Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Racial Gerrymandering: Your Guide to Fair Representation and Voting Rights ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is Racial Gerrymandering? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine you're in charge of cutting a large, round pizza for a group of friends. Ten friends want pepperoni, and five friends want veggie. To be fair, you'd probably cut the pizza into triangular slices, so everyone gets a piece that reflects the group's overall preference. But what if you wanted to rig the outcome? Instead of normal slices, you could carefully carve bizarre, snake-like shapes across the pizza. You could draw a line around each individual piece of pepperoni, creating ten "pepperoni" slices, and then lump all the veggie lovers into one or two weirdly shaped "veggie" slices. Even though the number of toppings hasn't changed, you’ve manipulated the boundaries to create a result that looks overwhelmingly pro-pepperoni. This is exactly what **racial gerrymandering** does, but with voters and their communities. It's the illegal practice of drawing legislative district lines to dilute the voting power of a racial or ethnic minority group. Instead of creating compact districts that keep neighborhoods together, map-drawers intentionally split these communities apart or cram them all into a few districts. The goal is to ensure that their votes have less impact, robbing them of the ability to elect candidates who represent their interests. It is a direct assault on the principle of "one person, one vote" and a critical issue in the ongoing fight for [[civil_rights]] and fair elections. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **What It Is:** **Racial gerrymandering** is the deliberate manipulation of electoral district boundaries to weaken the voting strength of citizens based on their race, which is illegal under federal law. [[voting_rights_act_of_1965]]. * **How It Affects You:** **Racial gerrymandering** can make your vote feel worthless by ensuring your community can never build a majority, denying you a meaningful voice in choosing representatives who understand your needs and concerns. [[voter_suppression]]. * **What You Can Do:** While **racial gerrymandering** is illegal, it still happens. You can fight it by getting involved in your state's redistricting process, supporting voting rights organizations, and understanding your rights under the law. [[equal_protection_clause]]. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Racial Gerrymandering ===== ==== The Story of Racial Gerrymandering: A Historical Journey ==== The fight against **racial gerrymandering** is inseparable from the long and arduous struggle for voting rights in America. Its roots run deep into the post-Civil War era. After the `[[fifteenth_amendment]]` granted African American men the right to vote in 1870, many Southern states immediately began searching for ways to suppress this newfound political power. While overt tactics like poll taxes and literacy tests were common, the manipulation of district lines was a more subtle weapon. During the Jim Crow era, white-dominated legislatures drew maps to ensure that Black communities were either "cracked" (split into multiple districts) or "packed" (concentrated into a single district), preventing them from electing Black representatives. This practice continued largely unchecked for nearly a century. It wasn't until the `[[civil_rights_movement]]` of the 1950s and 60s that the tide began to turn. The movement culminated in the passage of the landmark `[[voting_rights_act_of_1965]]` (VRA). This was the single most important piece of legislation in combating **racial gerrymandering**. Section 2 of the VRA prohibited any voting practice or procedure that resulted in the "denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen...to vote on account of race or color." For decades, the VRA, particularly its Section 5 "preclearance" provision, was a powerful deterrent. It required states and counties with a history of discrimination to get federal approval before changing their election laws or district maps. However, the 2013 `[[shelby_county_v_holder]]` Supreme Court decision effectively neutralized this provision, placing the burden back on citizens and advocacy groups to sue states after discriminatory maps are passed, rather than preventing them beforehand. This has opened the door to a new era of sophisticated map-drawing and legal battles that continue to this day. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== Two core pillars of U.S. law form the basis for challenging **racial gerrymandering**: * **The Voting Rights Act of 1965:** * **The Law:** Section 2 of the VRA is the primary tool used today. It states: *"No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color."* * **In Plain English:** This means a state doesn't have to be *caught saying* they intended to discriminate. If their new voting map *results* in minority voters having less opportunity than other citizens to elect their preferred candidates, that map can be illegal. This is known as the "results test," and it's a powerful protection. * **The Fourteenth Amendment:** * **The Law:** The `[[equal_protection_clause]]` of the `[[fourteenth_amendment]]` declares that no state shall *"deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."* * **In Plain English:** In the context of redistricting, the Supreme Court has interpreted this to mean that race cannot be the *predominant* factor in drawing district lines. While map-drawers can be aware of race, they cannot make it the main reason for a district's shape, subordinating all other traditional principles like keeping communities or cities whole. If a district is so bizarrely shaped that it can only be explained as an effort to segregate voters by race, it may violate the Equal Protection Clause. