicable,"
Hadley v. Junior College District,
397 U. S. 50,
397 U. S. 56
(1970), and that the "as nearly as is practicable" standard of
Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U. S. 1,
376 U.S. 7-8 (1964), for
congressional districting forbade a maximum variation of 67%.
Kirkpatrick v. Preisler, 394 U. S. 526
(1969). Today the Court sustains a local governmental apportionment
scheme with a 12% variation.
Abate v. Mundt, post, p.
403 U. S. 182.
Other past decisions have suggested that multi-member
constituencies would be unconstitutional if they could be
shown,
"under the circumstances of a particular case . . . , to
minimize or cancel out the voting strength of racial or political
elements of the voting population."
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U. S. 433,
379 U. S. 439
(1965);
Burns v. Richardson, 384 U. S.
73,
384 U. S. 88
(1966). Today the Court holds that a three-judge District Court,
which struck down an apportionment scheme for just this reason,
"misconceived the Equal Protection Clause."
Ante at
403 U. S.
160.
Prior opinions stated that,
"once the class of voters is chosen and their qualifications
specified, we see no constitutional way by which equality of voting
power may be evaded."
Gray v. Sanders, 372 U. S. 368,
372 U. S. 381
(1963);
Hadley v. Junior College District, 397 U. S.
50,
Page 403 U. S. 166
397 U. S. 59
(1970). Today the Court sustains a provision that gives opponents
of school bond issues half again the voting power of proponents.
Gordon v. Lance, ante, p.
403 U. S. 1.
II
The Court justifies the wondrous results in these cases by
relying on different combinations of factors.
Abate v.
Mundt relies on the need for flexibility in local governmental
arrangements, the interest in preserving the integrity of political
subdivisions, and the longstanding tradition behind New York's
practice in the latter respect. This case finds elementary
probability theory too simplistic as a guide to resolution of what
is essentially a practical question of political power; the opinion
relies on the long history of multi-member districts in this
country and the fear that "affirmance of the District Court would
spawn endless litigation."
Ante at
403 U. S. 157.
Gordon v. Lance relies heavily on the "federal analogy"
and the prevalence of similar anti-majoritarian elements in the
constitutions of the several States.
To my mind, the relevance of such considerations as the
foregoing is undeniable, and their cumulative effect is
unanswerable. I can only marvel, therefore, that they were
dismissed, singly and in combination, in a line of cases which
began with
Gray v. Sanders, 372 U.
S. 368 (1863), and ended with
Hadley v. Junior
College District, 397 U. S. 50
(1970).
That line of cases can best be understood, I think, as
reflections of deep personal commitments by some members of the
Court to the principles of pure majoritarian democracy. This
majoritarian strain and its nonconstitutional sources are most
clearly revealed in
Gray v. Sanders, supra, at
372 U. S. 381,
where my Brother DOUGLAS, speaking for the Court, said:
"The conception of political equality from the Declaration of
Independence,
Page 403 U. S. 167
to Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, to the Fifteenth, Seventeenth,
and Nineteenth Amendments, can mean only one thing -- one person,
one vote."
If this philosophy of majoritarianism had been given its head,
it would have led to different results in each of the cases decided
today, for it is in the very nature of the principle that it
regards majority rule as an imperative of social organization, not
subject to compromise in furtherance of merely political ends. It
is a philosophy which ignores or overcomes the fact that the scheme
of the Constitution is one not of majoritarian democracy, but of
federal republics, with equality of representation a value
subordinate to many others, as both the body of the Constitution
and the Fourteenth Amendment itself show on their face.
See
generally Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186,
369 U.S. 297-324 (1962)
(Frankfurter, J., dissenting).
III
If majoritarianism is to be rejected as a rule of decision, as
the Court implicitly rejects it today, then an alternative
principle must be supplied if this earlier line of cases just
referred to is still to be regarded as good law. The
reapportionment opinions of this Court provide little help. They
speak in conclusory terms of "debasement" or "dilution" of the
"voting power" or "representation" of citizens without explanation
of what these concepts are. The answers are hardly apparent, for,
as the Court observes today:
"As our system has it, one candidate wins, the others lose.
Arguably the losing candidates' supporters are without
representation, since the men they voted for have been defeated;
arguably they have been denied equal protection of the laws, since
they have no legislative voice of their own. . . . But we have not
yet deemed it a denial of equal protection to deny legislative
seats to losing candidates,
Page 403 U. S. 168
even in those so-called 'safe' districts where the same party
wins year after year."
