Legal Sidebari
Supreme Court Considering Second Partisan
Gerrymandering Case This Term
April 2, 2018
For a second time during the current term, the U.S. Supreme Court is considering a claim of
unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering. On March 28, 2018, the Court heard oral
argument in
Benisek
v. Lamone, involving a challenge to a Maryl
and congressional district. In October 2017, the Court
heard
oral argument i
n Gill v. Whitford, involving a similar challenge to a Wisconsin state legislative
redistricting plan. While the Court has invalidated redistricting maps because of unconstitutional
racial
gerrymandering, it has not overturned a map because of
partisan gerrymandering. As defined by the
Court
, partisan gerrymandering is “the drawing of legislative district lines to subordinate adherents of one
political party and entrench a rival party in power.” A decision in these cases is expected by June 2018.
Supreme Court Precedent
In prior cases presenting a claim of unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering, the Supreme Court has left
open the possibility that such claims could be judicially reviewable, but has been unable to determine a
manageable standard for adjudicating such claims. For example, in a 2004 decision,
Vieth v. Jubelirer, a
plurality of four Justices determined that a claim of unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering presented a
nonjusticiable political question, while four other Justices concluded that such claims are justiciable, but
could not agree upon a standard for courts to use in assessing such claims. The deciding vote in
Vieth, Justice Kennedy, concluded that the claims presented in
Vieth were not justiciable because neither
comprehensive, neutral principles for drawing electoral boundaries, nor rules limiting judicial
intervention, exist. Nonetheless, he “would not foreclose all possibility of judicial relief if some limited
and precise rationale were found to correct an established violation of the Constitution in some
redistricting cases.”
Case Background Summary
Benisek arises from a group of Maryland voters challenging the state’s 2011 congressional redistricting
map as a violation of the First Amendment and Article I, Sections 2 and 4 of the U.S. Constitution. The
voters, registered Republicans, argue that Maryland’s Sixth Congressional District was drawn both with
the specific intent to retaliate against them because of their political party affiliation, and in such a manner
as to dilute their vote and burden their political expression. In August 2016, a federal district court,
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denying Maryland’s request to dismiss the case for failure to state a justiciable claim
, set forth a legal
standard for ascertaining unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering under the First Amendment retaliation
doctrine. According to the court, this fundamental principle—that the government may not penalize
citizens for exercising their First Amendment rights—provides a discernable and manageable standard for
claims of unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering. Generally, the court held that in order to prevail in a
claim of unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering under this doctrine, a plaintiff must allege that a
redistricting map was drawn with the specific intent to impose a burden on the voter and those similarly
situated because of how they voted or their political party affiliation, and that the gerrymander has and
will continue to dictate the outcome of every election.
In August 2017, a divided three-judge federal district court panel
denied the voters’ request for a
preliminary injunction, barring enforcement of the 2011 redistricting map and requiring the State of
Maryland to implement a new map prior to the 2018 congressional elections. The majority concluded that
the voters had not demonstrated that they were likely to prevail upon their First Amendment claim
because they had failed to show that the alleged gerrymander caused them a real and actionable injury.
The court also stayed any further proceedings pending the Supreme Court’s decision in
Gill v. Whitford.
The voters appealed to the Supreme Court.
Arguments in the Supreme Court
In the Supreme Court
, among other things, the voter
s argued that their case differed from any previous
challenge to partisan gerrymandering in that it does not invoke the Equal Protection Clause; rest upon
statistical measures of partisan imbalance; or ask the Court to adopt any new doctrinal framework.
Instead, the voters asserted that their claim is based on the established and manageable standard of the
First Amendment retaliation doctrine applied in the context of partisan gerrymandering. In this context,
they contended, the doctrine asks whether the challenged redistricting plan has imposed a real and
practical burden, which is more than de minimis, in retaliation for prior support for the opposing political
party. They further maintained that the August 2016 lower court decision, requiring that a First
Amendment retaliation challenge to a redistricting map demonstrate that the partisan gerrymander has and
will continue to dictate the outcome of every election, contradicts Court precedent. In contrast, the voters
argued that for challengers to a redistricting map to prevail in this context, all they must show is that they
have suffered some injury from the gerrymander.