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: The Redistricting Process ==== While federal law sets the rules against **racial gerrymandering**, the actual process of drawing maps—called `[[redistricting]]`—is handled by the states. This creates a patchwork of different systems, some more vulnerable to manipulation than others. ^ **State** ^ **Who Draws the Maps?** ^ **What This Means For You** ^ | California | **Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission:** A 14-member commission of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents, selected through a public process, draws the maps. | This system is designed to be less partisan and more community-focused, reducing the risk of intentional gerrymandering. Public input is a core part of the process. | | Texas | **State Legislature:** The party in power in the state legislature has primary control over drawing the maps, which are then subject to the governor's veto. | This is a highly partisan process where the majority party has a strong incentive to draw maps that protect its own power, leading to frequent legal challenges over both racial and partisan gerrymandering. | | North Carolina | **State Legislature:** Similar to Texas, the legislature controls the process. However, North Carolina's governor does **not** have veto power over redistricting maps. | This gives the legislative majority almost total control, making the state a frequent battleground for gerrymandering lawsuits. Maps are often challenged in both state and federal court. | | Florida | **State Legislature with Constitutional Rules:** The legislature draws the maps, but they must comply with the "Fair Districts" amendments to the state constitution, which explicitly forbid drawing lines to favor a party or incumbent. | While intended to curb gerrymandering, the legislature's role still allows for partisan influence, and the interpretation of the "Fair Districts" rules is often decided by the courts. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== ==== The Anatomy of Racial Gerrymandering: Key Components Explained ==== Understanding a **racial gerrymandering** claim requires knowing its key parts and the tactics used to carry it out. === Element: Redistricting === Redistricting is the process of redrawing the lines of electoral districts. It's a normal and necessary part of our democracy. It happens every 10 years, following the U.S. `[[census]]`, to ensure that each district has roughly the same number of people. This upholds the principle of "one person, one vote," ensuring that a vote in a rural district carries the same weight as a vote in a dense urban one. However, this necessary process is also the opportunity for mischief. The decisions about where to draw the lines can either empower or silence entire communities. === Element: Intent vs. Effect (The Results Test) === This is one of the most critical legal concepts. To prove a map violates the `[[voting_rights_act_of_1965]]`, you generally **do not** need to find a "smoking gun" email where a politician admits they are trying to hurt minority voters. Instead, courts use the "results test." Challengers must show that, based on the "totality of circumstances" in that state or county (such as a history of discrimination or racially polarized voting), the new map gives a minority group less opportunity to participate in the political process and elect candidates of their choice. The discriminatory *effect* is what matters most. In contrast, claims under the `[[fourteenth_amendment]]` often do require showing that race was the "predominant intent" behind a district's lines, making those cases harder to win. === Element: Vote Dilution === Vote dilution is the core harm of **racial gerrymandering**. It doesn't mean your vote isn't counted. It means your vote is made less powerful. Imagine a town with 1,000 voters, 600 from Group A and 400 from Group B. The town needs to be split into 10 districts of 100 people each. * **Fair Map:** You might create 6 districts where Group A is the majority and 4 districts where Group B is the majority, reflecting the town's overall population. * **Diluted Map:** A map-drawer could instead draw lines to create 10 districts where each one has 60 members of Group A and 40 members of Group B. Now, Group A wins every single election, and Group B is shut out completely. Their votes have been "diluted" into permanent minority status in every district. === The Two Main Tactics: "Cracking" and "Packing" === Gerrymandering is achieved through two primary tactics. Think of them as two sides of the same coin, both designed to dilute votes. * **Cracking:** This tactic involves **splitting** a concentrated community of minority voters across several different districts. By "cracking" the community apart, you ensure that their numbers are too small in any single district to elect their preferred candidate. * **Real-Life Analogy:** Imagine a school where one classroom has a group of 10 students who are all best friends. To break up their influence, the principal "cracks" them up, sending two friends to each of five different homerooms. Now, the friends are always outnumbered and can't vote together to make decisions for their homeroom. * **Packing:** This tactic involves **concentrating** as many minority voters as possible into a single, "super-majority" district. This sounds good on the surface—that district will almost certainly elect a minority representative. But the real goal is to "bleach" the surrounding districts, removing minority voters from them so that those neighboring districts become much safer for the other party's candidates. * **Real-Life Analogy:** Using the same school, the principal "packs" all 10 best friends into one homeroom. They easily control that room, but now the other four homerooms have zero members of that friend group, making it easy for a rival group to dominate those rooms. The friends won