UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
SHELBY COUNTY, ALABAMA,
Plaintiff,
v. Civil Action No. 10-0651 (JDB)
ERIC H. HOLDER, Jr., in his official
capacity as Attorney General of the United
States,
Defendant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 ("the Act") prevents certain "covered"
jurisdictions from implementing any change to voting practices or procedures unless and until the
jurisdiction demonstrates to federal authorities that the change "neither has the purpose nor will
have the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race or color." 42 U.S.C. §
1973c. Praised by some as the centerpiece of the most effective civil rights legislation ever
enacted, Section 5 has been condemned by others as an impermissible federal encroachment on
state sovereignty. In 2009, the Supreme Court addressed Congress's 2006 extension of Section 5
and, although avoiding the merits of a facial constitutional challenge to Section 5's
"preclearance" obligation, nonetheless expressed concern about the provision's continued vitality,
noting that "[t]he Act's preclearance requirements and its coverage formula raise serious
constitutional questions." Nw. Austin Mun. Util. Dist. No. One v. Holder, 129 S. Ct. 2504, 2513
(2009) ("Nw. Austin II").
Today, those serious constitutional questions can no longer be avoided. Shelby County,
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Alabama ("Shelby County" or "plaintiff"), a jurisdiction covered by Section 4(b) of the Act, 42
U.S.C. § 1973b(b), has brought this suit against the Attorney General ("defendant") seeking a
declaratory judgment that Section 5 and Section 4(b) are facially unconstitutional, and a
permanent injunction prohibiting defendant from enforcing these provisions. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 44(a)-
(b). Specifically, Shelby County alleges that Section 4(b)'s coverage formula and Section 5's
preclearance obligation for covered jurisdictions exceed Congress's enforcement authority under
the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, and violate the principle of "equal sovereignty"
embodied in the Tenth Amendment and Article IV of the U.S. Constitution. Id. ¶¶ 36-43.
This Court is mindful that "judging the constitutionality of an Act of Congress is 'the
gravest and most delicate duty that [it] is called on to perform.'" Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at
2513 (quoting Blodgett v. Holden, 275 U.S. 142, 147-48 (1927) (Holmes, J., concurring)). That
duty is all the more sensitive where, as here, the challenged statute seeks to enforce the core
Fifteenth Amendment prohibition against denial of the franchise on the basis of race. The
Fifteenth Amendment provides that "[t]he right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not
be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous
condition of servitude." U.S. CONST . amend. XV, § 1. Yet 95 years after the Amendment's
ratification, the struggle for the realization of this constitutional guarantee was far from complete.
See H.R. Rep. No. 89-439, at 2439 (1965). In 1965, literacy tests, poll taxes, and other devices
were still being "widely used" in certain regions of the country as part of "a calculated plan to
deprive Negroes of their right to vote." Id. at 2443. When traditional litigation proved
ineffective to counter "those determined to circumvent the guarantees of the 15th amendment,"
id. at 2441, Congress decided that "the wrong to our citizens is too serious -- the damage to our
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national conscience is too great not to adopt more effective measures than exist today," id. at
2442. Hence, almost a century after the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified, Congress passed the
Voting Rights Act of 1965 -- with Section 5 at its core -- in order "to make the guarantees of the
Fifteenth Amendment finally a reality for all citizens." Allen v. State Bd. of Elections, 393 U.S.
544, 556 (1969). Congress reauthorized the Act three times (in 1970, 1975 and 1982), and the
Supreme Court upheld each reauthorization against constitutional challenges. See Nw. Austin II,
129 S. Ct. at 2510.
Certainly, today Section 5's continued constitutionality "must be judged with reference to
the historical experience which it reflects." South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301, 308
(1966). But the Supreme Court has also made clear that history alone cannot provide a valid
basis for upholding Section 5 indefinitely; rather, "the Act imposes current burdens and must be
justified by current needs." Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2512. This Court has now carefully
reviewed the extensive 15,000-page legislative record that Congress amassed in support of its
2006 reauthorization of Section 5 and Section 4(b). It is, of course, Congress that is charged in
the first instance under the Fifteenth Amendment with formulating the legislation needed to
enforce it. Id. at 2513. Bearing in mind both the historical context and the extensive evidence of
recent voting discrimination reflected in that virtually unprecedented legislative record, the Court
concludes that "current needs" -- the modern existence of intentional racial discrimination in
voting -- do, in fact, justify Congress's 2006 reauthorization of the preclearance requirement
imposed on covered jurisdictions by Section 5, as well as the preservation of the traditional
coverage formula embodied in Section 4(b). Applying the standard of review articulated by the
Supreme Court in City of Boerne v. Flores, 521 U.S. 507 (1997), this Court finds that Section 5
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remains a "congruent and proportional remedy" to the 21st century problem of voting
discrimination in covered jurisdictions.
BACKGROUND
I. The History of the Voting Rights Act of 1965
The Voting Rights Act of 1965 "was designed by Congress to banish the blight of racial
discrimination in voting." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 308. Although the Fifteenth Amendment
guaranteed African-American citizens the right to vote as early as 1870, southern states quickly
responded by creating a series of voting qualifications and devices to perpetuate black
disenfranchisement. See id. at 310-311; see also H.R. Rep. No. 89-439, at 2439-40. None of this
new voting legislation mentioned race on its face, but it was nonetheless "motivated entirely and
exclusively by a desire to exclude the Negro from voting." H.R. Rep. No. 89-439, at 2443, 2451.
Southern states imposed poll taxes, which disproportionately burdened African-Americans as a
result of their comparatively lower incomes. See id. at 2451-53. They enacted literacy
requirements as a precondition to voting "based on the fact that as of 1890 . . . more than two-
thirds of the adult Negroes [in southern states] were illiterate while less than one-quarter of the
adult whites were unable to read or write." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 311. And they adopted
alternate tests, such as grandfather clauses and property qualifications, in order to "assure that
white illiterates would not be deprived of the franchise." Id.
Not only were these tests intentionally discriminatory in their design, but southern voting
officials were given unfettered discretion to administer them in a discriminatory fashion.
Officials would refuse to accept poll taxes from blacks seeking to pay them, or would withhold
poll tax exemption certificates from otherwise-qualified black applicants. See H.R. Rep. No. 89-
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439, at 2452. They would provide whites with "easy versions" of literacy tests or excuse them
altogether, but demand that blacks pass "difficult versions . . . without the slightest error."
Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 312-13. Other voting qualifications -- including the infamous "good-
morals requirement" and "constitutional interpretation" tests -- were so inherently "vague and
subjective" that they "constituted an open invitation to abuse at the hands of voting officials." Id.
In addition to these methods of direct disenfranchisement, southern officials before 1965
also enacted laws designed to dilute black voting strength, if and when blacks were able to
register and cast ballots. Specifically, southern officials "gerrymandered election districts,
instituted at-large elections, annexed or deannexed land as it fit their racial and partisan interests,
and required huge bonds of officeholders." J. Morgan Kousser, The Strange, Ironic Career of
Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 1965-2007, 86 TEX . L. REV . 667, 678-79 (2008); see also To
Examine the Impact and Effectiveness of the Voting Rights Act, Hearing Before the Subcomm.
on the Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 1138 (Oct. 18, 2005)
("Impact and Effectiveness") (Chandler Davidson and Bernard Grofman, eds., Quiet Revolution
in the South: The Impact of the Voting Rights Act 1965-1990 (Princeton University Press 1994)).
These tactics aimed at reducing the ability of blacks to elect candidates of their choice --
sometimes referred to as "[d]isenfranchisement by indirection" -- were widely employed
throughout the South in the late nineteenth century, and they reemerged during the "Second
Reconstruction" of the mid-twentieth century as well. See 1 Voting Rights Act: Evidence of
Continued Need, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the Constitution of the H. Comm. on the
Judiciary, 109th Cong. 142 (Mar. 8, 2006) (hereinafter, "1 Evidence of Continued Need")
(National Commission on the Voting Rights Act, Protecting Minority Voters: The Voting Rights
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Act at Work 1982-2005 (Feb. 2006) (hereinafter, "Nat'l Comm'n Report")); see also An
Introduction to the Expiring Provisions of the Voting Rights Act and Legal Issues Relating to
Reauthorization, Hearing Before the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 206 (May 9, 2006)
("Introduction to Expiring Provisions") (prepared statement of Chandler Davidson).
The Supreme Court eventually responded to these attempts to evade the requirements of
the Reconstruction Amendments by striking down some of the most egregious practices used to
impede blacks from effectively exercising their right to vote. See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 311-
12 (internal citations omitted). The Court invalidated grandfather clauses in 1915, see Guinn v.
United States, 238 U.S. 347 (1915); Myers v. Anderson, 238 U.S. 368 (1915); outlawed the so-
called "white primary" in 1944, see Smith v. Allwright, 321 U.S. 649 (1944); and condemned
racial gerrymandering in 1960, when the city of Tuskegee, Alabama, attempted to transform its
square-shape into "a strangely irregular twenty-eight-sided figure," which had the effect of
removing "from the city all save four or five of its 400 Negro voters while not removing a single
white voter or resident," Gomillion v. Lightfoot, 364 U.S. 339, 341 (1960).1
Congress also responded to southern states' sophisticated disenfranchisement strategies by
enacting civil rights legislation in 1957, 1960, and 1964, which sought to "facilitat[e] case-by-
case litigation against voting discrimination." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 313. But it soon became
apparent that "case-by-case" litigation would not be sufficient to protect African-Americans'
access to the ballot. See H.R. Rep. No. 89-439, at 2440-41. Not only was litigation expensive
and slow, but even where it proved successful, southern officials would often ignore court orders,
1
Reversing the lower court's dismissal of the case, the Supreme Court emphasized that
the Fifteenth Amendment "nullifies sophisticated as well as simple-minded modes of
discrimination." Gomillion, 364 U.S. at 342 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
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"close[] their registration offices to freeze the voting rolls," or "merely switch[] to discriminatory
devices not covered by the federal decrees." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 314. As Congress
explained, "[b]arring one contrivance too often has caused no change in result, only in methods."
H.R. Rep. No. 89-439, at 2441. Hence, in 1965 Congress decided that "sterner and more
elaborate measures" were needed to combat the "insidious and pervasive evil which had been
perpetrated in certain parts of our country through unremitting and ingenious defiance of the
Constitution." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 309.
To craft these measures effectively, the Senate and House Committees on the Judiciary
held hearings for nine days, during which they discussed 122 proposed voting rights bills and
heard testimony from 67 witnesses. See id.; see also H.R. Rep. No. 89-439, at 2438. The House
debated the legislation for three full days, while the Senate discussed the Act for almost a month.
See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 308. Ultimately, when it came time to vote, "the verdict of both
chambers was overwhelming": the Voting Rights Act of 1965 passed by a margin of 328-74 in
the House, and 79-18 in the Senate. Id.; see also Voting Rights Act of 1965 ("1965 Act"), Pub.
L. No. 89-110, 79 Stat. 437 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 1973 et seq.).
The Act's basic prohibition against racial discrimination in voting is contained in Section
2, which provides that "[n]o 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." 42 U.S.C. § 1973. Although Section 2 echoes the language of the
Fifteenth Amendment, at least since 1982 it has been interpreted to prohibit a broader category of
conduct than that which the Amendment itself proscribes, as it forbids all electoral practices with
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discriminatory "results," not just those enacted with a discriminatory purpose. Compare City of
Mobile v. Bolden, 446 U.S. 55, 62 (1980) (holding that Section 2 merely restates "the
prohibitions already contained in the Fifteenth Amendment" and that "racially discriminatory
motivation is a necessary ingredient of a Fifteenth Amendment violation") with S. Rep. No. 97-
417, at 28 (1982) (explaining Congress's intent to amend Section 2 in response to City of Mobile
to make clear that a plaintiff can establish a Section 2 violation "without proving any kind of
discriminatory purpose"). Other provisions of the Voting Rights Act ban poll taxes, 42 U.S.C. §
1973h, prohibit voter intimidation and coercion, 42 U.S.C. § 1973i(b), and establish civil and
criminal sanctions for the deprivation of rights secured by the Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1973j.
In addition to these permanent provisions -- which apply nationwide -- the Act sets forth
"a complex scheme of stringent remedies aimed at areas where voting discrimination has been
the most flagrant." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 315. These targeted provisions are temporary, and
only apply to jurisdictions that are "covered" under Section 4(b). For example, Section 4(a) of
the Act bans the use of voting tests in all covered jurisdictions, see 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a), while
Section 8 authorizes the Attorney General to send federal observers to enter polling places and
monitor elections in covered jurisdictions when "necessary to enforce the guarantees of the 14th
or 15th amendment," 42 U.S.C. § 1973f(a)(2); see also H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 91 (2006).2
Section 5, however, remains the most innovative -- and the most controversial -- of the
Act's targeted, temporary provisions. Under Section 5, a covered jurisdiction cannot make any
changes to its voting qualifications, standards, practices, or procedures unless those changes are
2
Under Section 3(a) of the Act, federal observers may also be assigned to non-covered
jurisdictions where it is deemed "appropriate to enforce the voting guarantees of the fourteenth or
fifteenth amendment." See 42 U.S.C. § 1973a(a); see also H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 91.
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first "submitted to and approved by a three-judge Federal District Court in Washington, D.C., or
the Attorney General." See Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2509; 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. Preclearance
under Section 5 will only be granted if a jurisdiction can show that its proposed voting change
"neither 'has the purpose nor will have the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on
account of race or color.'" Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2509 (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(a)).
Section 5 constituted a direct response to the "common practice in some jurisdictions of
staying one step ahead of the federal courts by passing new discriminatory voting laws as soon as
the old ones had been struck down." Beer v. United States, 425 U.S. 130, 140 (1976). Prior to
1965, such novel methods of minority disenfranchisement would continue to operate "until the
Justice Department or private plaintiffs were able to sustain the burden of proving that the new
law, too, was discriminatory." Id. But with the passage of Section 5, Congress "shift[ed] the
advantage of time and inertia from the perpetrators of the evil to its victim," Katzenbach, 383
U.S. at 328. Rather than requiring minority voters to sue to challenge discriminatory voting
practices after their implementation, Section 5 places the burden on covered jurisdictions to show
their voting changes are nondiscriminatory before those changes can be put into effect. See id.
If a jurisdiction covered by Section 5 chooses to submit its proposed electoral change to
the Attorney General for preclearance, and the Attorney General does not interpose an objection
to the change within 60 days, the change may be implemented as proposed. See 42 U.S.C. §
1973c(a); see also City of Rome v. United States, 446 U.S. 156, 170 (1980). If the Attorney
General does interpose an objection, the submitting jurisdiction "may at any time request the
Attorney General to reconsider an objection," see 28 C.F.R. § 51.45(a), or it may institute a
declaratory judgment action before a three-judge panel of this Court, seeking "de novo
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consideration of whether the method of election violates rights protected by the Voting Rights
Act or the Constitution," Cnty. Council of Sumter Cnty. v. United States, 555 F. Supp. 694, 706-
07 (D.D.C. 1983) (three-judge court); see also City of Rome v. United States, 450 F. Supp. 378,
381-82 (D.D.C. 1978) (three-judge court), aff'd, 446 U.S. 156 (1980) (explaining that "even if . . .
the Attorney General objects to certain proposed electoral changes, the applicant-jurisdiction can
always seek . . . a declaratory judgment from a three-judge court in this District . . . "); 28 C.F.R.
§ 51.11 (noting that "[s]ubmission to the Attorney General does not affect the right of the
submitting authority to bring an action in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia for
a declaratory judgment"). However, if the jurisdiction does not receive federal preclearance from
either the Attorney General or a three-judge panel of this Court, the change to its voting practice
or procedure may not be implemented.
Section 4(b) establishes the formula that determines which jurisdictions are subject to
Section 5's preclearance requirements (and the other temporary provisions of the Act). As
originally enacted, a jurisdiction was "covered" under Section 4(b) if it maintained a voting test
or device as of November 1, 1964, and had less than 50% voter registration or turnout in the
1964 presidential election. See 1965 Act § 4(b).3 Congress found that the combined presence of
one of these "tests or devices" and low voter registration or turnout in a particular jurisdiction
made it "a strong probability that low registration and voting are a result of racial discrimination
in the use of such tests." H.R. Rep. No. 89-439, at 2444. The jurisdictions originally covered by
3
A voting "test or device" was defined by statute as a requirement that a person "(1)
demonstrate the ability to read, write, understand, or interpret any matter, (2) demonstrate any
educational achievement or his knowledge of any particular subject, (3) possess good moral
character, or (4) prove his qualifications by the voucher of registered voters or members of any
other class." Id. § 4(c).