Ante at
403 U. S. 153.
A coherent and realistic notion of what is meant by "voting power"
might have restrained some of the extreme lengths to which this
Court has gone in pursuit of the will-o'-the-wisp of "one man, one
vote."
An interesting illustration of the light which a not implausible
definition of "voting power" can shed on reapportionment doctrine
is provided by the theoretical model created by Professor Banzhaf,
to which the Court refers,
ante at
403 U. S.
144-146. [
Footnote 2/2]
This model uses as a measure of voting power the probability that a
given voter will cast a tie-breaking ballot in an election. Two
further assumptions are made: first, that the voting habits of all
members of the electorate are alike; and second, that each voter is
equally likely to vote for either candidate before him. On these
assumptions, and taking the voting population in Marion County as
roughly 300,000, it can be shown that the probability of an
individual voter's casting a decisive vote in a given election is
approximately .00146. This provides a standard to which "voting
power" of residents in other districts may be compared.
See
generally Banzhaf, Multi-Member Electoral Districts -- Do They
Violate the "One Man, One Vote" Principle, 75 Yale L.J. 1309
(1966).
Page 403 U. S. 169
However, Professor Banzhaf's model also reveals that minor
variations in assumptions can lead to major variations in results.
For instance, if the temper of the electorate changes by one-half
of one percent, [
Footnote 2/3] each
individual's voting power is reduced by a factor of approximately
1,000,000. Or if a few of the 300,000 voters are committed -- say
15,000 to candidate A and 10,000 to candidate B [
Footnote 2/4] -- the probability of any
individual's casting a tie-breaking vote is reduced by a factor on
the rough order of 120,000,000,000,000,000,000. Obviously, in
comparison with the astronomical differences in voting power which
can result from such minor variations in political characteristics,
the effects of the 12% and 28% population variations considered in
Abate v. Mundt and in this case are
de minimis,
and even the extreme deviations from the norm presented in
Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186
(1962), and
Avery v. Midland County, 390 U.
S. 474 (1968), pale into insignificance. [
Footnote 2/5]
It is not surprising, therefore, that the Court in this case
declines to embrace the measure of voting power suggested by
Professor Banzhaf. But it neither suggests an alternative nor
considers the consequences of its inability to measure what it
purports to be equalizing.
See 403
U.S. 124fn2/2|>n. 2,
supra. Instead, it becomes
enmeshed in the haze of slogans and numerology which, for 10 years,
has obscured its vision in this field, and finally remands the case
"for further proceedings consistent with [its] opinion."
Ante at
403 U. S. 163.
This inexplicit mandate is at
Page 403 U. S. 170
least subject to the interpretation that the court below is to
inquire into such matters as "the actual influence of Marion
County's delegation in the Indiana Legislature,"
ante at
403 U. S. 147,
and the possibility of "recurring poor performance by Marion
County's delegation with respect to Center Township ghetto,"
ante at
403 U. S. 155,
with a view to determining whether
"any legislative skirmish affecting the State of Indiana or
Marion County in particular would have come out differently had
Marion County been subdistricted and its delegation elected from
single-member districts."
Ante at
403 U. S. 148.
If there are less appropriate subjects for federal judicial
inquiry, they do not come readily to mind. The suggestion implicit
in the Court's opinion that appellees may ultimately prevail if
they can make their record in these and other like respects should
be recognized for what it is: a manifestation of frustration by a
Court that has become trapped in the "political thicket" and is
looking for the way out.
This case is nothing short of a complete vindication of Mr.
Justice Frankfurter's warning nine years ago
"of the mathematical quagmire (apart from divers judicially
inappropriate and elusive determinants) into which this Court today
catapults the lower courts of the country."
Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186,
369 U.S. 268 (1962)
(dissenting opinion). With all respect, it also bears witness to
the morass into which the Court has gotten itself by departing from
sound constitutional principle in the electoral field.
See
the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Frankfurter in
Baker v.
Carr, supra, and my separate opinions in
Reynolds v.
Sims, 377 U. S. 533,
377 U.S. 589 (1964), and in
Oregon v. Mitchell, 400 U. S. 112,
400 U. S. 152
(1970). I hope the day will come when the Court will frankly
recognize the error of its ways in ever having undertaken to
restructure state electoral processes.
I would reverse the judgment below and remand the case to the
District Court with directions to dismiss the complaint.
Page 403 U. S. 171
[
Footnote 2/1]
Abate v. Mundt, post, p.