In response, the State of Maryland
argued that adopting the First Amendment retaliation test proffered by
the appellants in this case would not resolve a central problem identified in
Vieth: how can a court
determine when partisan considerations in the redistricting process have gone “too far”? Although the
voters maintained that their proposed standard leaves room for a small amount of permissible
partisanship, the State argued that the lack of a definition in the test leaves it for courts to ascertain on
some indeterminate basis. Therefore, the State maintained that the appellants’ “proposed standard
threatens to render any partisan motive fatal” in a redistricting map, “a result that the Supreme Court has
already rejected.”
Possible Implications of Court Considering Benisek
Along with
Gill v. Whitford, a ruling by the Supreme Court in
Benisek could hav
e major consequences for
pending and future claims of partisan gerrymandering. If the Court adopts a standard for adjudicating
claims of unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering, it is possible that additional challenges to
congressional and state legislative maps nationwide would result and further, that such a ruling may
impact how maps are drawn during the next round of redistricting that follows the 2020 census.
While both cases advance claims of unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering, the challenge in
Benisek presents different issues, perhaps explaining why the Court agreed to hear
Benisek after already hearing
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oral argument in
Gill. First, unlike
Gill, where the challenge is being made to a redistricting map in its
entirety, i
n Benisek, the challenge is being made to a particular district. One of the
arguments proffered by
the State of Wisconsin in defending the map in
Gill is that statewide claims of unconstitutional partisan
gerrymandering are nonjusticiable, an argument that would not apply to the single district at issue in
Benisek. Furthermore, the challengers in
Gill have asked the Court to establish a standard for determining
whether a redistricting map is an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander under the Equal Protection Clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment and the First Amendment. In contrast, the challengers in
Benisek have
solely based
and more fully developed their arguments under the First Amendment. It is worth noting that
Justice Kennedy, who was the swing vote i
n Vieth, has suggested that the First Amendment may be a
more relevant constitutional provision than the Equal Protection Clause for developing a standard for
adjudicating unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering. Finally, perhaps indicating an interest in
considering claims of unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering by challengers from both major political
parties, the Court may have decided that in addition to
Gill, which was brought by voters who identify as
Democratic, it would also consider
Benisek, in which the plaintiffs identify as Republican.
Potential Impact on 2018 Midterm Congressional Elections
During the March 28 oral argument, according t
o a media report, some Justices indicated that the Court’s
rulings in
Gill and
Benisek would likely be issued too late in the election cycle to alter the redistricting
maps for the upcoming midterm congressional elections. As a consequence, several Justices opined that
Benisek should be returned to the lower court for a full trial. Furthermore, the report indicates, Justice
Breyer raised the possibility of reconsidering
Gill and
Benisek during the Court’s next term, in addition to
a pending case regarding the North Carolina congressional redistricting map (discussed below).
North Carolina and Pennsylvania Litigation
While the Wisconsin and Maryland cases have been pending in the Supreme Court, two other courts have
invalidated redistricting maps as unconstitutional partisan gerrymanders. In January 2018, a federal
district court
invalidated the North Carolina congressional redistricting map as an unconstitutional
partisan gerrymander under various provisions of the U.S. Constitution and required that a new map be
drawn for the 2018 congressional midterm elections. Later that month, the Supreme Court
stayed the
ruling and, in February
, denied a motion to expedite consideration of the case. It seems likely that the
Court will hold the North Carolina case until it issues its rulings in
Gill and
Benisek.
In another notable ruling, in January, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
invalidated that state’s
congressional redistricting map as an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander under the Pennsylvania
Constitution and in February
, ordered the implementation of a new, court-drawn congressional
redistricting map for the 2018 elections. (This ruling is similar to a 2015 Florida Supreme Court
decision
overturning Florida’s congressional redistricting map as a partisan gerrymander in violation of that state’s
constitution.) On March 19, the Supreme Court
denied an application for a stay of the Pennsylvania’s
court’s ruling. Although the
stay application presented the federal question as to the circumstances under
which a state court improperly intrudes on authority provided to the legislature by the Elections Clause, as
at least on
e commentator observed, the Court may have decided against hearing this case in order to avoid
redistricting disputes involving alleged violations of
state constitutional provisions.
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Author Information
L. Paige Whitaker
Legislative Attorney
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