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this formula were Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Virginia.
See 28 C.F.R. pt. 51 app. Thirty-nine counties in North Carolina and one county in Arizona also
qualified for coverage as separately designated political subdivisions. Id.
It was no coincidence that the six states originally covered in their entirety by Section
4(b) -- and therefore subject to preclearance under Section 5 -- were those southern states with
the worst historical records of racial discrimination in voting. The drafters of the Act
purposefully designed its coverage formula "to pick up the core Southern states that had been
bastions of Jim Crow." Introduction to the Expiring Provisions 221 (statement of Samuel
Issacharoff). As one scholar has explained, "those who wrote the legislation knew the states they
wanted to 'cover' and, by a process of trial and error, determined the participation level that
would single them out." 1 Voting Rights Act: Section 5 of the Act – History, Scope, and
Purpose, Hearing before the Subcomm. on the Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary,
109th Cong. 68 (Oct. 25, 2005) ("1 History, Scope, & Purpose") (Abigail Thernstrom, Whose
Votes Count? Affirmative Action and Minority Rights (Harvard University Press 1987)). The
reverse-engineered, percentage-based "trigger" for coverage under the Act was, in other words, "a
formally neutral device for capturing a more historically based truth." The Continuing Need for
Section 5 Pre-Clearance, Hearing before the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 99 (May
16, 2006) ("Continuing Need") (responses of Pamela S. Karlan to questions submitted by
Senators Leahy, Kennedy, Kohl, Cornyn, and Coburn) ("Karlan Responses").
But Congress also recognized the potential that Section 4(b)'s coverage formula would be
over- or under-inclusive, and hence created mechanisms whereby jurisdictions could "bail out" of
or "bail-in" to Section 5's requirements. See 1965 Act § 4(a), § 3(c). In order to successfully
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"bail out" under the version of Section 4(a) now in effect, a jurisdiction must obtain a declaratory
judgment from a three-judge court confirming that "for the previous ten years it has not used any
forbidden voting test, has not been subject to any valid objection under § 5, and has not been
found liable for other voting rights violations." Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2509. The
jurisdiction must also show "that it has 'engaged in constructive efforts to eliminate intimidation
and harassment of voters,' and similar measures." Id. (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(1)(A)-(F)).
By the same token, a court can require a jurisdiction to "bail-in" to the requirements of Section 5
if it finds that "violations of the fourteenth or fifteenth amendment justifying equitable relief have
occurred within the territory of such State or political subdivision." 42 U.S.C. § 1973a(c).
Specifically, a court presiding over a voting discrimination suit against a state or political
subdivision may retain jurisdiction over the suit "for such a period as it may deem appropriate,"
and may, during that time, require that the defendant-jurisdiction be subject to preclearance. Id.
Shortly after Congress enacted the Voting Rights Act, South Carolina brought suit
challenging the constitutionality of Section 5's preclearance requirement, Section 4(b)'s coverage
formula, and several of the Act's other temporary provisions, on the grounds that they exceeded
Congress's Fifteenth Amendment enforcement authority and violated "[t]he doctrine of the
equality of the states." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 323, 328. Rejecting these arguments, the
Supreme Court explained that "[a]s against the reserved powers of the States, Congress may use
any rational means to effectuate the constitutional prohibition of racial discrimination in voting."
Id. at 325. Although recognizing that Section 5 "may have been an uncommon exercise of
congressional power," the Court noted that "exceptional conditions can justify legislative
measures not otherwise appropriate." Id. at 334. With respect to the coverage formula in Section
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4(b), the Court found that Congress had considered "reliable evidence of actual voting
discrimination in a great majority of the States . . . affected by the . . . Act," and had created a
formula that was "relevant to the problem of voting discrimination." Id. at 329. "No more was
required," the Court said, "to justify the application to these areas of Congress' express powers
under the Fifteenth Amendment." Id. at 330.
Although Section 5 was originally intended to be in effect for only five years, Congress
has reauthorized Section 5 on four occasions -- first in 1970 (for five years), then in 1975 (for
seven years), again in 1982 (for 25 years), and most recently in 2006 (for 25 years). See Nw.
Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2510. When Section 5 was reauthorized in 1970 and again in 1975,
Section 4(b)'s coverage formula was amended each time, first to include (1) jurisdictions that
maintained a voting test or device as of November 1, 1968, and had less than 50% voter
registration or turnout in the 1968 presidential election; and then to add (2) jurisdictions that
maintained a voting test or device as of November 1, 1972, and had less than 50% voter
registration or turnout in the 1972 presidential election. See Pub. L. No. 91-285, 84 Stat. 314,
315 (1970) ("1970 Amendments"); Pub. L. No. 94-73, 89 Stat. 400, 401 (1975) ("1975
Amendments"). In the 1975 Amendments, Congress also added Section 4(f) to the Act, which
bars voting discrimination against language minorities and expands the definition of "test or
device" in Section 4 to include the provision of English-only voting materials in jurisdictions
where more than 5% of the voting-age population are members of a single language minority.
See 1975 Amendments § 203, 89 Stat. at 401-02 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(f)).
Five years after the enactment of the 1975 Amendments, the Supreme Court was again
confronted with a challenge to the constitutionality of Section 5, and confirmed that the
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provision's reauthorization constituted a permissible exercise of Congress's Fifteenth Amendment
enforcement authority. See City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 182. Just as Shelby County has argued
here with respect to the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5, Rome, Georgia, argued there that
"even if the Act and its preclearance requirement were appropriate means of enforcing the
Fifteenth Amendment in 1965, they had outlived their usefulness by 1975, when Congress
extended the Act for another seven years." 446 U.S. at 180. The Supreme Court, however,
declined Rome's "invitation to overrule Congress' judgment that the 1975 extension was
warranted." Id. Acknowledging the significant gains that had been made in minority political
participation since 1965, the Court nonetheless expressed concern that "'[a]s registration and
voting of minority citizens increases [sic], other measures may be resorted to which would dilute
increasing minority voting strength.'" Id. at 181 (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 94-196, at 10-11
(1975)). The Court emphasized that the Voting Rights Act had been enacted to remedy nearly a
century of racial discrimination in voting, and that the 1975 extension of the Act's temporary
provisions occurred just ten years after the Act's passage. Id. at 182. Thus viewed, the Court
found "Congress's considered determination that at least another 7 years of statutory remedies
were necessary to counter the perpetuation of 95 years of pervasive voting discrimination" to be
both "unsurprising and unassailable." Id.
Two years after City of Rome, Congress reauthorized Section 4(b) and Section 5 a third
time, and in so doing liberalized the procedures for bailout in several significant ways. Prior to
1982, only covered states (such as Alabama) or separately-covered political subdivisions (such as
individual North Carolina counties) were eligible to seek bailout -- even though all political
subdivisions within covered states were required to seek preclearance for their proposed electoral
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changes. See Nw. Mun. Util. Dist. No. One v. Holder, 573 F. Supp. 2d 221, 227-28 (D.D.C.
2008) ("Nw. Austin I"), rev'd and remanded, Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. 2504 (2009). After the
1982 Amendments, political subdivisions within covered states (such as, for example, Shelby
County) could themselves petition for bailout. See Pub. L. No. 97-205 § 2(b)(2), 96 Stat. 131,
131 ("1982 Amendments") (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(1)). Moreover, the
1982 Amendments changed the substantive criteria for bailout so that jurisdictions with "clean"
voting rights records over the previous ten years were bailout-eligible; under prior versions of the
Act, there had been no such "bailout opportunity for jurisdictions that eliminated discriminatory
voting tests and practices that [had been] used at the time of initial coverage." Nw. Austin I, 573
F. Supp. 2d at 228 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted) (brackets in original). In this
manner, the 1982 Amendments created an incentive for "those jurisdictions with post-1965
histories of discrimination . . . to improve their voting rights records." Id.
The 1982 Amendments also extended the Act's temporary provisions for the longest
period of time to date. Whereas the 1970 and 1975 Amendments had extended the Act's
temporary provisions for only five and seven years, respectively, the 1982 Amendments extended
Section 5 and Section 4(b) for a full 25 years. See Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2510. The 1982
Amendments did not, however, change the coverage formula in Section 4(b). See 1982
Amendments, 96 Stat. at 131-133.
II. The 2006 Reauthorization of Section 5 and Section 4(b)
As a result of the 25 year extension imposed by the 1982 Amendments, Section 5 and the
Act's other temporary provisions were set to expire in 2007. Hence, in the fall of 2005, the
House Committee on the Judiciary began to examine "the effectiveness of the temporary
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provisions of the VRA over the last 25 years" in order to determine whether another renewal of
the Act's temporary provisions was warranted. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 5. The result was
"one of the most extensive legislative records in the Committee on the Judiciary's history." Id.
From October 2005 through May 2006, the House Judiciary Committee held ten
oversight hearings and two legislative hearings before the Subcommittee on the Constitution, at
which it heard from 46 witnesses and assessed over 12,000 pages of testimony, documentary
evidence, and statistical analyses. Id. The Subcommittee on the Constitution received and
incorporated into the legislative record lengthy reports from several civil rights organizations and
voting rights scholars, including: (1) a report by the ACLU's Voting Rights Project, assessing 293
cases involving allegations of voting discrimination since 1982, see 1 Evidence of Continued
Need 378-1270 (Laughlin McDonald and Daniel Levitas, The Case for Extending and Amending
the Voting Rights Act: Voting Rights Act Litigation, 1982-2006 (Mar. 2006)) (hereinafter,
"ACLU Report"); (2) a report by the National Commission on the Voting Rights Act, compiling
evidence of voting discrimination since 1982 based on testimony gathered at ten field hearings
across the country, as well as "governmental, legal, media and scholarly sources," see id. at 121
(Nat'l Comm'n Report); and (3) a study conducted by Professor Ellen Katz and the Voting Rights
Initiative of the University of Michigan Law School, which analyzed 323 post-1982 lawsuits that
raised claims under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, see Impact and Effectiveness 974 (Ellen
Katz, Documenting Discrimination in Voting: Judicial Findings Under Section 2 of the Voting
Rights Act Since 1982 (Nov. 2005)) (hereinafter, "Katz Study").
The Senate Judiciary Committee held nine of its own hearings to discuss the
reauthorization of the Act's temporary provisions, at which it, too, received testimony from 46
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witnesses, including experienced civil rights litigators, law professors, and Department of Justice
attorneys. See S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 2-4, 10 (2006). All told, the legislative record compiled
by the two houses is over 15,000 pages in length, and includes "statistics, findings by courts and
the Justice Department, and first-hand accounts of discrimination." See id. at 10. On the basis of
this extensive record, Congress determined that "40 years has not been a sufficient amount of
time to eliminate the vestiges of discrimination following nearly 100 years of disregard for the
dictates of the 15th amendment." See Pub. L. No. 109-246, § 2(b)(7), 120 Stat. 577, 578 (2006)
("2006 Amendments"). Despite the effectiveness of Section 5 in deterring some attempts at
voting discrimination, the House Judiciary Committee found that "instances of discrimination
and efforts to discriminate against minority voters continue, thus justifying reauthorization of the
VRA's temporary provisions." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 24-25.
As evidence of continued discrimination in voting, Congress pointed to the "hundreds of
objections" to voting changes that were interposed by the Attorney General since 1982; the
number of voting changes withdrawn from consideration after so-called "more information
requests" from the Attorney General; the number of "section 5 enforcement actions undertaken
by the Department of Justice in covered jurisdictions since 1982," in which the Department has
sought to compel jurisdictions to submit their voting changes for preclearance; the number of
requests for preclearance that have been denied by three-judge panels of this Court; the
"continued filing of section 2 cases" in covered jurisdictions; the existence of racially polarized
voting "in each of the jurisdictions covered by the expiring provisions" of the Act; and "the tens
of thousands of Federal observers dispatched to monitor polls" in covered jurisdictions.
See 2006 Amendments § 2(b)(3)-(4), (8), 120 Stat. at 577-78. Such evidence, Congress found,
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"demonstrates that, without the continuation of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 protections, racial
and language minority citizens will be deprived of the opportunity to exercise their right to vote,
or will have their votes diluted, undermining the significant gains made by minorities in the last
40 years." 2006 Amendments § 2(b)(9), 120 Stat. at 578.
Hence, Congress passed H.R. 9 -- entitled the Fannie Lou Hamer, Rosa Parks, and
Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006 -- which
reauthorized Section 5 (and the coverage formula in Section 4(b)) for another 25 years. See 2006
Amendments § 4; 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(8). The congressional support for the Act's 2006
reauthorization was even more "overwhelming" than it had been for the Act's passage in 1965.
Whereas the 1965 Act passed by a vote of 328 to 74 in the House and 79 to 18 in the Senate, see
Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 309, the 2006 Amendments passed by a vote of 390 to 33 in the House
and 98 to 0 in the Senate, see 152 Cong. Rec. H5207 (daily ed. July 13, 2006); 152 Cong. Rec.
S8012 (daily ed. July 20, 2006). President George W. Bush then signed the bill into law on July
27, 2006. See 120 Stat. at 581.
In addition to extending the operation of Section 5, the 2006 Amendments made two
substantive changes to the Act's preclearance standard. First, Congress clarified its intent with
respect to the meaning of the word "purpose" in Section 5 in response to the Supreme Court's
decision in Reno v. Bossier Parish Sch. Bd., 528 U.S. 320 (2000) ("Bossier II"). Section 5, by its
terms, only allows a voting change to be precleared if the change "neither has the purpose nor
will have the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race or color." See 42
U.S.C. § 1973c(a). Prior to Bossier II, this provision was interpreted to bar preclearance of
voting changes that either (1) were enacted with a discriminatory purpose; or (2) had a
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discriminatory, retrogressive effect -- i.e., changes that worsened the position of minority voters
relative to the status quo. See Bossier II, 528 U.S. at 324 (explaining that a redistricting plan
only has a prohibited discriminatory "effect" under Section 5 if it is retrogressive); Beer, 425 U.S.
at 141 (noting that "the purpose of s[ection] 5 has always been to insure that no voting-procedure
changes would be made that would lead to a retrogression in the position of racial minorities with
respect to their effective exercise of the electoral franchise"). In Bossier II, however, the
Supreme Court -- for the first time -- held that the "purpose" prong of Section 5 only prohibits
electoral changes that are enacted with a discriminatory and retrogressive purpose. See 528 U.S.
at 341. In other words, after Bossier II, a redistricting plan that was passed for purely
discriminatory reasons (such as to purposefully avoid the creation of a new majority-minority
district), but that was not intended to make minority voters any worse off than they had been
under the preexisting plan (which, say, had no majority-minority districts), would not run afoul
of Section 5's "purpose" prong. See id. (holding that Section 5 "does not prohibit preclearance of
a redistricting plan with a discriminatory but nonretrogressive purpose").
Bossier II thus had the effect of reading the "purpose" prong "almost entirely out of
Section 5." See Voting Rights Act: Section 5 – Preclearance Standards, Hearing before the
Subcomm. on the Constitution of the House Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 12 (Nov. 1,
2005) (hereinafter, "Preclearance Standards") (prepared statement of Mark A. Posner)
(hereinafter, "Posner Prepared Statement"). As was the case prior to Bossier II, if a jurisdiction
enacted an electoral change that reduced the ability of minority voters to elect candidates of their
choice, the change would be denied preclearance under Section 5's "effects" prong (because it
would have a retrogressive effect). Under Bossier II, then, the "purpose" prong would only serve
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as an independent bar to discriminatory voting changes where a jurisdiction "intend[ed] to cause
retrogression, but then, somehow, messe[d] up and enact[ed] a voting change that [did] not
actually cause retrogression to occur (the so-called 'incompetent retrogressor')." Id.
In 2006, the House Judiciary Committee explained that Bossier II's limitation of the
"purpose" prong had been inconsistent with Congress's intent that Section 5 prevent not only
purposefully retrogressive discriminatory voting changes, but also those "[v]oting changes that
'purposefully' keep minority groups 'in their place.'" See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 68.
Accordingly, as part of the 2006 Amendments, Congress restored the pre-Bossier II "purpose"
standard by adding a provision to the statute that defined "purpose" in Section 5 to mean "any
discriminatory purpose." See 2006 Amendments § 5(c), 120 Stat. at 581; 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(c)
(emphasis added).
In a similar vein, Congress also responded to the Supreme Court's decision in Georgia v.