403 U. S. 182;
Gordon v. Lance, ante, p.
403 U. S. 1.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Court, though stating that it does "not quarrel with
plaintiffs' mathematics," nevertheless implies that it may be
ignored because
"the position remains a theoretical one . . . , and does"
"not take into account any political or other factors which
might affect the actual voting power of the residents, which might
include party affiliation, race, previous voting characteristics or
any other factors which go into the entire political voting
situation."
Ante at
403 U. S. 145,
403 U. S. 146.
Precisely the same criticism applies, with even greater force, to
the "one man, one vote" opinions of this Court. The only relevant
difference between the elementary arithmetic on which the Court
relies and the elementary probability theory on which Professor
Banzhaf relies is that calculations in the latter field cannot be
done on one's fingers.
[
Footnote 2/3]
More precisely, the result follows if the second of Professor
Banzhaf's assumptions is altered so that the probability of each
voter's selecting candidate A over candidate B is 50.5%, rather
than 50%.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The text assumes that each of the remaining 275,000 voters is
equally likely to vote for A or for B.
[
Footnote 2/5]
"There is something fascinating about science. One gets such
wholesale returns of conjecture out of such a trifling investment
of fact." Mark Twain, Life on the Mississippi 109 (Harper &
Row, 1965).
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR.
JUSTICE MARSHALL concur, dissenting in part and concurring in the
result in part.
The Indiana Constitution provides that "no county, for
Senatorial apportionment, shall ever be divided." Art. 4, § 6. The
legislative apportionment statutes in Indiana which implemented
that provision gave Marion County eight senators, all elected at
large. The statutes also gave the county 15 at-large
representatives.
Marion County is the most populous in the State. It contains
nine townships, and includes the city of Indianapolis. On January
9, 1969, this lawsuit was commenced to require a subdivision of the
multi-member districting practiced in Marion County. Certain voters
contended that the multi-member district deprived them of equal
protection of the laws because it diluted the voting rights of an
identifiable racial minority within the county.
To determine if there was an identifiable minority within the
county, the District Court adopted the following definition of
"ghetto":
"A primarily residential section of an urban area characterized
by a higher relative density of population and a higher relative
proportion of substandard housing than in the overall metropolitan
area which is inhabited predominantly by members of a racial,
ethnic, or other minority group, most of whom are of lower
socioeconomic status than the prevailing status in the metropolitan
area and whose residence in the section is often the result of
social, legal, or economic restrictions or custom."
305 F.
Supp. 1364, 1373. Applying the definition to the extensive
evidence in the case, the District Court found there was an
identifiable ghetto area within Center Township. The court then
contrasted the residence of those elected to the state
Page 403 U. S. 172
House and Senate from Marion County since 1960. There had been
21 elected senators; two came from Center Township, 11 from
Washington Township. Of the 67 representatives, 12 came from Center
Township and 28 from Washington Township.
The District Court concluded:
"The inequity of representation by residence of legislators
between Washington and Center Townships is apparent. . . .
Washington Township, the upper middle-class and wealthy suburban
area having 14.64% of the population of Marion County, was the
residence of 52.27% of the senators and 41.79% of the
representatives. Center Township, having 41.14% of the population
(approximately three times as large), was the residence of 9.51% of
the senators (less than one-fifth of Washington Township) and
17.91% of the representatives (approximately three-sevenths of
Washington Township)."
305 F. Supp. at 1385.
The court found that the voting strength of the cognizable
element within Center Township was severely minimized, that
minimization occurred by virtue of the strong control which the
political parties exert over the nomination process in Marion
County, and that black voters within Center Township are unable to
be assured of the opportunity of voting for prospective legislators
of their choice. The court further found that,
"[u]nder the evidence before the Court, such invidious effects
will continue so long as Marion County is apportioned into large
senate and house multi-member districts."
305 F. Supp. at 1399.
I
Based on its findings, the District Court held the then Indiana
apportionment acts unconstitutional and enjoined their enforcement.
The court then determined
Page 403 U. S. 173
that to redistrict Marion County alone would leave
constitutionally impermissible population variances between the
newly created districts and the other districts in the State, and
therefore redistricting the entire State was necessary. In its
redistricting plan, the District Court divided well over half of
the counties in the State despite Art. 4, § 6, of the Indiana
Constitution. Marion County itself was divided into seven separate
senatorial districts, and an eighth was created by taking part of
Marion and parts of Johnson and Morgan Counties. The court mandated
that the 1970 election be conducted in accordance with the plan it
approved, and the court retained jurisdiction for the purpose of
passing on any future claims of unconstitutionality made by the
plaintiffs against any future legislative apportionment plan
promulgated. This Court stayed the District Court's order. 396 U.S.