one battle but lost the war for influence across the school. ===== Part 3: How to Identify and Challenge Racial Gerrymandering ===== While legal challenges are typically brought by large organizations like the `[[aclu]]` or the `[[naacp]]`, ordinary citizens are the first line of defense. Your voice and awareness are crucial. === Step 1: Understand Your District Map === - **Find Your Map:** The first step is to see what your congressional and state legislative districts look like. Websites like the Brennan Center for Justice, All About Redistricting, and your state's Secretary of State or election board website are excellent resources. - **Look at the Shape:** Does your district have a bizarre, sprawling shape that seems to defy logic? Does it snake through neighborhoods, cross major highways for no reason, or have strange appendages? This is often called the "eye test," and while not definitive proof, it can be a major red flag. === Step 2: Identify the "Red Flags" === - **Splitting Communities:** Does the district line cut right through your town, neighborhood, or a recognized community? Look at a map. If a line divides an area where people share a school district, cultural center, or economic interests, ask why. - **Lack of Compactness:** A district should ideally be reasonably compact. While geography (like a river or mountain range) can dictate some irregular shapes, districts that are extremely long and skinny are often suspicious. - **Ignoring Local Boundaries:** Does the map ignore county or city lines without a good reason? Map-drawers are supposed to respect these political subdivisions when possible. === Step 3: Get Involved in the Public Process === - **Public Hearings:** During the redistricting cycle (right after the census), states are often required to hold public hearings. This is your chance to testify. You can speak about your community, explain why it should be kept whole, and protest maps that you believe are unfair. - **Contact Officials:** Write and call your state legislators, the governor, and members of any redistricting commission. Let them know you are watching and that you expect fair maps. === Step 4: Connect with Advocacy Groups === - You are not alone. National and local organizations are experts in this fight. * **The League of Women Voters:** Active in all 50 states, providing education and advocacy for fair maps. * **The ACLU Voting Rights Project:** A legal powerhouse that frequently litigates gerrymandering cases. * **The Brennan Center for Justice:** A leading think tank that produces research and analysis on redistricting. * **Common Cause:** A watchdog group that advocates for government accountability, including fair redistricting. - These groups can provide resources, data, and legal support to communities fighting unfair maps. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== The law on **racial gerrymandering** has been shaped by decades of Supreme Court battles. Understanding these key cases is essential to understanding where we are today. ==== Case Study: Shaw v. Reno (1993) ==== * **The Backstory:** After the 1990 census, North Carolina drew a new congressional map that included two majority-Black districts. One of them, the 12th district, was long and thin, stretching 160 miles along an interstate highway, at times no wider than the highway itself. A group of white voters sued, arguing the district was so bizarrely shaped that it was an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. * **The Legal Question:** Can a district, drawn with the good intention of increasing minority representation, be so extreme in its shape that it violates the `[[equal_protection_clause]]` of the `[[fourteenth_amendment]]`? * **The Ruling:** Yes. The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that if a district's shape is so "bizarre" that it can't be explained by anything other than separating voters by race, it demands close scrutiny from the courts. * **Impact on You Today:** This case established that there are constitutional limits to using race in redistricting. Even if the goal is to help a minority group, map-drawers cannot make race the *only* thing that matters, ignoring all other principles and creating districts that reinforce racial segregation. ==== Case Study: Shelby County v. Holder (2013) ==== * **The Backstory:** Section 5 of the `[[voting_rights_act_of_1965]]` required certain states and counties with a history of racial discrimination to get "preclearance" (advance approval) from the federal government before changing any voting laws, including redistricting maps. Shelby County, Alabama, sued, arguing this was an outdated and unconstitutional burden. * **The Legal Question:** Is the preclearance requirement of the VRA still constitutional? * **The Ruling:** No. The Court, in a 5-4 decision, did not strike down Section 5 itself but instead struck down Section 4(b), which contained the formula for determining which states were covered. The Court said the formula was based on 40-year-old data and that Congress needed to create a new one. Congress has not done so. * **Impact on You Today:** This decision drastically weakened the VRA. It removed the federal government's most powerful proactive tool against discriminatory voting laws. Now, instead of blocking bad maps before an election, opponents must spend millions of dollars and years in court to challenge them *after* they've already been used, often for several election cycles. ==== Case Study: Allen v. Milligan (2023) ==== * **The Backstory:** Following the 2020 census, Alabama's legislature drew a congressional map with only one majority-Black district out of seven, even though Black residents make up over 27% of the state's population. Plaintiffs sued, arguing this "packed" Black voters into one district and "cracked" them elsewhere, diluting their power in violation of Section 2 of the VRA. * **The Legal Question:** Did