Ashcroft, 539 U.S. 461 (2003), which had altered the preexisting standard for determining
whether a voting change had a prohibited retrogressive effect under Section 5's "effects" prong.
Prior to Georgia v. Ashcroft, the standard for assessing whether an electoral change violated the
Section 5 "effects" test was "whether the ability of minority groups to participate in the political
process and to elect their choices to office is . . . diminished . . . by the change affecting voting."
Beer, 425 U.S. at 141 (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 94-196, at 10). In Georgia v. Ashcroft, however,
the Court endorsed a less rigid, "totality of the circumstances" analysis for examining
retrogressive effects, explaining that "any assessment of the retrogression of a minority group's
effective exercise of the electoral franchise depends on an examination of all the relevant
circumstances, such as the ability of minority voters to elect their candidate of choice, the extent
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of the minority group's opportunity to participate in the political process, and the feasibility of
creating a nonretrogressive plan." 539 U.S. at 479. In reauthorizing the Act in 2006, Congress
expressed concern that the Georgia v. Ashcroft framework had introduced "substantial
uncertainty" into the administration of a statute that was "specifically intended to block persistent
and shifting efforts to limit the effectiveness of minority political participation." See H.R. Rep.
No. 109-478, at 70 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Hence, in an attempt to
restore the simpler, "ability to elect" analysis articulated in Beer, see id. at 71, Congress added
new language to the Act, stating that all voting changes that diminish the ability of minorities "to
elect their preferred candidates of choice" should be denied preclearance under Section 5. See
2006 Amendments § 5(b), 120 Stat. at 581; 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(b).
For present purposes, even more significant than the substantive changes that Congress
made in 2006 to Section 5's preclearance standard were the proposed changes that Congress
considered -- but ultimately, did not make -- to Section 4(b)'s coverage formula. During the 2006
reauthorization hearings, there was extensive discussion of the potential need to revise the Act's
coverage formula to take account of changed circumstances since 1975, when the formula had
last been updated. Several Senators asked members of the academic community whether they
believed Section 4(b)'s "trigger" should be based on voter registration and turnout data from the
2000 and 2004 presidential elections, rather than data from the 1964, 1968, and 1972 elections.
See, e.g., Continuing Need 48-49 (responses of Anita S. Earls to questions submitted by Senators
Coburn, Cornyn, Leahy, and Kohl) ("Earls Responses"); id. at 76, 85-86 (responses of Ronald
Keith Gaddie to questions submitted by Senators Kohl, Cornyn, and Coburn) ("Gaddie
Responses"); id. at 99-100, 103-04 (Karlan Responses); id. at 110-12 (responses of Richard H.
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Pildes to questions submitted by Senators Specter, Cornyn, Coburn, and Kohl) ("Pildes
Responses"); Introduction to Expiring Provisions 36, 38 (responses of Richard L. Hasen to
questions submitted by Senators Specter, Cornyn, and Sessions) ("Hasen Responses"); id. at 76
(responses of Samuel Issacharoff to questions submitted by Senators Specter, Sessions, and
Cornyn) ("Issacharoff Responses").
Many voting rights scholars expressed the view that some sort of "updated trigger is
called for." See, e.g., Continuing Need 85 (Gaddie Responses); Introduction to Expiring
Provisions 36 (Hasen Responses) (explaining that "Congress should update the coverage
formula based on data indicating where intentional state discrimination in voting on the basis of
race is now a problem or likely to be one in the near future"); Introduction to Expiring Provisions
13 (statement of Samuel Issacharoff) (noting that a trigger based on "voter turnout figures from
1964 . . . risks appearing constitutionally antiquated by the proposed next expiration date of
2032"). But almost all agreed that updating the formula on the basis of voter turnout and
registration data from the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections would be ill-advised. As one law
professor explained, such a proposal "rest[s] on a fundamental misperception of the triggers,"
since Congress "did not pick the 1964, 1968, or 1972 elections as triggers because it thought
something distinctive happened in any of those elections." See Continuing Need 99 (Karlan
Responses). Rather, the use of election data from those years -- in conjunction with the presence
of a prohibited voting test or device -- had served only as a proxy for identifying those
"jurisdictions that had a long, open, and notorious history of disenfranchising minority citizens
and diluting their voting strength whenever they did manage to register and cast ballots." Id.; see
also Continuing Need 110 (Pildes Responses). For this reason, most scholars who testified
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before Congress were skeptical as to whether "tinkering with the coverage dates is necessarily the
best way to make the Act more current." Introduction to Expiring Provisions 76 (Issacharoff
Responses); see also Continuing Need 110 (Pildes Responses) (stating that "[m]echanically
updating the coverage formula in this way would . . . not tie coverage appropriately to where
problems are occurring today").
Nevertheless, the only amendment that was ultimately offered as a possible means of
making Section 4(b)'s coverage formula more "current" proposed to do just that. Specifically,
Representative Charlie Norwood of Georgia introduced an amendment that would have created a
"rolling test" for coverage based on voter turnout in the three most recent presidential elections.
See H. R. Rep. No. 109-554, at 2 (2006). Under the Norwood Amendment, a jurisdiction would
only be subject to preclearance if it had "a discriminatory test in place or voter turnout of less
than 50% in any of the three most recent presidential elections." See id.
The House's reaction to the Norwood Amendment was overwhelmingly negative.
Representative James Sensenbrenner, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, decried the
Amendment, claiming that it "not only guts the bill, but turns the Voting Rights Act into a farce."
See 152 Cong. Rec. H5181 (daily ed. July 13, 2006). Although over 1,000 counties still would
have been subject to preclearance under the Norwood Amendment's proposed formula, Hawaii
would have been the only state covered in its entirety -- even though Hawaii has no discernible
history of voting discrimination. See 152 Cong. Rec. H5179-81. Opponents of the Amendment
condemned such results as evidence of the Amendment's "absurdity," and expressed concern that
by severing Section 4(b)'s "connection to jurisdictions with proven discriminatory histories," the
Amendment would place Section 5 in constitutional jeopardy. See 152 Cong. Rec. H5181.
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Ultimately, the Norwood Amendment was defeated, and the existing coverage formula in
Section 4(b) remained intact. See 152 Cong. Rec. H5204; see also James Thomas Tucker, The
Politics of Persuasion: Passage of the Voting Rights Act Reauthorization Act of 2006, 33 J.
LEGIS. 205, 254-55 (2007) (describing the debate over the Norwood Amendment). Under that
formula, which remains in existence today, a jurisdiction is subject to preclearance if it
maintained a voting test or device in 1964, 1968, or 1972, and had voter turnout or registration
below 50% in that year's presidential election. See 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(b). Currently, there are 16
states covered in whole or in part by Section 4(b), and therefore subject to preclearance under
Section 5. See 28 C.F.R. pt. 51, app. Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, South Carolina, Texas, and Virginia are covered in their entirety, while portions of
California, Florida, Michigan, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, and South Dakota
are also covered. Id.
III. Northwest Austin
Shortly after the 2006 Amendments became effective, a Texas municipal utility district
brought suit, seeking to bail out of the Act's requirements or, in the alternative, to challenge
Section 5 on its face as "an unconstitutional overextension of Congress's enforcement power to
remedy past violations of the Fifteenth Amendment." See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 230
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Because the plaintiff-district sought a
declaratory judgment that it was eligible for bailout, a three-judge panel of this Court was
convened to hear the case. See id. (citing 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(5)). The court first concluded
that the district was not a "political subdivision" under Section 14(c)(2) of the Act, and thus
could not petition for bailout pursuant to Section 4(a), which only authorizes states and "political
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subdivisions" to seek bailout. See id. at 230-35; see also § 1973b(a)(1).
The court then proceeded to address the merits of the plaintiff's facial constitutional
challenge to the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5. Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 235-79.
The court began by identifying the types of evidence of voting discrimination upon which
Congress had relied in deciding to reauthorize Section 5 in 2006, which included evidence of (1)
racial disparities in voter registration and turnout; (2) the number of minority elected officials;
(3) objections to proposed voting changes under Section 5; (4) "more information requests" by
the Attorney General in response to Section 5 preclearance submissions; (5) judicial preclearance
suits brought by covered jurisdictions; (6) Section 5 enforcement actions brought by the Attorney
General; (7) Section 2 litigation; (8) the dispatch of federal election observers; (9) racially
polarized voting; and (10) Section 5's deterrent effect. Id. at 247. In a lengthy opinion replete
with citations to the legislative record, the court analyzed each of these categories of evidence to
determine whether there was sufficient proof of "contemporary discrimination in voting to justify
Congress's decision to subject covered jurisdictions to section 5 preclearance for another twenty-
five years." Id. at 265. Concluding that the legislative record did, in fact, contain "extensive
contemporary evidence of intentional discrimination," id. at 266, the court decided there was "no
basis for overturning Congress's judgment that preclearance - 'a vital prophylactic tool[]' -
remains necessary," id. at 279 (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 21).
On appeal, however, the Supreme Court reversed and remanded. In a decision that has
since been criticized by some as "a questionable application of the doctrine of 'constitutional
avoidance,'" see Richard L. Hasen, Constitutional Avoidance and Anti-Avoidance by the Roberts
Court, 2009 SUP . CT . REV . 181 (2009); see also Ellen Katz, From Bush v. Gore to NAMUDNO:
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A Response to Professor Amar, 61 FLA . L. REV . 991, 992-93 (2009) (describing the Court's
"statutory construction" of the bailout provision in Nw. Austin II as "contrived"), Justice Roberts,
writing for an eight-justice majority, sidestepped the "big question" of Section 5's
constitutionality by instead resolving the case on narrower, statutory grounds, see Nw. Austin II,
129 S. Ct. at 2508. Specifically, the Court found that the plaintiff-district qualified as a "political
subdivision" eligible to petition for bailout -- even though it did not register voters and was
therefore not a political subdivision as that term is defined in Section 14(c)(2) of the Act. See 42
U.S.C. § 1973l(c)(2) (defining "political subdivision" to include "any county or parish" or "any
other subdivision of a State which conducts registration for voting").
According to the Court, "the statutory definition of 'political subdivision' in § 14(c)(2)
does not apply to every use of the term 'political subdivision' in the Act." Nw. Austin II, 129 S.
Ct. at 2515. Rather, the Court explained, the phrase "political subdivision" in Section 4(a) has a
"broader" meaning than that set forth in Section 14(c)(2), and hence "all political subdivisions -
not only those described in § 14(c)(2) - are eligible to file a bailout suit" under Section 4(a). Id.
at 2515-17 (emphasis added). As a political subdivision of Texas "in the ordinary sense of the
term," the plaintiff-district was thus eligible to seek bailout. Id. at 2513. And because the district
had framed its constitutional challenge to the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5 "as being 'in the
alternative' to its statutory argument" for bailout, the majority saw no need to resolve the merits
of the district's constitutional challenge. Id.
But the majority did take the opportunity to voice some concerns about the
constitutionality of Section 5 and Section 4(b), and thereby presaged future challenges to Section
5 like that raised here by Shelby County. The Court in Nw. Austin II emphasized the substantial
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"federalism costs" imposed by Section 5, as well as the "dramatic improvements" in minority
voter turnout and registration since the Act's passage. Id. at 2511. "Things have changed in the
South," the Court wrote, explaining that minorities now register and vote at rates that "approach
parity" with those of non-minorities, and that minority candidates "hold office at unprecedented
levels." Id. The Court conceded that these "improvements are no doubt due in significant part to
the Voting Rights Act itself, and stand as a monument to its success," but made clear that "[p]ast
success alone . . . is not adequate justification to retain the preclearance requirements." Id.
The Court also raised concern about the continued constitutionality of the Act's coverage
formula, noting that it is "based on data that is now more than 35 years old, and there is
considerable evidence that it fails to account for current political conditions." Id. at 2512. The
Court cited the fact that the "racial gap in voter registration and turnout is lower in the States
originally covered by § 5 than it is nationwide." Id. Although the Court did not specify the
precise nature of the differences between covered and non-covered jurisdictions that would be
constitutionally necessary to justify Section 5's continued selective application, it did state that "a
departure from the fundamental principle of equal sovereignty requires a showing that a statute's
disparate geographic coverage is sufficiently related to the problem that it targets." Id. at 2512.
After identifying "serious constitutional questions" raised by the Act's coverage formula
and preclearance requirement, however, the majority refrained from answering them. Id. at 2513.
But Justice Thomas did not. Writing separately as the lone dissenter, he explained that he would
have "decided the constitutional issue presented" and concluded "that the lack of current
evidence of intentional discrimination with respect to voting renders § 5 unconstitutional." Id. at
2517, 2519 (Thomas, J., concurring in judgment in part, dissenting in part). According to Justice
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Thomas, "the constitutionality of § 5 has always depended on the proven existence of intentional
discrimination so extensive that elimination of it through case-by-case enforcement would be
impossible." Id. at 2524. He went on to explain that this kind of extensive intentional
discrimination in voting -- which led the Court to uphold the constitutionality of Section 5 on
prior occasions -- "no longer exists," citing the high minority voter registration rates in states
such as Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi. Id. at 2525. Justice Thomas dismissed evidence of
the so-called "second generation barriers" to voting upon which Congress had relied, noting that
evidence of Section 5 enforcement actions, Section 2 suits, and federal observer coverage "bears
no resemblance to the record initially supporting § 5, and is plainly insufficient to sustain such an
extraordinary remedy." Id. at 2526. With respect to evidence of intentional voting
discrimination contained in the 2006 legislative record and cited by the three-judge court, Justice
Thomas found that these "discrete and isolated incidents" fell short of a "coordinated and
unrelenting campaign to deny an entire race access to the ballot." Id. "Perfect compliance with
the Fifteenth Amendment's substantive command is not now - nor has it ever been - the yardstick
for determining whether Congress has the power to employ broad prophylactic legislation to
enforce that Amendment," he explained. Id.
IV. Shelby County, Alabama
Echoing the arguments of Justice Thomas, Shelby County brought this suit on April 27,
2010, asserting that "it is no longer constitutionally justifiable for Congress to arbitrarily impose
on Shelby County and other covered jurisdictions disfavored treatment by forcing them to justify
all voting changes to federal officials in Washington, D.C. for another twenty five years." See
Compl. ¶ 35. Shelby County's history under the Voting Rights Act is extensive and forms a
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relevant backdrop to this case. As a political subdivision of Alabama, Shelby County has been
subject to preclearance since 1965, based on the Attorney General's determination that Alabama
used a prohibited voting test or device on November 1, 1964, and had voter turnout of less than
50% in the 1964 presidential election. See 28 C.F.R. pt. 51 app.; 30 Fed. Reg. 9897 (Aug. 7,
1965); see also 42 U.S.C. § 1973b, § 1973c, § 1973l(c)(2); Compl. ¶¶ 28-29. From 1965 to the
filing of this suit, the Department of Justice has received at least 682 preclearance submissions
from Shelby County and jurisdictions located wholly or partially within Shelby County.
See Def.'s Mot. for Summ. J. ("Def.'s Mot.") [Docket Entry 54], Ex. 4, Decl. of Robert S.
Berman ("Berman Decl.") ¶ 4. Shelby County itself has submitted at least 69 proposed voting
changes to the Attorney General for preclearance. Id. ¶ 5.
Since 1965, the Department has lodged objections to five proposed voting changes
submitted by jurisdictions located wholly or partially within Shelby County. Id. ¶ 8. Shelby
County was also a defendant in the so-called Dillard litigation in the 1980s, in which black
residents of Alabama challenged the at-large system used to elect Alabama county
commissioners as a violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. See Dillard v. Crenshaw
Cnty., 640 F. Supp. 1347, 1352-54 (M.D. Ala. 1986); see also Dillard v. Baldwin Cnty. Bd. of
Educ., 686 F. Supp. 1459, 1461 (M.D. Ala. 1988) (reviewing history of Dillard litigation);
Dillard v. Crenshaw Cnty., 748 F. Supp. 819, 821-23 (M.D. Ala. 1990) (describing Shelby
County's involvement in Dillard). Although Shelby County was not one of the original nine
defendants in Dillard, see Dillard, 640 F. Supp. at 1352, the plaintiffs in Dillard eventually raised
claims against a total of 183 Alabama cities, counties, and school boards that employed at-large
methods of election, including Shelby County, see Dillard, 686 F. Supp. at 1461.