1055.
This suit was commenced some 22 months before the 1970 election,
in ample time for a decision on the merits. The plaintiffs, in
fact, won below, but this Court stayed the order. Now the election
has been held and a federal decennial census has been taken. Under
the compulsion of the decree of the District Court, the legislature
has adopted single member districts for the entire State. But,
absent a federal decree, they would certainly follow the mandate of
the Indiana Constitution.
As the Court says, the fact that the 1970 election is history
does not affect the underlying claim in this case. We have a
finding of fact that an identifiable racial minority has its voting
strength severely minimized by the operation of multi-member
districts. We also have a finding that the invidious effects will
continue so long as Marion County has multi-member districts. Under
the order of the District Court (absent our stay), the 1965
apportionment statutes could not be used. The District Court would
retain jurisdiction, and no attempt by the state
Page 403 U. S. 174
legislature to apply Art. 4, § 6, of the Constitution would be
successful, because, under the conclusions of the District Court,
it is unconstitutional as applied to Marion County.
See
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U. S. 533,
377 U.S. 584. There is no
chance that the Indiana Constitution can be amended in time to undo
the harm. By its own provisions, any amendment requires a majority
vote in each house of two consecutive general assemblies; it is
then referred to the voters and ratified by majority vote. Art. 16,
§ 1.
The Indiana Constitution requires "an enumeration . . . of all
male inhabitants over the age of twenty-one years" to be made every
six years. Art. 4, § 4. Then, at the next legislative session, the
general assembly is directed to reapportion the State according to
the number of male inhabitants above the age of 21. Art. 4, § 5.
These provisions fell into disuse, and the last enumeration
provided for was in 1921 and, prior to
Baker v. Carr,
369 U. S. 186, the
legislature had not been apportioned since that time.
See
Matthews v. Handley, 179 F.
Supp. 470 (ND Ind.1959);
Fruit v. Metropolitan School
District, 241 Ind. 621,
172 N.E.2d
864. Indiana courts had no power to require reapportioning
under the state constitution.
Parker v. State ex rel.
Powell, 133 Ind. 178, 32 N.E. 836.
In 1969, the legislature initially approved proposed
constitutional changes to those two sections which will provide for
using the federal decennial census for Indiana and apportioning the
State immediately thereafter, such apportionment to remain
unaltered until the next decennial census. S.J.Res. No. 26, Acts
1969, c. 464. The provision must still be approved by the 1971
general assembly and a majority of the voters.
See Art.
16, § 1, of the Indiana Constitution. At the time this case was
argued under the Indiana Apportionment Act of 1965 (2d Spec.Sess.),
c. 4, § 1, and c. 5, § 1, the 1960 Decennial Census was accepted as
correct.
Page 403 U. S. 175
Nor does the fact that the state legislature has passed a
reapportionment plan abolishing multi-member districts throughout
the entire State moot this case. But for the decision below, no
such plan would have been forthcoming. The plan is in plain
violation of the state constitution, and, in view of the fact that
no Indiana Legislature has ever violated that provision of the
state constitution before, it is obvious that the impetus came from
the outside. [
Footnote 3/1] The
provision of the state constitution forbidding dividing a county
for senatorial apportionment is unconstitutional under the Federal
Constitution as applied to Marion County.
See Reynolds v.
Sims, 377 U.S. at
377 U.S.
584. Mooting the case would accomplish nothing. If we were
to moot it, the state courts would likely void the 1971
apportionment plan as violative of the state constitution, and then
the parties would be right back where they were at the beginning of
this lawsuit. It is apparent this controversy remains alive, and
that there is no reason to wait two or more years in order to
decide it in a case growing out of a state court determination on
the constitutionality of single member districts in Marion County,
as would happen should we vacate the decree below and force the
parties to another forum for another round of litigation on the
same issue.
The constitutional provision which now requires multi-member
senatorial districts has been in Indiana's constitution from the
date of enactment -- 1851. And the ghetto voters' position as a
class will not change. The findings of the District Court clearly
state the invidious effects will last so long as multi-member
districting lasts. The District Court found that
"to redistrict Marion County alone, to provide single member
districts or any other type of districts meeting constitutional
standards, would
Page 403 U. S. 176
leave impermissible population variations between the new Marion
County districts and other districts in the State."