Alabama's map illegally dilute the votes of its Black citizens under Section 2 of the VRA? * **The Ruling:** Yes. In a surprising 5-4 decision, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh joining the liberal justices, the Court affirmed that the map likely violated the VRA. They rejected Alabama's attempt to weaken the VRA's protections and ordered the state to draw a new map with a second opportunity district for Black voters. * **Impact on You Today:** This very recent case was a major victory for voting rights. It reaffirmed that the VRA remains a potent tool for challenging racially discriminatory maps and pushed back against efforts to dismantle it. It provides a clear legal framework for minority communities to demand fairer representation. ===== Part 5: The Future of Racial Gerrymandering ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Racial vs. Partisan Gerrymandering ==== The single biggest controversy today is the line between **racial gerrymandering** (which is illegal) and `[[partisan_gerrymandering]]` (which the Supreme Court has ruled is a political issue beyond the reach of federal courts). The problem is that in the U.S., race and party affiliation are highly correlated. For example, Black voters overwhelmingly vote for the Democratic party. So, when a Republican-led legislature draws a map that "packs" Black voters into one district, are they doing it because of the voters' race or because of their party? They will almost always claim their motive was purely partisan—to create safe Republican seats—which they are allowed to do. Proving that race was the real motive is the central challenge in modern litigation. Courts must untangle these motivations, often using advanced statistical analysis to determine if a map goes too far in sorting people by race, even if done under the guise of partisanship. This complex legal fight is the front line in the battle for fair maps. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== * **The Technology Arms Race:** The same technology that helps you navigate with a GPS is making gerrymandering more precise and effective than ever. Sophisticated software can analyze voter data, census information, and election results down to the city block. This allows map-drawers to surgically "crack" and "pack" communities with ruthless efficiency. * **The Rise of Citizen Mapping:** The good news is that this technology is also being used to fight back. Open-source mapping tools and public data allow advocacy groups, academics, and even regular citizens to draw their own "fair" maps. These alternative maps can be used in court and public hearings to demonstrate that less discriminatory options are possible, putting pressure on legislatures to justify their chosen maps. * **The Push for Reform:** The ongoing legal and political battles have fueled a strong push for reform. The most popular solution is the one used in California and other states: independent redistricting commissions. By taking the map-drawing power out of the hands of self-interested politicians and giving it to a balanced, non-partisan or bipartisan body, these commissions aim to break the cycle of gerrymandering. The adoption of these commissions at the state level is one of the most significant trends shaping the future of fair representation. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **Apportionment:** The process of determining how many seats in the U.S. House of Representatives each state receives based on its population after the `[[census]]`. [[apportionment]]. * **Census:** The official count of the U.S. population, conducted every 10 years as required by the Constitution. [[census]]. * **Compactness:** One of the traditional principles of redistricting; the idea that a district's shape should be reasonably compact and not sprawling. [[compactness_(redistricting)]]. * **Contiguity:** A rule requiring that all parts of a district must be physically connected to each other. [[contiguity_(redistricting)]]. * **Cracking:** The gerrymandering tactic of splitting a concentrated group of voters across multiple districts to dilute their voting power. [[cracking_(gerrymandering)]]. * **Equal Protection Clause:** The part of the `[[fourteenth_amendment]]` that prohibits states from denying any person equal protection of the laws. [[equal_protection_clause]]. * **Gerrymandering:** The practice of drawing electoral district lines to give one political party an unfair advantage over another. [[gerrymandering]]. * **Majority-Minority District:** A district in which a racial or ethnic minority group comprises a majority of the population. [[majority-minority_district]]. * **One Person, One Vote:** The legal principle that legislative districts must be roughly equal in population. [[one_person_one_vote]]. * **Packing:** The gerrymandering tactic of concentrating a group of voters into a single district to reduce their influence in surrounding districts. [[packing_(gerrymandering)]]. * **Partisan Gerrymandering:** Drawing district lines to maximize the seats for one political party; currently permitted by federal courts. [[partisan_gerrymandering]]. * **Preclearance:** The now-defunct requirement from Section 5 of the VRA that forced certain jurisdictions to get federal approval for voting changes. [[preclearance]]. * **Redistricting:** The process of redrawing legislative district boundaries every 10 years after the census. [[redistricting]]. * **Vote Dilution:** The result of gerrymandering, where a voter's or a group's voting power is weakened. [[vote_dilution]]. * **Voting Rights Act of 1965:** Landmark federal legislation that outlawed discriminatory voting practices. [[voting_rights_act_of_1965]]. ===== See Also ===== * [[voting_rights_act_of_1965]] * [[fourteenth_amendment]] * [[voter_suppression]] * [[civil_rights]] * [[redistricting]] * [[partisan_gerrymandering]] * [[shelby_county_v_holder]]