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In the original Dillard lawsuit, the court concluded that the Alabama legislature had
"engaged in a pattern and practice of using at-large election systems as an instrument for race
discrimination." 640 F. Supp. at 1361. The court explained that the challenged at-large electoral
systems had been created against the backdrop of Alabama's "unrelenting historical agenda,
spanning from the late 1800's to the 1980's, to keep its black citizens economically, socially, and
politically downtrodden, from the cradle to the grave." Id. at 1357. Moreover, the court noted,
the Alabama legislature had "consistently enacted at-large systems for local governments during
periods when there was a substantial threat of black participation in the political process." Id. at
1361. When viewed in light of the state's "undisputed history of racial discrimination," it became
clear that the creation of at-large methods of election -- which did, in fact, have an "adverse racial
impact" -- "was not adventitious but rather racially inspired." Id. Hence, the court found that
preliminary injunctive relief with respect to the counties then defending their at-large election
systems was warranted. Id. at 1373.
Despite the adverse judgment against the other Alabama counties with at-large electoral
systems in place, Shelby County continued to deny that its at-large method for electing county
commissioners violated Section 2, and the related case against it proceeded to trial. See Dillard,
748 F. Supp. at 822. While the case was under submission, however, Shelby County entered into
a consent decree with the plaintiffs, under which it agreed to change its at-large electoral system
to a "single-member district scheme" with one majority-black district. Id.
Most recently, on August 25, 2008, the Attorney General objected to a redistricting plan
and 177 annexations submitted by the city of Calera, located within Shelby County. See Berman
Decl. ¶¶ 9-10; id., Att. A. Calera's redistricting plan and annexations would have eliminated the
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city's sole majority-black district, which had been created pursuant to the consent decree in
Dillard, and which had elected an African-American councilman for the past 20 years. See
Berman Decl., Att. A. In its preclearance submission to the Attorney General, Calera conceded
that it had, in fact, already adopted the 177 annexations without receiving advance preclearance
for them. See id.; see also Berman Decl. ¶ 9. After the Attorney General lodged an objection to
the annexations and the city's 2008 redistricting plan, Calera nonetheless proceeded to conduct
elections based on these unprecleared voting changes. See Berman Decl. ¶ 11; id., Att. B
("Calera Compl.") ¶ 18.; id., Att. C ("Calera Consent Decree") at 3. The elections held under the
objected-to plan and annexations resulted in the defeat of the African-American incumbent
councilman. See id., Att. D.
The Attorney General responded by bringing a Section 5 enforcement action, seeking to
prohibit Calera from certifying the results of its elections "based on the district boundaries and
electorate to which the Attorney General ha[d] interposed a timely objection unless and until
preclearance under Section 5 . . . is obtained." Calera Compl. at 7. The case was temporarily
resolved through a consent decree, and the Attorney General subsequently withdrew his objection
to the 177 annexations. See Calera Consent Decree; see also Berman Decl. ¶ 15; id., Att. F. The
Attorney General did not, however, withdraw his objection to the 2008 redistricting plan. See
Berman Decl. ¶ 15; id., Att. F.
Because of the Attorney General's objection to Calera's proposed voting changes, Shelby
County argues that it is not eligible for bailout. Compl. ¶ 34(b) (citing 42 U.S.C. §
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1973b(a)(1)(E)).4 As a result of its alleged ineligibility for bailout and the 2006 reauthorization
of Section 5, Shelby County claims that it now "will have to regularly seek preclearance in the
near future" -- a process that, historically, has required the expenditure of "significant taxpayer
dollars, time, and energy." See id. ¶¶ 32-33; Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. ("Pl.'s Mot.") [Docket Entry
5], Decl. of Frank C. Ellis, Jr. ("Ellis Decl.") ¶¶ 7-8.
Shelby County does not challenge any specific application of Section 5 to one of its
proposed voting changes; rather, it seeks a declaration that Section 5 and Section 4(b) are facially
unconstitutional, as well as a permanent injunction prohibiting the Attorney General from
enforcing these provisions. See Compl. ¶¶ 1, 44(a)-(b). In Count I, Shelby County alleges that in
reauthorizing Section 5 "for another twenty-five years in 2006, Congress lacked the evidence of
intentional discrimination that warranted the enactment of the VRA in 1965 and its extensions in
1970, 1975, and 1982." Id. ¶ 38(c). Hence, Shelby County argues, because there is neither
"'congruence and proportionality' . . . nor even a 'rational relationship' between the evidence
compiled in support of the latest extension of Section 5 and the burdens imposed by that
provision . . . Section 5 . . . exceeds Congress's authority under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments," id. ¶ 38(d) (internal citations omitted), "and, therefore, violates the Tenth
Amendment and Article IV of the Constitution," id. ¶ 37. In Count II, Shelby County similarly
4
Shelby County also maintains that it is ineligible for bailout because it held several
special elections under the authority of Act 65-816 (the "Planning Act" of 1965) between 1965
and 2003. See Compl. ¶ 34(a)(i)-(iii). During that time, the Planning Act had not been
precleared by the Department of Justice. Id. ¶ 34(a)(ii)-(iii). Under Section 4(a), a covered
jurisdiction is only eligible for bailout if it has complied "with the requirement that no change
covered by . . . [Section 5] has been enforced without preclearance." See 42 U.S.C. §
1973b(a)(1)(D). Because Shelby County held special elections under the authority of the
Planning Act (i.e., "enforced" the Act) without first receiving preclearance, Shelby County
maintains that it is also ineligible for bailout pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(1)(D).
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challenges the constitutionality of the 2006 reauthorization of Section 4(b)'s coverage formula,
arguing that "Congress's reliance . . . on voting practices, voter registration data, and presidential
election data from 1964, 1968, and 1972 as the trigger for the preclearance obligation of Section
5 is not an 'appropriate' means of enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment." Id. ¶ 42(a). Because
"Section 4(b)'s coverage formula is not 'sufficiently related to the problem that it targets,'" Shelby
County maintains that Section 4(b), like Section 5, exceeds Congress's Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendment enforcement authority, and violates the principle of equal sovereignty embodied in
the Tenth Amendment and Article IV. Id. ¶ 43(c).
Shortly after filing its complaint, Shelby County filed a motion for summary judgment.
Several civil rights groups and Shelby County residents responded by filing motions seeking to
intervene as defendants, which the Court granted. See 8/25/10 Order [Docket Entry 29].
Defendant and defendant-intervenors then asked the Court to deny Shelby County's summary
judgment motion as premature, or, in the alternative, to grant limited discovery pursuant to Fed.
R. Civ. P. 56(f). Denying the request, this Court found that there was no need for discovery on
any of the three issues upon which discovery was sought. With respect to the first issue -- Shelby
County's standing to sue -- the Court explained that no discovery was warranted since defendant
"was unable to articulate any reason why a covered jurisdiction subject to Section 5's
preclearance requirement - such as Shelby County - would lack standing to bring this type of
action." Shelby Cnty. v. Holder, 270 F.R.D. 16, 18 (D.D.C. 2010). The Court next rejected
defendant's contention that discovery was needed to determine whether Shelby County was, in
fact, eligible for bailout, since Shelby County did not seek bailout. Id. at 19. Finally, the Court
held that there was no need for discovery on Shelby County's constitutional challenge because it
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was purely facial -- not "as applied" -- and it therefore must "rise or fall on the record that
Congress created when it extended [the Voting Rights Act's temporary provisions] in 2006." Id.
at 21. Accordingly, the Court set a schedule for the filing of dispositive motions, which
generated over 1,000 pages of briefs and exhibits and culminated in a lengthy motions hearing on
February 2, 2011.
*****
This Court does not write on a clean slate in assessing plaintiff's facial constitutional
challenge to the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5 and Section 4(b). To date, one Supreme Court
Justice has declared that he would strike down Section 5 as an unconstitutional exercise of
Congress's Fifteenth Amendment enforcement power, see Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2517-27
(Thomas, J., concurring in judgment in part, dissenting in part), while several other Justices have
voiced concerns about the continued vitality of the Act's coverage formula, see, e.g., Nw. Austin
II Oral Arg. Tr. at 36 (Apr. 29, 2009) (Alito, J., asking, "[w]ouldn't you agree that there is [sic]
some oddities in this coverage formula"); id. at 22 (Kennedy, J., inquiring whether there is
"anything in the record" addressing whether "these States that are now covered . . . are markedly
different from the noncovered jurisdictions"), and about the apparent never-ending nature of the
preclearance obligation, which was originally intended to last only through 1970, but which is
now scheduled to last through 2032, id. at 32 (Roberts, C.J., stating with respect to Section 5, "at
some point it begins to look like the idea is that this is going to go on forever"). At the same
time, a three-judge panel of this Court, after undertaking an exhaustive review of the legislative
record, concluded that there was sufficient evidence of modern-day, intentional discrimination in
voting to justify Congress's 2006 reauthorization of the preclearance obligation on covered
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jurisdictions for another 25 years. See Nw. Austin I, 571 F. Supp. 2d at 221-83. Keeping all
these views in mind, the Court will undertake its own assessment of the legislative record in
order to determine whether Congress exceeded its enforcement authority under the Fourteenth
and Fifteenth Amendments when it reauthorized Section 5 and Section 4(b) in 2006.
DISCUSSION
I. Threshold Issues
Three threshold issues are presented by this suit: (1) plaintiff's Article III standing; (2)
plaintiff's eligibility for bailout; and (3) the facial rather than as-applied nature of plaintiff's
claims. These three issues were, to some extent, already addressed in the prior Memorandum
Opinion in this case. See Shelby Cnty., 270 F.R.D. at 18-21. Nevertheless, given the "'well-
established principle . . . that normally the Court will not decide a constitutional question if there
is some other ground upon which to dispose of the case,'" Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2513
(quoting Escambia Cnty. v. McMillan, 466 U.S. 48, 51 (1984)), the Court will briefly revisit each
of these issues to explain why none provides a valid basis for avoiding the merits of the facial
constitutional challenge raised here.
A. Standing
To establish the "irreducible constitutional minimum of standing," a plaintiff must allege
(1) an "injury in fact" that is "(a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, not
conjectural or hypothetical"; (2) "a causal connection between the injury and the conduct
complained of"; and (3) a likelihood "that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision."
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560-61 (1992) (internal quotation marks and
citations omitted). As a jurisdiction covered by Section 4(b), Shelby County maintains that it
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must expend "significant taxpayer dollars, time, and energy to meet its obligations under Section
5 of the VRA." Ellis Decl. ¶ 7. Shelby County's expenditure of time and money to ensure
compliance with Section 5 constitutes a "concrete and particularized" injury that is caused by the
continued operation of the statute, and that would be redressed by a decision declaring Section 5
facially unconstitutional and permanently enjoining its enforcement.
The mere fact that Shelby County does not challenge any specific objection to one of its
proposed electoral changes does not serve to render its claims "conjectural or hypothetical" for
purposes of Article III. See LaRoque v. Holder, --- F.3d ----, 2011 WL 2652441, at *10 (D.C.
Cir. 2011) (noting that a plaintiff need only demonstrate a "'substantial probability' of imminent
injury" to establish Article III standing to bring a facial constitutional challenge to Section 5).
Because Shelby County is a jurisdiction subject to Section 5, it will be forced to expend
resources obtaining preclearance for all of its future electoral changes, absent a decision from this
Court granting its requested relief.5 Shelby County therefore has alleged an injury that is both
"credible and immediate, and not merely abstract or speculative." See Navegar, Inc. v. United
States, 103 F.3d 994, 998 (D.C. Cir. 1997); see also Steffel v. Thompson, 415 U.S. 452, 459
(1974) (permitting plaintiff to challenge the legality of his potential arrest under a criminal
trespass statute where the plaintiff alleged threats of prosecution that were neither imaginary nor
speculative). Accordingly, Shelby County has standing to pursue its facial constitutional
challenges to Section 5 and Section 4(b).
5
In fact, Shelby County represented to the Court in July 2011 that it was in the process of
completing its decennial redistricting plan, and that it would need to expend time and resources
preparing a preclearance submission for the plan as early as last month, in the event that the
Court denied its motion for summary judgment. See Notice to the Court [Docket Entry 79].
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B. Bailout
Unlike the Texas municipal utility district in Nw. Austin, Shelby County has not framed
its constitutional challenge "as being 'in the alternative' to its statutory argument" for bailout.
Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2513. Indeed, Shelby County has expressly chosen not to petition for
bailout, based on its determination that such a petition would be futile. See Compl. ¶ 34.
Because Shelby County has not sought bailout under Section 4(a), a finding that Shelby County
was bailout-eligible would not obviate the need for this Court to assess the merits of Shelby
County's constitutional challenge, as was the case in Nw. Austin II. The Supreme Court's finding
in Nw. Austin II that the plaintiff-district was eligible for bailout served to "afford [the plaintiff-
district] all the relief it s[ought]," see 129 S. Ct. at 2513; here, however, a determination that
Shelby County was eligible for bailout would only relieve Shelby County of its preclearance
obligation if defendant or this Court could somehow "force Shelby County to accept bailout,"
which, as defendant correctly concedes, cannot be done. See Shelby Cnty., 270 F.R.D. at 19.6
6
Although the Court did not permit discovery into the question of Shelby County's
bailout-eligibility, it is clear -- based on undisputed facts in the record -- that Shelby County is
not eligible for bailout. Under Section 4(a)(1)(E), a jurisdiction is only eligible for bailout if,
during the ten years preceding its bailout request, "the Attorney General has not interposed any
objection . . . with respect to any submission by or on behalf of the plaintiff or any governmental
unit within its territory." 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(1)(E) (emphasis added). The Attorney General
concedes that, in 2008, he interposed an objection to the proposed redistricting plan and
annexations submitted by the city of Calera, a "governmental unit" within Shelby County.
See Def.'s Mot. at 8; Berman Decl. ¶¶ 9-10. As a result of this objection, Shelby County would
not be eligible for bailout under Section 4(a)(1)(E), even if -- like the Texas municipal utility
district in Nw. Austin II -- it had chosen to pursue such a course as an "alternative" to its facial
constitutional challenge. Similarly, Shelby County concedes that it held several special elections
under the authority of Act 65-816 (the "Planning Act" of 1965) between 1965 and 2003.
See Compl. ¶ 34(a)(i)-(iii). During that time, the Planning Act had not been precleared by the
Department of Justice. Id. ¶ 34(a)(ii)-(iii). Under Section 4(a), a covered jurisdiction is only
eligible for bailout if it has complied "with the requirement that no change covered by . . .
[Section 5] has been enforced without preclearance." See 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(1)(D). Because
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C. The Facial Nature of Plaintiff's Challenge
Finally, it is important to remember that Shelby County's suit presents only a facial -- and
not an as-applied -- challenge to the constitutionality of the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5 and
Section 4(b). The "distinction between 'as-applied' and 'facial' challenges is that the former ask
only that the reviewing court declare the challenged statute or regulation unconstitutional on the
facts of the particular case," Sanjour v. E.P.A., 56 F.3d 85, 92 n.10 (D.C. Cir. 1995), whereas the
latter ask the court to conclude that "'no set of circumstances exists under which [the statute]
would be valid,' or that the statute lacks any 'plainly legitimate sweep,'" United States v. Stevens,
130 S. Ct. 1577, 1587 (2010) (internal citations omitted). When a plaintiff brings both a facial
and an as-applied challenge to a statute, "the court must 'determine first whether the law is
constitutional as applied to the challenging party's conduct, and then only if the as-applied
challenge fails, . . . determine whether it is necessary to consider the facial challenge.'" Heller v.
Dist. of Columbia, 698 F. Supp. 2d 179, 188 n.10 (D.D.C. 2010) (internal citations omitted); see
also Bd. of Trs. of State Univ. of N.Y. v. Fox, 492 U.S. 469, 485 (1989) (explaining that "for
reasons relating both to the proper functioning of courts and to their efficiency, the lawfulness of
the particular application of the law should ordinarily be decided first").
Here, however, Shelby County has made clear that it is only seeking to challenge the
constitutionality of Section 5 and Section 4(b) on their face, and not as they have been applied to
Shelby County in any particular instance. See, e.g., Compl. ¶ 1 (seeking a declaratory judgment
that Section 4(b) and Section 5 "are facially unconstitutional") (emphasis added); Pl.'s Mot. at 17
Shelby County held special elections under the authority of the Planning Act, Shelby County is
also ineligible for bailout under 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(1)(D).