305 F. Supp. at 1399. Accordingly, the court redistricted the
entire State. [
Footnote 3/2] The
decision to redistrict the State and the finding of minimization of
the ghetto voters' strength are intertwined. As the District Court
stated, the "portions of the . . . statutes relating to Marion
County" were found to be not severable from the full body of the
statutes. 305 F. Supp. at 1399. There is no showing here that that
finding is even partially erroneous, let alone clearly erroneous. A
decision to redistrict Marion County involves the entire State;
each properly must be considered with the other.
II
The merits of the case go to the question reserved in
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U. S. 433,
379 U. S. 439,
and in
Wells v. Rockefeller, 394 U.
S. 542,
394 U. S. 544,
whether a gerrymander can be "constitutionally impermissible." The
question of the gerrymander [
Footnote
3/3] is the other half of
Reynolds v. Sims,
377 U. S. 533.
Fair representation of voters in a legislative assembly -- one man,
one vote -- would seem to require (1) substantial equality of
population within each district and (2) the avoidance of district
lines that weigh the power of one race more heavily than another.
The latter can be done -- and is done -- by astute drawing of
district lines that makes the district either heavily Democratic or
heavily Republican, as the case may be. Lines may be drawn so as to
make the voice
Page 403 U. S. 177
of one racial group weak or strong, as the case may be. The
problem of the gerrymander is how to defeat or circumvent the
sentiments of the community. The problem of the law is how to
prevent it. As MR. JUSTICE HARLAN once said "A computer may grind
out district lines which can totally frustrate the popular will on
an overwhelming number of critical issues."
Wells v.
Rockefeller, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 561
(dissenting). The easy device is the gerrymander. The District
Court found that it operated in this case to dilute the vote of the
blacks.
III
In
Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U.
S. 339, we dealt with the problem of a State
intentionally making a district smaller to exclude black voters.
Here we have almost the converse problem. The State's districts
surround the black voting area with white voters.
Gomillion, involving the turning of the city of
Tuskegee from a geographical square "to an uncouth
twenty-eight-sided figure," 364 U.S. at
364 U. S. 340,
was only one of our cases which dealt with elevating the political
interests of one identifiable group over those of another.
Georgia's county unit system was similar, although race was not a
factor. Under the Georgia system, a farmer in a rural county could
have up to 99 times the voting power of his urban-dwelling brother.
See Gray v. Sanders, 372 U. S. 368.
Here, the districting plan operates to favor "upper-middle class
and wealthy" suburbanites. 305 F. Supp. at 1385.
A showing of racial motivation is not necessary when dealing
with multi-member districts.
Burns v. Richardson,
384 U. S. 73,
384 U. S. 88;
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U.S. at
379 U. S. 439.
Although the old apportionment plan which is in full harmony with
the State's 1851 constitution, may not be racially motivated, the
test for multi-member districts is whether there are invidious
effects.
Page 403 U. S. 178
That rule is but an application of a basic principle applied in
Hunter v. Erickson, 393 U. S. 385.
There, a city passed a housing law which provided that, before an
ordinance regulating the sale or lease of realty on the basis of
race could become effective, it must be approved by a majority
vote. Thus, the protection of minority interests became much more
difficult. We held that a State or a state agency could not, in its
voting scheme, so disadvantage black interests.
Multi-member districts are not
per se unconstitutional.
Fortson v. Dorsey, 379 U.S. at
379 U. S. 439.
In that case, we expressly reserved judgment on the question of
whether a multi-member districting plan which operated "to minimize
or cancel out the voting strength of racial or political elements
of the voting population" could pass constitutional muster.
Ibid.
In
Burns v. Richardson, supra, we again considered the
problems of multi-member districts. The doubts noted in
Fortson
v. Dorsey were resolved, and we stated that assuming the
requirements of
Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.
S. 533, were satisfied, multi-member districts are
unconstitutional
"only if it can be shown that, 'designedly or otherwise,' . . .
[such a district would operate] to minimize or cancel out the
voting strength of racial or political elements of the voting
population."
384 U.S. at
384 U. S. 88. We
went on to suggest how the burden of proof could be met.
"It may be that this invidious effect can more easily be shown
if, in contrast to the facts in
Fortson, districts are
large in relation to the total number of legislators, if districts
are not appropriately subdistricted to assure distribution of
legislators that are resident over the entire district, or if such
districts characterize both houses of a bicameral legislature,
rather than one."
