U.S. Supreme Court divided over Texas
electoral district fight
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[April 25, 2018]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court on Tuesday appeared divided along ideological lines as it heard a
bid by Texas to revive Republican-drawn electoral districts thrown out
by a lower court for diluting the clout of black and Hispanic voters.
Some of the conservative justices seemed willing during arguments in the
case to accept that the Republican-led Texas legislature acted in good
faith when it adopted new electoral maps in 2013 for state legislative
and U.S. congressional seats.
Liberal justices seemed skeptical that those maps resolved racial
discrimination concerns that caused earlier maps to be invalidated, and
questioned whether it was premature to hear the case because a lower
court had not yet issued a final ruling on the dispute.

The case is the latest in which the justices are pondering a practice
known as gerrymandering in which electoral districts in states are drawn
in a way that amplifies the power of certain voters - in this case white
voters - at the expense of others.
The Supreme Court is currently weighing two other gerrymandering cases,
involving electoral maps drawn by Republicans in Wisconsin and Democrats
in Maryland. Those cases focus not on claims of racial discrimination
but rather on whether districts drawn with the aim of entrenching one
party in power violate the U.S. Constitution.
RULINGS ON HOLD
The high court in September put on hold two lower court rulings that had
invalidated a series of Texas electoral districts. The justices then
were divided 5-4, with the conservatives justices backing Texas
Republicans and the liberals dissenting, suggesting they could be
similarly divided when they rule on the merits of the case by the end of
June.
The position of the court's frequent swing vote, conservative Justice
Anthony Kennedy, was unclear, as he said little during the arguments.
Republican President Donald Trump's administration backed Texas.
Conservative Justices John Roberts, Samuel Alito and Justice Neil
Gorsuch all appeared sympathetic to the state.
The maps, adopted in 2013 and challenged by individual voters and civil
rights groups representing blacks and Hispanics, were based on
court-drawn districts imposed for the 2012 election after prior
Republican-draw maps were tossed as racially discriminatory.
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Police officers stand in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in
Washington, DC, U.S., January 19, 2018. REUTERS/Eric Thayer/File
Photo

Chief Justice Roberts said Texas has a "strong argument" that the
new maps were adopted in large part to bring an end to long-running
litigation over whether the maps were discriminatory.
"It does seem to me that at the very least .... that ought to give
them some presumption of good faith moving forward, which is
significant to the determination of their intent to discriminate,"
Roberts added.
Liberal justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor suggested Texas was
still trying to avoid drawing districts with no racial taint.
"Are you ending a litigation, or are you ending the possibility of a
court stopping you from discriminating?" asked Sotomayor, the
court's only Hispanic justice.
The state's lawyer, Scott Keller, denied any discriminatory motive,
saying, "This was not the legislature trying to pull a fast one on
anyone."
The lower court found that the configuration of two U.S. House
districts violated the Voting Rights Act, a 1965 law that protects
minority voters and was enacted to address a history of racial
discrimination in voting, especially in Southern states. Texas has
36 U.S. House districts, 25 held by Republicans and 11 by Democrats.
The same court found similar faults with Texas House of
Representatives maps.

Gerrymandering typically is accomplished by packing voters who tend
to favor a particular party into a small number of districts to
reduce their statewide voting power while scattering others in
districts in numbers too small to be a majority.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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