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n.2 (describing plaintiff's challenge as facial); Shelby Cnty., 270 F.R.D. at 19 (finding that
discovery was "unwarranted" because "Shelby County brings only a facial challenge"). Because
Shelby County has chosen not to raise an as-applied challenge -- and indeed, has explicitly
waived its right to bring such a challenge, see Shelby Cnty., 270 F.R.D. at 19 -- the Court's
consideration of Shelby County's facial challenge is not premature. See Stevens, 130 S. Ct. at
1587 n.3 (rejecting contention that the Court's consideration of a facial constitutional challenge
was "premature" where "the constitutional argument [wa]s a general one" and there was no
"separate attack on a defined subset of the statute's applications").
II. Standard of Review
The Court must first determine the appropriate standard of review to use in evaluating
whether Congress exceeded its enforcement authority under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments when it reauthorized Section 5 and Section 4(b) in 2006.7 The Attorney General,
relying on cases in which the Supreme Court has previously assessed the constitutionality of
Section 5, argues that "when Congress is legislatively enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment's
prohibition on race discrimination with respect to voting, the Court reviews the appropriateness
of that legislation under a deferential rationality standard." See Def.'s Mot. at 12 (citing
7
In addition to challenging the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5 and Section 4(b) as
exceeding Congress's Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendment enforcement authority, Shelby
County argues that Section 5 and Section 4(b) impermissibly intrude on state sovereignty in
violation of the Tenth Amendment and Article IV of the Constitution. See Compl. ¶¶ 39, 41, 43.
The Supreme Court, however, has repeatedly rejected such federalism-based challenges to
Section 5, recognizing that the Reconstruction Amendments "were specifically designed as an
expansion of federal power and an intrusion on state sovereignty." See City of Rome, 446 U.S.
at 179; see also Lopez v. Monterey Cnty., 525 U.S. 266, 282 (1999) (noting that "the
Reconstruction Amendments by their nature contemplate some intrusion into areas traditionally
reserved to the States"). To the extent that Section 5 and Section 4(b) constitute "appropriate"
remedial enforcement legislation, then, their encroachment on state sovereignty is permissible.
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Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 324; City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 175-77; Georgia v. United States, 411
U.S. 526, 535 (1973); Lopez, 525 U.S. at 282-85). Shelby County, on the other hand, urges this
Court to apply the "congruence and proportionality" framework first articulated by the Supreme
Court in City of Boerne v. Flores, 521 U.S. at 520, to assess legislation enacted pursuant to § 5 of
the Fourteenth Amendment, asserting that Boerne "applies just the same in Fifteenth Amendment
cases" because "[t]he enforcement clauses of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments are co-
extensive." See Pl.'s Mot. at 19; see also Pl.'s Reply in Supp. of Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. ("Pl.'s
Reply") at 2 (explaining that "[t]he Supreme Court has made clear that all enforcement
legislation is subject to congruence and proportionality review, and it has specifically relied on
the voting rights cases in adopting and applying this test").
The parties in Nw. Austin engaged in the same dispute regarding the proper standard of
review to apply in assessing the constitutionality of Section 5. See Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at
2512. Although the Supreme Court ultimately declined to resolve the issue, see id.; but see id. at
2524-25 (Thomas, J., concurring in judgment in part, dissenting in part) (suggesting that
Boerne provides the framework for reviewing the constitutionality of Section 5), the three-judge
court below held that "Katzenbach's rationality standard governs this case," Nw. Austin I, 573 F.
Supp. 2d at 241.
That court described Katzenbach's "rationality standard" and Boerne's "congruence and
proportionality test" as "two distinct standards for evaluating the constitutionality of laws
enforcing the Civil War Amendments." 573 F. Supp. 2d at 235-36. After summarizing what it
characterized as "these two lines of cases," the court said that "the time has come to choose
between them." 573 F. Supp. 2d at 241. The court ultimately "chose" Katzenbach for two
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reasons (although it went on to find that Section 5 passed muster under both Katzenbach and the
congruence and proportionality framework outlined in Boerne). First, the court noted that City of
Rome, which had "applied Katzenbach's rationality test," constituted controlling precedent
directly on point. Id. Although City of Rome pre-dates Boerne, the Nw. Austin I panel reasoned
that because neither Boerne nor any case since had questioned the standard of review utilized in
City of Rome, that standard had not been overruled. See id. at 242. Hence, the court concluded
that the type of review enunciated in Katzenbach and employed in City of Rome still governed
the plaintiff's challenge to the 2006 extension of Section 5, even assuming that Boerne had "cast
some doubt" on Katzenbach and City of Rome. Id. at 246. Second, the court pointed to the fact
that Boerne involved a challenge to Congress's enforcement authority under § 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment, id. at 517, whereas Katzenbach and City of Rome involved challenges to Section 5,
which, "at its core," constitutes legislation enacted under § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment, id. at
243-44. "Even if the City of Boerne cases changed the test for all statutes enacted pursuant to the
Fourteenth Amendment," the court explained, "those cases leave the Fifteenth Amendment
standard untouched." Id. at 243.
This Court respectfully disagrees. A close analysis of the Voting Rights Act cases,
Boerne, and cases following Boerne reveals that the Supreme Court has not left the standard of
review for Fifteenth Amendment enforcement legislation "untouched"; moreover, it has not
established a "distinct standard" for evaluating Fourteenth Amendment enforcement legislation
different from that traditionally employed in the Fifteenth Amendment context. Rather, Boerne
merely explicated and refined the one standard of review that has always been employed to
assess legislation enacted pursuant to both the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. See
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Appellant's Br., Nw. Austin II, 2009 WL 453246, at *33 (Feb. 19, 2009) (explaining that "Boerne
and the cases following it do no more than elaborate and clarify the standard for reviewing
Congress's efforts to enforce the Reconstruction Amendments"). The question is not, then,
whether this Court, as "a district court bound by Supreme Court precedent," should follow
"Katzenbach and City of Rome even if . . . the City of Boerne cases cast some doubt on those
cases," Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 246. If this Court viewed Boerne and its enunciation of
the congruence and proportionality test as merely "casting doubt" on Katzenbach and City of
Rome, it would, indeed, still be obligated to follow those earlier cases, and leave to the Supreme
Court "the prerogative of overruling its own decisions," Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/Am.
Express, Inc., 490 U.S. 477, 484 (1989). Rather, the question is whether, given the elaboration
of the Katzenbach standard that was undertaken by the Supreme Court in Boerne, this Court
should nonetheless adhere to the standard as first articulated in Katzenbach, simply because the
Boerne elaboration occurred in the Fourteenth Amendment context, not the Fifteenth. Such a
course would, in this Court's view, constitute a misunderstanding of Boerne. This Court will
therefore review the Supreme Court's evolving descriptions of the nature of Congress's
enforcement powers under the Reconstruction Amendments, as explicated in Katzenbach,
Boerne and later cases, to show that Boerne's congruence and proportionality framework reflects
a refined version of the same method of analysis utilized in Katzenbach, and hence provides the
appropriate standard of review to assess Shelby County's facial constitutional challenge to
Section 5 and Section 4(b).
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A. The "Virtually Identical" Enforcement Clauses of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments
Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that "Congress shall have the power to
enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article," U.S. CONST . amend. XIV, § 5,
while § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment states that "Congress shall have power to enforce this
article by appropriate legislation," U.S. CONST . amend. XV, § 2.8 Given the nearly identical
language and similar origin of these two Reconstruction Amendments, there would seem to be
"no reason to treat the enforcement provision of the Fifteenth Amendment differently than the
identical provision of the Fourteenth Amendment, and the Supreme Court has not held to the
contrary." Mixon v. State of Ohio, 193 F.3d 389, 399 (6th Cir. 1999); see also Hayden v. Pataki,
449 F.3d 305, 331 n.5 (2d Cir. 2006) (finding "no indication in Supreme Court precedent, or in
logic, that the Congress and the legislatures that enacted and ratified the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments intended that they be 'enforced' in different ways").
In fact, the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized -- both before, in, and after
Boerne -- that the nature of the enforcement power conferred by § 5 of the Fourteenth
Amendment is "virtually identical" to that conferred by § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment. See Bd.
of Trs. of Univ. of Ala. v. Garrett, 531 U.S. 356, 373 n.8 (2001); see also Boerne, 521 U.S. at
518 (comparing Congress's Fourteenth Amendment enforcement authority to its "parallel power
to enforce the provisions of the Fifteenth Amendment"); Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. 641,
651 (1966) (explaining that "Section 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment grants Congress a similar
8
In this Opinion, the Court uses "Section 5" to refer to Section 5 of the Voting Rights
Act, and "§ 5" to refer to the enforcement clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Similarly, the
Court uses "Section 2" to refer to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, and § 2 to refer to the
enforcement clause of the Fifteenth Amendment.
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power to [that of § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment]," as both sections permit Congress to
"enforce by 'appropriate legislation' the provisions of that amendment"); Dep't of Human Res. v.
Hibbs, 538 U.S. 721, 742 n.1 (2003) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (noting that "Section 2 of the
Fifteenth Amendment is practically identical to § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment"); Lopez, 525
U.S. at 294 n.6 (Thomas, J., dissenting) (explaining that while "City of Boerne involved the
Fourteenth Amendment enforcement power, we have always treated the nature of the
enforcement powers conferred by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments as coextensive");
City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 208 n.1 (Rehnquist, J., dissenting) (stating that "the nature of the
enforcement powers conferred by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments has always been
treated as coextensive").
Hence, when the Supreme Court in Katzenbach first examined whether Congress's
enactment of the Voting Rights Act exceeded its power to "enforce" the Fifteenth Amendment
"by appropriate legislation," the Court looked for guidance to Ex Parte Virginia -- a case
involving Congress's parallel enforcement power under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment. See
Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 326-27 (citing Ex Parte Virginia, 100 U.S. 339, 345-46 (1879)). In Ex
Parte Virginia, the Supreme Court assessed the nature of Congress's power under the
enforcement clauses of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments,9 and explained that
"[w]hatever legislation is appropriate, that is, adapted to carry out the objects the amendments
have in view, whatever tends to enforce submission to the prohibitions they contain, and to
secure to all persons the enjoyment of perfect equality of civil rights and the equal protection of
9
Section 1 of the Thirteenth Amendment abolishes slavery, and § 2 provides, in terms
identical to those in § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment, that "Congress shall have power to enforce
this article by appropriate legislation." See U.S. CONST . amend. XIII.
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the laws against State denial or invasion, if not prohibited, is brought within the domain of
congressional power." Ex Parte Virginia, 100 U.S. at 346. Quoting this language, the Supreme
Court in Katzenbach rejected the contention that § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment permits
Congress to "do no more than to forbid violations of the Fifteenth Amendment in general terms."
383 U.S. at 327. Rather, the Court explained, § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment -- like § 5 of the
Fourteenth Amendment -- provides Congress with "full remedial powers" to enforce the
Amendment by "appropriate" legislation; that is, to pass legislation to make the Amendment's
protections "'fully effective.'" See id. at 326 (quoting Ex Parte Virginia, 100 U.S. at 345).
According to the Court in Katzenbach, "[t]he basic test to be applied in a case involving
s[ection] 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment" is the same as that to be applied "in all cases concerning
the express powers of Congress with relation to the reserved powers of the States." Id. As Chief
Justice Marshall said in McCulloch v. Maryland: "'Let the end be legitimate, let it be within the
scope of the constitution, and all means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted to that
end, which are not prohibited, but consist with the letter and spirit of the constitution, are
constitutional.'" Id. (quoting McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316, 421 (1819)).
After setting forth Congress's Fifteenth Amendment enforcement authority in these broad
terms, the Supreme Court in Katzenbach proceeded to engage in a careful analysis of whether
Section 5 and Section 4(b) constituted "appropriate" enforcement legislation, as that word is
defined in McCulloch v. Maryland and Ex Parte Virginia. With respect to the coverage formula
in Section 4(b), the Court acknowledged that Congress had confined the Act's most stringent
remedies -- such as preclearance -- to "a small number of States and political subdivisions which
in most instances were familiar to Congress by name." See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 328. The
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decision to target only certain sections of the country and not others was based on "evidence of
actual voting discrimination" in these areas, and the Court found it "acceptable" for Congress to
"limit its attention to the geographic areas where immediate action seemed necessary." Id. at
328-29. "Legislation need not deal with all phases of a problem in the same way," the Court
explained, "so long as the distinctions drawn have some basis in practical experience." Id. at
331. Because the distinctions drawn by the coverage formula in Section 4(b) had such a basis,
the Court found that the formula was "rational in both practice and theory." See id. at 330.
The Court also concluded that Section 5's preclearance requirement constituted a
"permissibly decisive" response to the problem of states "contriving new rules of various kinds
for the sole purpose of perpetuating voting discrimination in the face of adverse federal court
decrees." Id. at 335. Given the "voluminous" legislative record amassed by Congress during its
consideration of the Act, id. at 308, which contained ample evidence of "obstructionist tactics" in
covered jurisdictions, id. at 328, the Court noted that "Congress had reason to suppose that these
States might try similar maneuvers in the future in order to evade the remedies for voting
discrimination contained in the Act itself," thereby justifying the need for a prophylactic measure
like Section 5, see id. at 334-35. The Court determined, then, on the basis of the evidence of
voting discrimination in the record, that Congress had "exercised its powers under the Fifteenth
Amendment in an appropriate manner" when it enacted Section 5 and Section 4(b). Id. at 324.
The same year that it decided Katzenbach, the Supreme Court had occasion to re-examine
the nature of Congress's enforcement authority under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, and in
so doing made clear that the test for reviewing exercises of Congress's Fourteenth and Fifteenth
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Amendment enforcement powers is the same. See Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. at 651.10 In
Katzenbach v. Morgan, the Supreme Court addressed a Fourteenth Amendment challenge to
Section 4(e) of the Voting Rights Act, which guaranteed the right to vote to persons educated in
Puerto Rico who satisfied certain educational criteria but who could not read or write English.
Registered voters in New York challenged Section 4(e) insofar as it forbid New York from
enforcing its state election laws, which made the ability to read and write English a precondition
to voting. See id. at 643-45. Rejecting this challenge, the Supreme Court explained that § 5 of
the Fourteenth Amendment is a "positive grant of legislative power," which permits Congress to
"enforce" the Amendment by enacting legislation to prevent state action even if that state action
would not otherwise be "prohibited by the provision of the Amendment that Congress sought to
enforce." Id. at 648. Because there was a "basis" upon which Congress could have found that
New York's application of its English literacy requirement to deny the right to vote to non-
English speakers educated in Puerto Rico "constituted invidious discrimination in violation of the
Equal Protection Clause," id. at 656, Congress was entitled to respond to this state-sponsored
discrimination by passing Section 4(e), even assuming that Section 4(e) would prevent some
applications of New York's state election law that did not, in and of themselves, violate the
substantive provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment, see id. at 648.
The Supreme Court in Katzenbach v. Morgan explained the nature of Congress's
Fourteenth Amendment enforcement power with reference to South Carolina v. Katzenbach,
noting that § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment "grants Congress a similar power to enforce by
10
The Court uses the shorthand "Katzenbach" to refer to Katzenbach v. South Carolina,
but employs the full case name for Katzenbach v. Morgan.
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'appropriate legislation' the provisions of that amendment; and we recently held . . . that '[t]he
basic test to be applied in a case involving s[ection] 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment is the same as
in all cases concerning the express powers of Congress with relation to the reserved powers of
the States'": namely, the test identified in McCulloch v. Maryland. Id. at 651 (internal citations
omitted). Hence, the Court confirmed, the meaning of "appropriate," as stated in McCulloch v.
Maryland and Ex Parte Virginia, governs Congress's enforcement authority under both § 5 of the
Fourteenth Amendment and § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment. See id.
When the Supreme Court next addressed a facial challenge to the constitutionality of
Section 5 in City of Rome, it again held that McCulloch v. Maryland and Ex Parte Virginia
provide the basic framework for assessing whether legislation is "appropriate" under § 2 of the
Fifteenth Amendment. See City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 174-75. The Court also elaborated on its
discussion in Katzenbach v. Morgan by describing the precise nature of Congress's authority to
"enforce" the Reconstruction Amendments. According to the Court, "even if § 1 of the
[Fifteenth] Amendment prohibits only purposeful discrimination," id. at 173, Congress may,
under the authority vested in it by § 2, "prohibit state action that, though in itself not violative of
§ 1, perpetuates the effects of past discrimination," id. at 176.