Ibid. These factors are all present in this case.
Between the
Page 403 U. S. 179
largest (Marion) and second largest (Lake) counties in the
State, 26% of each house of the legislature is controlled. There is
no subdistricting under the Indiana plan.
Cf. Dusch v.
Davis, 387 U. S. 112. And
multi-member districts are used in both houses of the
legislature.
In both
Fortson and
Burns, we demanded that
the invidious effects of multi-member districts appear from
evidence in the record. Here, that demand is satisfied by (1) the
showing of an identifiable voting group living in Center Township,
(2) the severe discrepancies of residency of elected members of the
general assembly between Center and Washington Townships,
cf. BRENNAN, J., dissenting in
Abate v. Mundt,
post, p.
403 U. S. 187,
(3) the finding of pervasive influence of the county organizations
of the political parties, and (4) the finding that legislators from
the county maintain "common, undifferentiated" positions on
political issues. [
Footnote 3/4]
305 F. Supp. at 1385.
IV
Little time need be spent on the District Court's decision to
redistrict the entire State. The court found that there were
already impermissible population variances between districts under
the current apportionment plan. The ratio between the largest and
smallest Senate district was 1.327 to 1. For the House, it was
1.279 to 1. The court also found that the new Marion County
districts would also have impermissible population variances when
compared to existing districts.
Page 403 U. S. 180
On these facts, the demands of our decisions required
redistricting. As
Reynolds v. Sims showed, the state
constitution must give way to requirements of the Supremacy Clause
when there is a conflict with the Federal Constitution. And,
finally, the District Court's own plan was exemplary. The
population ratio for the largest and smallest Senate districts was
1.017 to 1, and, for the House, it was 1.020 to 1.
V
It is said that, if we prevent racial gerrymandering today, we
must prevent gerrymandering of any special interest group tomorrow,
whether it be social, economic, or ideological. I do not agree. Our
Constitution has a special thrust when it comes to voting; the
Fifteenth Amendment says the right of citizens to vote shall not be
"abridged" on account of "race, color, or previous condition of
servitude."
Our cases since
Baker v. Carr have never intimated that
"one man, one vote" meant "one white man, one vote." Since "race"
may not be gerrymandered, I think the Court emphasizes the
irrelevant when it says that the effect on "the actual voting
power" of the blacks should first be known. They may be all
Democratic or all Republican; but once their identity is purposely
washed out of the system, the system, as I see it, has a
constitutional defect. It is asking the impossible for us to demand
that the blacks first show that the effect of the scheme was to
discourage or prevent poor blacks from voting or joining such party
as they chose. On this record, the voting rights of the blacks have
been "abridged," as I read the Constitution.
The District Court has done an outstanding job, bringing insight
to the problems. One can always fault a lower court by stating
theoretical aspects of apportionment plans that may not have been
considered. This
Page 403 U. S. 181
District Court acted earnestly and boldly to correct a festering
electoral system. I would not even vacate and remand so that it
could revise its plan in accordance with the 1970 census figures.
That court has retained jurisdiction of the cause, and has sense
enough to update its own plan. We can make the contribution of the
District Court enormous and abiding by leaving it the initiative to
carry out the mandate of
Reynolds v. Sims.
I would affirm the judgment.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Wallace, Legislative Apportionment In Indiana: A Case History,
42 Ind.L.J. 6, 30 (1966).
[
Footnote 3/2]
The District Court also found independent of the new districts
that there were impermissible population variances in the Indiana
apportionment. The ratio between the largest and smallest Senate
district was 1.327 to 1. For the House, it was 1279 to 1. Under the
plan promulgated by the District Court, these were reduced to 1.017
to 1 and 1.020 to 1, respectively.
[
Footnote 3/3]
See Tyler & Wells, The New Gerrymander Threat,
AFL-CIO American Federationist 1 (Feb.1971).
[
Footnote 3/4]
The three-judge court
"emphasized that the black plaintiffs were members of an
identifiable interest group whose voting strength had been
minimized by the multi-member districting scheme. They were not
only unable to elect a legislator who was attuned to their
interests, but were also saddled with lawmakers who reflected white
suburban ideology and were controlled by political leaders."
Note,
Chavis v. Whitcomb: Apportionment,
Gerrymandering, and Black Voting Rights, 24 Rutgers L.Rev. 521, 533
(1970).