As one scholar has pointed out, this "reference to 'past discrimination' suggests that
Congress is authorized to prohibit [discriminatory] effects only if the Court believes it is
reasonable to infer discriminatory purposes in the past." Paul Winke, Why the Preclearance and
Bailout Provisions of the Voting Rights Act Are Still a Constitutionally Proportional Remedy, 28
N.Y.U. REV . L. & SOC. CHANGE 69, 80 (2003). In other words, City of Rome implies that
Congress may exercise its § 2 enforcement powers by prohibiting electoral practices that do not
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themselves violate § 1 of the Fifteenth Amendment only as a means of "attacking the
perpetuation of earlier, purposeful racial discrimination." See City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 177
(describing the Supreme Court's holding in Oregon v. Mitchell, 400 U.S. 112 (1970)) (emphasis
added). But City of Rome made clear that when Congress does legislate pursuant to § 2 of the
Fifteenth Amendment in response to earlier, purposeful voting discrimination, such legislation
need only be "'appropriate' as that term is defined in McCulloch v. Maryland and Ex Parte
Virginia." Id. at 177. The Supreme Court in City of Rome thus framed the specific question
before it as whether, in re-authorizing Section 5 in 1975, "Congress could rationally have
concluded that, because electoral changes by jurisdictions with a demonstrable history of
intentional racial discrimination in voting create the risk of purposeful discrimination, it was
proper to prohibit changes that have a discriminatory impact." Id. (emphasis added).
To answer this question, the Court looked to the evidence upon which Congress had
relied in deciding to reauthorize Section 5 in 1975. See id. at 180-82. The Court noted that
Congress had given "careful consideration to the propriety of readopting § 5's preclearance
requirement" and had considered evidence such as racial disparities in voter registration, the
number of minority elected officials, and "the number and types of submissions made by covered
jurisdictions and the number and nature of objections interposed by the Attorney General." Id. at
181. After considering such evidence, Congress "not only determined that § 5 should be
extended for another seven years," but gave Section 5 a "ringing endorsement," explaining that
Section 5 had been largely responsible for the increased minority political participation in the ten
years since the Voting Rights Act's passage, and for ensuring that such progress was not
"'destroyed through new procedures and techniques.'" Id. (quoting H.R. Rep. 94-196, at 10-11).
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Citing Congress's finding that Section 5 was "necessary to preserve the 'limited and fragile'
achievements of the Act and to promote further amelioration of voting discrimination," the Court
found that, based on the evidence in the congressional record, the 1975 extension of Section 5
"was plainly a constitutional method of enforcing the Fifteenth Amendment." Id. at 182.
B. Boerne's Refinement of Katzenbach and City of Rome
Then came City of Boerne. There, the Supreme Court addressed a challenge to the
Religious Freedom Restoration Act ("RFRA"), a statute that Congress had enacted pursuant to §
5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, and which prohibited states from imposing a "substantial
burden" on the free exercise of religion unless they could show that the burden was (1) in
furtherance of a "compelling" governmental interest; and (2) the "least restrictive means" of
furthering that interest. 521 U.S. at 515-16. The Court in Boerne began its analysis of RFRA by
quoting the familiar passage from Ex Parte Virginia on the meaning of "appropriate" § 5
enforcement legislation. See id. at 517-18. After noting that Ex Parte Virginia had only outlined
"the scope of Congress' § 5 power in . . . broad terms," id. at 517, the Court proceeded to expand
on these "broad terms" by confirming what Katzenbach v. Morgan and City of Rome had already
made clear: namely, that "[l]egislation which deters or remedies constitutional violations can fall
within the sweep of Congress's enforcement power even if in the process it prohibits conduct
which is not itself unconstitutional." Id. at 518.
But the Court in Boerne went on to explain that Congress's power under § 5 is not
unlimited. "Legislation which alters the meaning of the Free Exercise Clause cannot be said to
be enforcing the Clause," the Court said, since Congress "has been given the power 'to enforce,'"
but "not the power to determine what constitutes a constitutional violation." Id. at 519. The
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Court acknowledged that there is a fine line "between measures that remedy or prevent
unconstitutional actions and measures that make a substantive change in the governing law," and
it explained that while Congress "must have wide latitude in determining where [the line] lies,"
ultimately it is for the Court to decide whether Congress has overstepped the bounds of its
authority by attempting to "decree the substance of the Fourteenth Amendment's restrictions on
the States." Id. at 519-20. Hence, the Court concluded, in order for legislation to be upheld as a
valid exercise of Congress's § 5 power, "[t]here must be a congruence and proportionality
between the injury to be prevented or remedied and the means adopted to that end." Id.
But in making this statement, the Supreme Court in Boerne did not purport to overrule
Katzenbach, nor did it seek to distinguish between the standards of review to be applied in the
Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendment enforcement contexts. To the contrary, the Court cited
Katzenbach as a paradigmatic example of a case that had "revolve[d] around the question
whether § 5 legislation can be considered remedial," see Boerne, 521 U.S. at 525 (citing
Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 808) -- despite the fact that Katzenbach involved § 2 legislation, not § 5
legislation. The Boerne Court also discussed Katzenbach v. Morgan and City of Rome in great
detail, see, e.g., Boerne 521 U.S. at 527-28, 533, without providing any indication that it was
departing from the method of analysis it had used to assess Congress's exercise of its Fourteenth
and Fifteenth Amendment enforcement authority in those cases. Instead, the Supreme Court in
Boerne cited Katzenbach v. Morgan and City of Rome as illustrative of the principle that
Congress may, consistent with § 5, enact "strong remedial and preventative measures to respond
to the widespread and persisting deprivation of constitutional rights resulting from this country's
history of racial discrimination." See Boerne, 521 U.S. at 526. Because it had previously upheld
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challenged provisions of the Voting Rights Act only on the basis of actual evidence of
unconstitutional voting discrimination by states, see id. at 526-28, the Court found no reason to
view its Voting Rights Act jurisprudence under § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment as inconsistent
with the pronouncement that "[t]he appropriateness of remedial measures must be considered in
light of the evil presented," id. at 530 (citing Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 308).
Applying this standard to RFRA, however, the Court decided that RFRA was "so out of
proportion to a supposed remedial or preventative object that it cannot be understood as
responsive to, or designed to prevent, unconstitutional behavior." Boerne, 521 U.S. at 532. In
reaching this conclusion, the Court found a comparison between RFRA and the Voting Rights
Act to be "instructive." Id. at 530. Whereas the Voting Rights Act had been passed on the basis
of an extensive legislative record replete with instances of state-sponsored voting discrimination
in violation of the Fifteenth Amendment, RFRA's legislative record lacked "examples of modern
instances of generally applicable laws passed because of religious bigotry." Id. Indeed, the
record contained no documented episodes of religious persecution that had occurred in the past
40 years. Id. And unlike the Voting Rights Act -- which was limited both in terms of the
"discrete class of laws" that it affected (voting laws) and in the states that it covered (those where
"constitutional violations were most likely") -- RFRA's "[s]weeping coverage" displaced laws in
every state, "of almost every description and regardless of subject matter." Id. at 532. Finally,
while Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act was enacted as a temporary provision, with a procedure
by which jurisdictions could bail out of its requirements, RFRA had "no termination date or
termination mechanism." Id. at 532-33.
The Supreme Court in Boerne made clear that a statute need not contain these kinds of
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limiting features in order to be sustained as congruent and proportional § 5 legislation. Id. at
533. But it explained that where "a congressional enactment pervasively prohibits constitutional
state action in an effort to remedy or to prevent unconstitutional state action, limitations of this
kind tend to ensure Congress' means are proportionate to ends legitimate under § 5." Id.
(emphasis added). Given the lack of any such limitations in RFRA, together with the absence of
any recent documented instances of religious persecution in the legislative record, the Court in
Boerne held that "RFRA cannot be considered remedial, preventative legislation." Id. at 532.
"Simply put, RFRA is not designed to identify and counteract state laws likely to be
unconstitutional because of their treatment of religion." Id. at 534-35.
After Boerne, the Supreme Court continued to refine the congruence and proportionality
framework in a series of cases addressing whether Congress had validly abrogated state
sovereign immunity pursuant to § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F.
Supp. 2d at 240-41. In the first of these cases, the Court struck down the Patent and Plant
Variety Protection Remedy Clarification Act, which subjected states to patent infringement suits,
on the ground that Congress had failed to identify any "pattern of patent infringement by the
States, let alone a pattern of constitutional violations" that could justify the Act as an appropriate
remedial measure under § 5. See Fla. Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense Bd. v. Coll. Sav.
Bank, 527 U.S. 627, 640 (1999). Instead, Congress appeared to have enacted the legislation only
in "response to a handful of instances of state patent infringement that do not necessarily violate
the Constitution." Id. at 645-46. The Act also did not contain any of the "various limits that
Congress [had] imposed in its voting rights measures," which the Court deemed "particularly
incongruous in light of the scant support for the predicate unconstitutional conduct that Congress
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intended to remedy." Id. at 647. Accordingly, given both the insufficient historical record of
constitutional violations and the broad scope of the Act's coverage, the Court found "it clear that
the Patent Remedy Act cannot be sustained under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment." Id.
The following year in Kimel v. Fla. Bd. of Regents, 528 U.S. 62 (2000), the Court
similarly held that Congress's abrogation of state sovereign immunity in the Age Discrimination
in Employment Act, which permitted suits for money damages against state employers alleged to
have discriminated on the basis of age, exceeded Congress's authority under § 5. While
reaffirming that "Congress' power 'to enforce' the [Fourteenth] Amendment includes the authority
both to remedy and deter violations of rights guaranteed thereunder by prohibiting a somewhat
broader swath of conduct" than that which the Amendment itself proscribes, 528 U.S. at 81, the
Court nonetheless found that Congress had exceeded this enforcement power by failing to
identify "any pattern of age discrimination by the States, much less any discrimination
whatsoever that rose to the level of constitutional violation," id. at 88.
Then, in Bd. of Trustees of Univ. of Ala. v. Garrett, 531 U.S. 356 (2001), the Court again
applied congruence and proportionality review to strike down § 5 enforcement legislation,
finding that the provision of Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act ("ADA") that
permitted individuals to sue states for money damages exceeded Congress's Fourteenth
Amendment enforcement authority. See 531 U.S. at 374. As in Boerne, the Supreme Court in
Garrett compared the legislative record amassed by Congress in support of the ADA with that
considered by Congress in enacting the Voting Rights Act. Whereas Congress in passing the
Voting Rights Act had documented "a marked pattern of unconstitutional action by the States,"
id., Congress in enacting the ADA had cited only "half a dozen examples" of state-sponsored
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discrimination against the disabled, id. at 369. These incidents fell "far short of even suggesting
the pattern of unconstitutional discrimination on which § 5 legislation must be based." Id. at 370.
The Court also contrasted the ADA's sweeping nation-wide mandate "for the elimination of
discrimination against individuals with disabilities" with the Voting Rights Act's more "limited
remedial scheme designed to guarantee meaningful enforcement of the Fifteenth Amendment in
those areas of the Nation where abundant evidence of States' systematic denial of those rights
was identified." Id. at 373 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). This comparison of
the ADA to the Voting Rights Act made clear "[t]he ADA's constitutional shortcomings." Id.
But after using congruence and proportionality review to strike down four separate pieces
of § 5 enforcement legislation, the Court most recently held that two statutes enacted pursuant to
Congress's Fourteenth Amendment enforcement authority were, in fact, congruent and
proportional. See Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 724; Tennessee v. Lane, 541 U.S. 509, 533-34 (2004). In
Hibbs, the Court upheld the constitutionality of the family-care provision of the Family and
Medical Leave Act ("FMLA"), and in Lane the Court found that Title II of the ADA -- as applied
to claims by the disabled alleging that they had been denied access to the courts because of their
disability -- constituted a valid exercise of Congress's § 5 enforcement power. See Hibbs, 538
U.S. at 724; Lane, 541 U.S. at 533-34. Significantly, both statutes sought to protect a class or
right that receives heightened judicial scrutiny: namely, "suspect gender classifications (the
FMLA) and the fundamental right of access to the courts (ADA Title II)." See Nw. Austin I, 573
F. Supp. 2d at 241. As a result, "'it was easier for Congress to show a pattern of state
constitutional violations' than in Garrett or Kimel, both of which concerned legislation that
targeted classifications subject to rational-basis review." Lane, 541 U.S. at 529 (quoting Hibbs,
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538 U.S. at 736). Given the nature of the classification at issue, the Court in Hibbs compared the
showing needed to uphold the FMLA to that necessary to sustain the Voting Rights Act.
Congress was "similarly successful" in demonstrating a pattern of unconstitutional conduct in the
voting rights context, the Hibbs Court explained, because racial classifications, like gender
classifications, "are presumptively invalid," so "most of the States' acts of race discrimination
violated the Fourteenth Amendment." Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 736.
After Hibbs, Lane, and the other cases that have applied and clarified Boerne, it is now
clear that the standard for reviewing Congress's enactment of remedial, prophylactic legislation
under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment involves three steps. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d
at 268-69. First, the court must "identify the constitutional right or rights that Congress sought to
enforce" when it enacted the challenged legislation. Lane, 541 U.S. at 522; see also Garrett, 531
U.S. at 365 (explaining that the court must "identify with some precision the scope of the
constitutional right at issue"); Fla. Prepaid, 527 U.S. at 652 (noting that "the first step of the
inquiry . . . is to determine what injury Congress sought to prevent or remedy with the relevant
legislation"). Second, it must "examine whether Congress identified a history and pattern of
unconstitutional [conduct] by the States" that justified the enactment of the remedial measure.
Garrett, 531 U.S. at 368. Finally, the court must decide whether the challenged legislation
constitutes "an appropriate response" to the identified "history and pattern" of unconstitutional
conduct, Lane, 541 U.S. at 530 -- in other words, whether is it "congruent and proportional to the
targeted violation," Garrett, 531 U.S. at 374; Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 737.
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C. Boerne Governs Challenges to Congress's Enforcement Power Under Both § 2 of
the Fifteenth Amendment and § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment
The only remaining question, then, is whether, notwithstanding the Court's articulation
and refinement of the congruence and proportionality framework in the context of challenges to
Congress's enforcement power under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, a different standard of
review nonetheless governs Congress's exercise of its "parallel power" to enforce § 2 of the
Fifteenth Amendment. Although Boerne and "the cases that define the limits of Congress's
enforcement power have focused primarily on that power as granted by Section 5 of the
Fourteenth Amendment," this Court agrees with the Second Circuit's determination that there is
"no significant reason to conclude that the scope of the enforcement power under the two
amendments is different." See Hayden, 449 F.3d at 331 n.5.
To begin with, the language of the enforcement clauses of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments is almost identical, as they both reference Congress's ability to enforce the
Amendment through the enactment of "appropriate" legislation. See id.; compare U.S. CONST .
amend. XIV, § 5 ("Congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the
provisions of this article") with U.S. CONST . amend. XV, § 2 ("Congress shall have power to
enforce this article by appropriate legislation"). Moreover, the two amendments have similar
origins and histories. See, e.g., Pamela S. Karlan, Two Section Twos and Two Section Fives:
Voting Rights and Remedies After Flores, 39 WM . & MARY L. REV . 725, 725 n.5 (1998)
(explaining that "because the two amendments are rough contemporaries and their enforcement
power provisions are articulated in similar terms, the [Boerne] analysis surely carries over" to the
Fifteenth Amendment context). And perhaps most importantly, the Supreme Court has expressly
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"equated Congress's enforcement power under the two amendments" on a number of occasions,
both before and after Boerne. See Hayden, 449 F.3d at 331 n.5 (citing Garrett, 531 U.S. at 373
n.8; Boerne, 521 U.S. at 517-18; Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. at 650-51).
Far from implying that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments were intended to be
"'enforced' in different ways," Hayden, 449 F.3d at 331 n.5, Boerne itself is also best read to
mean that the nature of Congress's enforcement powers under the two amendments is the same.
In Boerne, the Supreme Court relied on the Voting Rights Act as upheld in Katzenbach and City
of Rome as a paradigmatic example of legislation that satisfies the congruence and
proportionality test, contrasting the Voting Rights Act with RFRA in order to illustrate RFRA's
constitutional deficiencies. See, e.g., 521 U.S. at 518, 525-26, 530-33. Shelby County is correct
to point out that Boerne's repeated reliance on Katzenbach and City of Rome -- both of which
were decided under § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment -- would be "misplaced," see Pl.'s Mot. at
19, to say the least, if § 5 enforcement legislation "were to be judged against an entirely different
constitutional metric" than that applicable to § 2 enforcement legislation, see Pl.'s Reply at 12;
see also Evan Caminker, "Appropriate" Means-Ends Constraints on Section 5 Powers, 53 STAN .
L. REV . 1127, 1191 (2001) (stating that Boerne "strongly suggests that Section 2 measures
designed to enforce the Fifteenth Amendment are subject to stringent congruence and
proportionality analysis as well"); Mark A. Posner, Time is Still On its Side: Why Congressional
Reauthorization of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act Represents a Congruent and Proportional
Response to Our Nation's History of Discrimination in Voting, 10 N.Y.U. J. LEGIS. & PUB. POL'Y
51, 89 (2006) (noting that Boerne "strongly intimated that the same analysis applies when
assessing Congress's authority under the two amendments to enact prophylactic legislation").
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Boerne's characterization of Katzenbach as a case that "revolve[d] around the question
whether § 5 legislation can be considered remedial," see Boerne, 521 U.S. at 525 (emphasis
added), also cannot be reconciled with the contention that different modes of analysis govern
judicial review of § 5 and § 2 enforcement legislation. Again, this is because the Court in
Katzenbach upheld the challenged provisions of the Voting Rights Act not as a valid exercise of
Congress's power under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, but as "a valid means of carrying out
the commands of the Fifteenth Amendment." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 337. Indeed, the Supreme
Court in Katzenbach never even mentioned § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment. To the extent that
Katzenbach "revolve[d] around" the issue of what constitutes appropriate § 5 legislation, then, it
could only be because the test for determining the validity of § 5 legislation is the same as that
for determining the validity of § 2 legislation.
It is also significant that the Supreme Court in Boerne did not purport to overrule
Katzenbach v. Morgan, or the half-century of precedent that has treated the nature of the
enforcement power conferred by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments as coextensive.
See Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. at 651 (explaining that McCulloch v. Maryland and Ex
Parte Virginia provide the definition of what constitutes "appropriate" enforcement legislation in
both the Fifteenth and Fourteenth Amendment contexts). The Supreme Court in Boerne began
its analysis by quoting Katzenbach v. Morgan's acknowledgment that "§ 5 is 'a positive grant of
legislative power.'" Boerne, 521 U.S. at 517 (quoting Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. at 651).
And it then recited the traditional articulation of "the scope of Congress' § 5 power" as laid out in
Ex Parte Virginia, thereby suggesting that the congruence and proportionality framework was a
mere elaboration of those "broad terms." See Boerne, 521 U.S. at 517-18.
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Under Katzenbach and City of Rome, Ex Parte Virginia's definition of "appropriate"
legislation under the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments also governs what constitutes
"appropriate" legislation under the Fifteenth Amendment. See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 326; City
of Rome, 446 U.S. at 174-75. Hence, the Supreme Court's elaboration of Ex Parte Virginia in
Boerne would seem to apply just the same in the Fifteenth Amendment context, at least in the
absence of any indication that Katzenbach and City of Rome were incorrect to rely on a § 5 case
in delineating the scope of Congress's § 2 power. But the Supreme Court in Boerne gave no such
indication. In fact, it suggested just the opposite, by itself relying almost exclusively on § 2 cases
in delineating the scope of Congress's § 5 power. See Karlan, 39 WM . & MARY L. REV . at 725
n.5 (noting that "most of the cases Justice Kennedy cited relied on Congress's use of its
enforcement power under Section 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment").
The Supreme Court's failure in Boerne to announce any departure from Katzenbach and
City of Rome can be explained by the fact that the congruence and proportionality test does not
constitute a novel alternative to the standard of review employed in those earlier cases; rather, it
reflects a more detailed articulation of the same standard that the Court has always applied to
assess Congress's exercise of its Fifteenth Amendment enforcement power. In Katzenbach, the
Court began with the first step of the Boerne framework, determining "what injury Congress
sought to prevent or remedy" when it enacted the challenged provisions of the Voting Rights Act.
Fla. Prepaid, 527 U.S. at 652; see Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 308 (explaining that the Act was
designed "to banish the blight of racial discrimination in voting"). The Court then proceeded to
the second step of Boerne, looking to whether Congress had "identified a history and pattern of
unconstitutional [conduct] by the States," Garrett, 531 U.S. at 368. In so doing, the Supreme
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Court made clear that the "constitutional propriety" of the Act "must be judged with reference to
the historical experience it reflects," Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 308, and it pointed to historical
evidence of state-sponsored voting discrimination in the legislative record to justify the need for
the Act, id. at 310 (describing states' use of tests and devices that were "specifically designed to
prevent Negroes from voting"). Although the Court in Katzenbach did not use the words
"congruent" and "proportional" when assessing the challenged provisions of the Act, it did
closely analyze whether Section 5 and Section 4(b) constituted "an appropriate response" to the
"history and pattern" of unconstitutional voting discrimination that Congress had identified, see
Lane, 541 U.S. at 530. So, too, did the Court in City of Rome engage in a Boerne-like analysis,
upholding the 1975 reauthorization of Section 5 only after describing the evidence of voting
discrimination upon which Congress had relied in reauthorizing the Act's temporary provisions.
See City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 182 (finding that "at least another 7 years of statutory remedies"
was "necessary to counter the perpetuation of 95 years of pervasive voting discrimination").
To the extent that the analysis undertaken in Katzenbach and City of Rome was
somewhat less rigorous than that applied in cases since Boerne, that may only be a reflection of
the fact that where a remedial statute is designed to protect a fundamental right or to prevent
discrimination based on a suspect classification, it is "easier for Congress to show a pattern of
state constitutional violations," as required at the second step of Boerne. See Hibbs, 538 U.S. at
736; Lane, 541 U.S. at 529. Because Section 5 seeks to protect the right to vote -- a
"fundamental political right," Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356, 370 (1886) -- and to prohibit
discrimination based on race -- an "immediately suspect" classification, see Johnson v.
California, 543 U.S. 499, 509 (2005) -- the showing needed to substantiate Section 5 was easier
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to make in Katzenbach and City of Rome than in Kimel or Garrett, which involved
classifications subject to less stringent levels of constitutional scrutiny. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F.
Supp. 2d at 241.
The Attorney General relies heavily on Lopez, a Section 5 case decided shortly after
Boerne, in arguing that congruence and proportionality review does not govern Shelby County's
challenge to the constitutionality of Section 5. See Def.'s Reply in Supp. of Def.'s Mot. for
Summ. J. [Docket Entry 67] at 6. But such reliance is unwarranted. In Lopez, the Supreme
Court examined an as-applied challenge to Section 5 brought by Monterey County, California, a
political subdivision covered by Section 4(b). See Lopez, 525 U.S. at 282. Monterey County
alleged that Section 5 did not apply to its implementation of a voting change required by state
law, since enactment of the change was non-discretionary and California -- the source of the
change -- was not itself a covered jurisdiction subject to Section 5. Id. Rejecting this argument,
the Court held that "the Act's preclearance requirements apply to measures mandated by a
noncovered State to the extent that these measures will effect a voting change in a covered
county." Id. at 269. The Court then briefly addressed the plaintiff's contention that Section 5 was
unconstitutional to the extent that it was interpreted to apply "to voting measures enacted by
States that have not been designated as historical wrongdoers in the voting rights sphere." Id. at
283. Citing Katzenbach and City of Rome, the Court explained that it had previously upheld
Section 5 as a valid exercise of Congress's Fifteenth Amendment enforcement authority -- despite
its "intrusion into areas traditionally reserved to the States" -- and that no different result was
required just because Section 5 "is held to cover acts initiated by non-covered States." Id. The
Court then referenced Boerne as having held that Congress may, under the Fourteenth
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Amendment, "'intrude[] into legislative spheres of autonomy previously reserved to the States.'"
Id. (quoting Boerne, 521 U.S. at 518). Nowhere in Lopez did the Supreme Court mention either
"congruence and proportionality" or "rational basis" review, or purport to apply either standard to
Section 5. To the extent that Lopez cuts in either direction, then, the Court regards it as
reaffirming that Katzenbach, City of Rome, and Boerne are consistent in their evolving
descriptions of Congress's enforcement power under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.
Because the Court finds no basis upon which to differentiate between the standards of
review to be applied in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendment enforcement contexts, it need
not decide whether the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5 and Section 4(b) constituted an exercise
of Congress's Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendment enforcement authority, or a kind of hybrid
legislation enacted pursuant to both amendments. Shelby County correctly points out that to date
"[t]he Fifteenth Amendment has been the exclusive basis for upholding Section 5." See Pl.'s
Reply at 47, 49 n.15; see also City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 173; Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 327;
Allen, 393 U.S. at 588 (Harlan, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part) (explaining that
"Congress consciously refused to base s[ection] 5 of the Voting Rights Act on its powers under
the Fourteenth Amendment"). But in adopting the Act's protections for language minorities in
1975 and then extending them in 2006, Congress expressly relied on its Fourteenth Amendment
enforcement power as well, since the Fifteenth Amendment speaks only of discrimination on the
basis of "race." See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 243-44; see also S. Rep. No. 94-295, at
814-15 (1975) (explaining that "[t]he Fourteenth Amendment is added as a constitutional basis
for these voting rights amendments" in order to "doubly insure the constitutional basis for the
Act," even though the Department of Justice has taken the position that "'language minorities' are
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members of a 'race or color' group protected under the Fifteenth Amendment"); 42 U.S.C. §
1973aa-1a (finding that, because "citizens of language minorities have been effectively excluded
from participation in the electoral process," it is necessary to prescribe remedial measures "to
enforce the guarantees of the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments").
Some have argued that this reliance on the Fourteenth Amendment was unnecessary, and
that Congress "could have relied solely on its Fifteenth Amendment authority" in extending the
Act's protections to language minorities, since the Supreme Court has "strongly suggested" that
language minorities "qualify as racial groups" within the meaning of the Fifteenth Amendment.
See, e.g., Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 243-44. Regardless, there are additional reasons to
question whether Section 5 can still be viewed as pure Fifteenth Amendment enforcement
legislation. Section 5 is designed to combat not only outright denials of the right to vote, but also
vote dilution -- "defined as a regime that denies to minority voters the same opportunity to
participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice that majority voters
enjoy." Bossier II, 528 U.S. at 359 (Souter, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part). Although
there is an argument that measures that dilute minorities' voting strength violate the Fifteenth
Amendment's guarantee against "abridgment" of the right to vote, see id., the Supreme Court thus
far has "dealt with vote dilution only under the Fourteenth Amendment," id., and has "never held
that vote dilution violates the Fifteenth Amendment," Bossier II, 528 U.S. at 334 n.3. To the
extent that the Attorney General seeks to rely on evidence of vote dilution to justify the 2006
reauthorization of Section 5, then, it might be necessary to find that Section 5 constitutes valid
Fourteenth Amendment -- as opposed to Fifteenth Amendment -- enforcement legislation. But
again, this issue need not be decided, in light of the Court's conclusion that Boerne provides the
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proper mode of analysis to assess challenges to Congress's enforcement power under both § 5 of
the Fourteenth Amendment and § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment. Hence, irrespective of whether
Section 5 is considered § 2 enforcement legislation, § 5 enforcement legislation,11 or a kind of
hybrid legislation enacted pursuant to both amendments, it can only be upheld if it is "congruent
and proportional" to the problem of unconstitutional racial discrimination in voting.
III. Application of Boerne to the 2006 Extension of Section 5
A. The Scope of the Constitutional Right At Issue
The first step in determining whether the 2006 extension of Section 5 passes muster
under Boerne is "to identify with some precision the scope of the constitutional right at issue."
See Garrett, 531 U.S. at 365; see also Lane, 541 U.S. at 522. Where a statute is designed to
protect a fundamental right or to prevent discrimination based on a suspect classification, it is
"easier for Congress to show a pattern of state constitutional violations," as required at the
second step of the Boerne analysis. See Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 736. In other words, Congress is
more likely to be able to identify unconstitutional state action justifying remedial, prophylactic
enforcement legislation when it seeks to protect against discrimination based on a classification
like gender, "which triggers heightened scrutiny," see Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 736, than when it seeks
to protect against discrimination based on a trait such as disability, which "incurs only the
minimum 'rational-basis' review," see Garrett, 531 U.S. at 366. This is because "the heightened
11
In Hibbs, the Supreme Court noted that it had previously upheld "certain prophylactic
provisions of the Voting Rights Act as valid exercises of Congress' § 5 power, including the
literacy test ban and preclearance requirements for changes in States' voting procedures." Hibbs,
538 U.S. at 737-38. In support of this proposition, however, the Supreme Court cited only one
case that dealt with preclearance requirements, and that case -- Katzenbach -- upheld Section 5 as
a valid exercise of Congress's § 2 power, not its § 5 power. See id. (citing Katzenbach v.
Morgan, 384 U.S. 641; Oregon v. Mitchell, 400 U.S. 112; Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301).
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level of constitutional scrutiny" that accompanies a suspect classification or a fundamental right
means that "the historical problems" identified by Congress with respect to that class or right are
more likely to amount to constitutional violations, and a history of constitutional violations is a
necessary predicate for the enactment of remedial enforcement legislation under the
Reconstruction Amendments. See Posner, 10 N.Y.U. J. LEGIS. & PUB. POL'Y at 87. It is for this
reason that "the Court gives Congress significant leeway to craft broad remedial prohibitions
when fundamental rights or protected classes are at stake." Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 270.
Significantly, Section 5 not only seeks to protect the right to vote -- a "fundamental
political right, because [it is] preservative of all rights," Yick Wo, 118 U.S. at 370 -- but also
seeks to protect against discrimination based on race, "the classification of which we have been
the most suspect," see M.L.B. v. S.L.J., 519 U.S. 102, 135 (1996) (Thomas, J., dissenting).
Because Section 5 is designed to protect "both the quintessential suspect classification (race) and
the quintessential civil right (the franchise)," defendant-intervenors are correct that Congress
acted at the "zenith of its constitutional enforcement authority" when it reauthorized Section 5 in
2006. See Harris Def.-Ints.' Mot. for Summ. J. ("Harris Mot.") [Docket Entry 55] at 22; see also
Nathaniel Persily, The Promise and Pitfalls of the New Voting Rights Act, 117 YALE L.J. 174,
176 (2007) (explaining that Congress "acted at the apex of its power to enforce the guarantees of
the post-Civil War Amendments" when it enacted the Voting Rights Act). Just as in Hibbs and
Lane, then, it is "easier for Congress to show a pattern of state constitutional violations"
justifying the need for Section 5 than when Congress seeks to enforce rights subject to lesser
levels of constitutional review, since "racial classifications and restrictions on the right to vote -
like gender discrimination (Hibbs) and access to the courts (Lane) - are 'presumptively invalid.'"
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Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 270 (quoting Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 736).
B. Evidence of Unconstitutional Voting Discrimination in the Legislative Record
Having determined "the metes and bounds of the constitutional right[s] in question," the
core issue is whether Congress succeeded in identifying "a history and pattern" of
unconstitutional, state-sponsored voting discrimination to justify the 2006 reauthorization of
Section 5. See Garrett, 531 U.S. at 368. Shelby County argues that the evidence of so-called
"second generation barriers" to voting upon which Congress relied in 2006 when it re-authorized
Section 5 -- including evidence of racially polarized voting, preclearance statistics, the continued
filing of Section 2 cases, and the dispatch of federal observers -- cannot justify the extension of
Section 5, since "none of this evidence comes close to proving the existence of pervasive,
intentional discrimination." See Pl.'s Mot. at 32. Instead, Shelby County contends, there are only
two types of evidence that can be used to establish the constitutional necessity of Section 5: "(1)
direct evidence of widespread, intentional voting discrimination and gamesmanship; and (2)
registration data, turnout statistics, and the election of minorities to public office." Pl.'s Reply at
37 (emphasis added). This argument is flawed in several respects.
To begin with, "[i]n identifying past evils, Congress obviously may avail itself of
information from any probative source." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 330. To be sure, there must be
an established "pattern of constitutional violations" in order to justify remedial, prophylactic
legislation like Section 5, see Fla. Prepaid, 527 U.S. at 640, and discriminatory intent is a
necessary element of a Fourteenth or Fifteenth Amendment violation, see, e.g., City of Mobile,
446 U.S. at 62, 67. Shelby County is therefore correct that some evidence of purposeful state-
sponsored voting discrimination is needed to sustain Section 5. But Shelby County is incorrect
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to suggest that such evidence must be "direct." See Pl.'s Reply at 37. To the contrary, the
Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized that unconstitutional "discriminatory intent need not be
proved by direct evidence." See Rogers v. Lodge, 458 U.S. 613, 618 (1982) (emphasis added)
(citing Arlington Heights v. Metro. Housing Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 265 (1977); Washington
v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229, 242 (1976)). Rather, "an invidious discriminatory purpose may often be
inferred from the totality of the relevant facts, including the fact, if it is true, that the law bears
more heavily on one race than another." Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. at 242. Moreover, as
the Supreme Court in Katzenbach made clear, Congress is not bound by the standards of proof
applicable in judicial proceedings "when it prescribes civil remedies against other organs of
government under s[ection] 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment." See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 330.
Because the discriminatory effects of a challenged practice can constitute "powerful evidence of
the intent with which it was adopted or maintained," Continuing Need 186 (prepared statement of
Pamela S. Karlan), this Court would be remiss if it were to limit its examination of the legislative
record to judicially proven instances of discriminatory intent.
Shelby County's suggestion that circumstantial evidence of voting discrimination cannot
justify the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5 is also belied by City of Rome. There, in upholding
the 1975 extension of Section 5, the Supreme Court pointed to no recent "direct" evidence of
intentional voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions. Instead, it found that Section 5's
reauthorization was justified based on the country's history of intentional discrimination in
voting, together with more recent circumstantial evidence of continued voting discrimination,
which included evidence of racial disparities in voter registration and turnout, the number of
minority elected officials, and the nature and number of Section 5 objections. See City of Rome,
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446 U.S. at 181. Clearly, then, such evidence is -- at the very least -- relevant in assessing
whether Section 5 remains "justified by current needs." Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2512.
Not only is Shelby County incorrect to suggest that Section 5 can only be sustained on the
basis of recent "direct" evidence of intentional voting discrimination, but it is also wrong to
suggest that Congress lacked such evidence when it reauthorized Section 5 in 2006. Having
examined the 2006 legislative record, this Court -- like the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I --
has found ample evidence of purposeful voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions. The
record describes one instance in which Mississippi state legislators opposed a redistricting plan
that would have given African-Americans an increased opportunity to elect representatives of
their choice, referring to the plan "on the House floor as the 'black plan' and privately as 'the n-
plan.'" S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 14. On another occasion, Georgia's Chair of its House
Reapportionment Committee told his colleagues in the Georgia legislature that he was uncertain
as to the outcome of the state's redistricting process, "because the Justice Department is trying to
make us draw nigger districts and I don't want to draw nigger districts." See Busbee v. Smith,
549 F. Supp. 494, 501 (D.D.C. 1982); see also H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 67; Voting Rights Act:
The Judicial Evolution of the Retrogression Standard, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the
Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 54 (Nov. 9, 2005) (prepared
statement of Laughlin McDonald). In Shelby County's home state of Alabama, there were
reports of voting officials "closing the doors on African-American voters before the . . . voting
hours were over," see 1 Evidence of Continued Need 182 (Nat'l Comm'n Report), and of white
voting officials using racial epithets to describe African-American voters in the presence of
federal observers, see S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 130, 132. In both Texas and South Carolina,
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witnesses described various kinds of intimidation and harassment being directed at blacks at the
polls, see 1 Evidence of Continued Need 138 (Nat'l Comm'n Report); S. Rep. No. 109-295, at
307, 311, while one witness from Virginia testified that "hate literature" had been distributed in
his neighborhood, threatening to "lynch" African-Americans who voted in particular ways, see S.
Rep. No. 109-295, at 355. All these examples of intentional voting discrimination took place not
in the 1950s or 1960s, but in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s.
Yet Shelby County argues that even this kind of evidence carries little weight, as it is
merely "anecdotal" and such "anecdotal examples of intentional discrimination" cannot justify
the continued operation of Section 5. See Pl.'s Reply 39. Again, this Court disagrees. As
Professor Theodore Arrington explained in his 2006 testimony before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, "[t]he examination of specific cases cannot be dismissed as mere anecdotes,"
because "anecdote is the singular of data." Continuing Need 26 (responses of Theodore S.
Arrington to questions submitted by Senators Cornyn, Coburn, Leahy, Kennedy, and Kohl)
("Arrington Responses"); see also Understanding the Benefits and Costs of Section 5 Pre-
Clearance, Hearing Before the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 19 (May 17, 2006)
("Benefits and Costs") (testimony of Drew S. Days III) (explaining that to characterize "examples
that are quite concrete . . . violations of the Voting Rights Act . . . as anecdotes, I think, is really
to miss the point" since these "so-called anecdotes go right to the very heart of the matter").
Taken together, the large collection of anecdotes in the legislative record constitutes a valid form
of data that must be assessed and weighed -- not dismissed as "isolated examples" of voting
discrimination, see Pl.'s Reply at 39.
Anecdotes are by no means the only form of data in the legislative record that shows the
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continued existence of unconstitutional voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions. One
study relied on by Congress found that 89% of the 209 objections to redistricting plans in the
1990s were based, at least in part, on discriminatory intent. See Preclearance Standards 181
(Peyton McCrary et al., "The End of Preclearance As We Knew It: How the Supreme Court
Transformed Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act") (hereinafter, "McCrary Study"). In other
words, the Justice Department determined that discriminatory purpose was a motivating factor in
no less than 186 of the redistricting plans proposed by covered jurisdictions during the 1990s. Id.
at 177, 181. Another study in the legislative record identified 24 lawsuits involving more than
one hundred instances of intentionally discriminatory conduct in voting since 1982. See Impact
and Effectiveness 986 (Katz Study). Such evidence can hardly be dismissed as "anecdotal."
Ultimately, an assessment of all the evidence in the legislative record confirms that
Congress was, in fact, responding to what it reasonably perceived to be a continuing history and
pattern of unconstitutional conduct by covered jurisdictions when it reauthorized Section 5 in
2006. Although some scholars voiced concern during the 2006 reauthorization hearings that "the
Act has been so effective it will be hard to produce enough evidence of intentional
discrimination by the states so as to justify the extraordinary preclearance remedy for another 25
years," see, e.g., Introduction to Expiring Provisions 216 (prepared statement of Richard L.
Hasen) ("Hasen Prepared Statement"); id. at 221 (prepared statement of Samuel Issacharoff)
("Issacharoff Prepared Statement"), Congress succeeded in doing just that. Despite the marked
improvements in minority political participation over the last several decades -- due, in large
part, to the effectiveness of the Voting Rights Act -- the 2006 legislative record reveals that, just
as in 1975, "'a bleaker side of the picture yet exists.'" City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 180 (internal
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citations omitted).
This Court will begin, as did the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I, by examining the
three types of evidence relied on by the Supreme Court in City of Rome when it upheld the 1975
reauthorization of Section 5 -- evidence of (1) racial disparities in voter registration (and
turnout); (2) the number of minority elected officials; and (3) the nature and number of Section 5
objections. The Court will then assess the other types of evidence cited by Congress when it
reauthorized Section 5 in 2006, including evidence of (4) more information requests; (5) Section
5 preclearance suits; (6) Section 5 enforcement actions; (7) Section 2 litigation; (8) the dispatch
of federal observers; (9) racially polarized voting; and (10) Section 5's deterrent effect. In the
course of its review, the Court will call particular attention to the evidence of intentional, state-
sponsored voting discrimination contained in the legislative record, keeping in mind that there
must be "a history and pattern of unconstitutional [conduct] by the States" to justify a remedial,
prophylactic measure like Section 5. See Garrett, 531 U.S. at 368.
1. Minority Voter Registration and Turnout
Shelby County points to the "dramatic rise in African-American voter registration and
turnout rates" since 1965 as evidence that Section 5's protections are no longer constitutionally
justified. See Pl.'s Reply at 44; see also Pl.'s Mot. at 25-26. It is true that there has been a
substantial increase in black voter registration and turnout in the South since the Voting Rights
Act was first enacted. See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 156-57 (Nat'l Comm'n Report). In
1964, the year before the Act's passage, the black voter registration rate was only 32% in
Louisiana, 23% in Alabama, and a meager 6.7% in Mississippi. Id. In each of these states, the
white voter registration rate was at least 50 percentage points higher than the corresponding rate
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for blacks. See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 313. Only ten years later, however, black voter
registration rates in the South had already increased substantially -- no doubt as a result of the
Act's prohibition of those tests and devices that had previously been employed to deny blacks
access to the ballot. See S. Rep. No. 94-295, at 779. In Mississippi, for example, the percentage
of blacks who were registered to vote multiplied almost tenfold in the seven years following the
Act's passage, jumping from 6.7% in 1964 to 63.2% in 1971-1972. Id.
But in spite of these significant improvements, the Supreme Court in City of Rome
remained troubled by the "[s]ignificant disparity" that "persisted between the percentages of
whites and Negroes registered in at least several of the covered jurisdictions." 446 U.S. at 180.
In 1975, black voter registration rates in Alabama, Louisiana, and North Carolina continued to
lag behind those of whites by as much as 23.6, 16, and 17.8 percentage points, respectively. See
S. Rep. No. 94-295, at 779. Hence, while "the City of Rome Court acknowledged the dramatic
progress the South had made since 1965," it still "found the evidence of continued discrimination
sufficient to justify the 1975 extension" of the Act's temporary provisions. See Nw. Austin I, 573
F. Supp. 2d at 247. After City of Rome, then, the question is not whether there has been
substantial improvement in minority voter registration and turnout since the Act's passage in
1965 (or even since the Act's reauthorization in 1975 or 1982), but whether, in spite of this
substantial improvement, there remained significant racial disparities in voter registration and
turnout when Congress reauthorized Section 5 in 2006. See id.
Just as in 1975, Congress in 2006 did find that significant disparities persisted between
minority and non-minority voter registration and turnout in several jurisdictions subject to
preclearance under Section 5. In Virginia, for example, Congress reported that the black voter
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registration rate in 2004 was almost 11 percentage points behind the corresponding rate for
whites, while the racial disparity in voter turnout was even greater, with only 49% of blacks
turning out to vote, as compared to 63% of whites. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 25. Similarly,
in Texas, Congress found a 20 percentage point gap in voter registration between whites and
Hispanics, id. at 29, with an even greater gap in voter turnout, see S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 11.
Nationwide, the 2004 voter registration and turnout rates for Hispanics were approximately half
the corresponding rates for whites, with only 34.3% of Hispanics registering and 28% turning out
to vote, as compared to 67.9% and 60.3% for whites. Id. Although the difference between black
and white voter registration and turnout rates was less significant, blacks nationwide still
registered and turned out to vote at rates below those of whites in 2004, with only 64.3% of
blacks registering, and 56.1% of blacks turning out to vote. Id.
Moreover, as the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I pointed out, these statistics understate
the true disparities between minority and non-minority voter registration and turnout. That is
because in computing the voter registration and turnout rates for whites, Congress included
Hispanics. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 248. Given the low registration and turnout
rates of Hispanic voters, the inclusion of these voters in the "white" category served to lower the
overall white voter registration and turnout rates reported by Congress, thereby reducing the true
disparity between black and white voter registration and turnout (as well as the disparity between
Hispanic and white voter registration and turnout). See id.; see also Persily, 117 YALE L.J. at 197
(explaining that "once Hispanics are taken out of the white category the picture changes
considerably"). For instance, Congress reported that in five of the 16 states covered in whole or
in part by Section 4(b) (California, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Texas), voter
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registration and turnout in 2004 was higher among blacks than whites. See S. Rep. No. 109-295,
at 11. But when black voter registration and turnout rates are compared to the rates for non-
Hispanic whites, only one of these states (Mississippi) had higher black than white voter
registration and turnout in 2004. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 248. In each of the other
states covered in whole or in part by Section 4(b) for which comparative data was available,
voter registration was lower for blacks than for non-Hispanic whites. See U.S. Census Bureau,
Voting and Registration in the Election of November 2004 tbl. 4a., Reported Voting and
Registration of the Total Voting-Age Population, by Sex, Race and Hispanic Origin, for States,
available at http://www.census.gov/population/www/socdemo/voting/cps2004.html (hereinafter,
"2004 U.S. Census Bureau Report") (last visited September 19, 2011); see also S. Rep. No. 109-
295, at 11 (relying on 2004 U.S. Census Bureau Report).12
In many covered states, the disparities between black and non-Hispanic white voter
registration and turnout were stark: in both Arizona and Florida, for example, voter turnout rates
among non-Hispanic whites were more than 20 percentage points higher than voter turnout rates
among blacks, while in Louisiana and Texas, voter registration rates among non-Hispanic whites
were more than five percentage points higher than voter registration rates among blacks. See
2004 U.S. Census Bureau Report. When the data for non-Hispanic whites are used, the
disparities between black and white voter registration and turnout rates in Virginia become even
12
In North Carolina and Alabama, for which the 2004 voter registration rate for blacks
was lower than the rate for non-Hispanic whites, the voter turnout rate for blacks was higher than
the rate for non-Hispanic whites. See 2004 U.S. Census Bureau Report. Aside from North
Carolina, Alabama and Mississippi, all of the remaining 14 states covered in whole or in part by
Section 4(b) had lower voter registration and turnout rates for blacks than for non-Hispanic
whites. See id.
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more pronounced than those reported by Congress. Whereas Congress found that Virginia had a
10.8 percentage point racial disparity in voter registration and a 14 percentage point racial
disparity in voter turnout, see H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 25, the racial disparities become 14.2
and 16.6 percentage points, respectively, when black voter registration and turnout rates are
compared to the rates for non-Hispanic whites. See 2004 U.S. Census Report.
The 2004 disparities between Hispanic and white voter registration also become more
severe when Hispanics are taken out of the "white" category. Although Congress reported a 20
percentage point gap in voter registration between Hispanics and whites in Texas in 2004, see
H.R. Rep. 109-478, at 29, the gap increases to 32.1 percentage points when the rate for Hispanics
is compared to the rate for non-Hispanic whites, see 2004 U.S. Census Report. Even greater
gaps between Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites existed in other covered jurisdictions, with
Hispanics in Arizona, California and Virginia registering in 2004 at rates more than 40
percentage points lower than the corresponding rates for non-Hispanic whites. See id. In
Georgia and North Carolina, the racial disparities in registration rates between Hispanics and
non-Hispanic whites were the highest of any covered jurisdictions, with only 9.6% of Hispanics
registering to vote in Georgia and 13.4% of Hispanics registering to vote in North Carolina, as
compared to 68% and 73.2% of non-Hispanic whites, respectively -- in other words, there was
almost a 60 percentage point gap in voter registration between Hispanics and non-Hispanic
whites in both Georgia and North Carolina. See id.
As the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I explained, these disparities in voter registration
and turnout are "comparable to the disparity the City of Rome Court called 'significant.'" 573 F.
Supp. 2d at 248 (quoting City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 180). In City of Rome, the Court deemed as
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"significant" the 16, 17.8, and 23.6 percentage point disparities in voter registration rates then-
existing between blacks and whites in Louisiana, North Carolina, and Alabama. See S. Rep. No.
94-295, at 779; City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 180. In 2004, there were 14.2, 17.8, and 19.2
percentage point disparities between black and white voter registration rates in Virginia, Arizona,
and Florida, respectively (using the data for non-Hispanic whites). See 2004 U.S. Census
Report. Moreover, there were far greater gaps between Hispanic and non-Hispanic white voter
registration rates than even those held "significant" in City of Rome, with disparities nearing 60
percentage points in two covered jurisdictions. See id.
2. Minority Elected Officials
Shelby County next points to the dramatic increase in the number of African-American
elected officials since 1965 as proof that Section 5 has outlived its usefulness. See Pl.'s Mot. at
27-28; Pl.'s Reply at 46-47. Again, however, the number of African-American elected officials
had already risen substantially by the time that Section 5 was reauthorized in 1975. Whereas
there were only 72 black elected officials in the 11 southern states when the Voting Rights Act
was first passed in 1965, there were 963 black elected officials in the seven southern states
subject to preclearance by 1974, including 68 black state legislators. See S. Rep. No. 94-295, at
780. Yet the Supreme Court in City of Rome did not regard this progress as fatal to the 1975
reauthorization of the Act's temporary provisions. Although the Court recognized that "the
number of Negro elected officials had increased since 1965," see City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 180,
the Court nonetheless heeded Congress's advice "not to be misled by sheer numbers." See S.
Rep. No. 94-295, at 780. Instead, it examined the nature of the positions to which African-
Americans had been elected, and found that "most held only minor positions, none held statewide
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office, and their number in the state legislatures fell far short of being representative of the
number of Negroes residing in the covered jurisdictions." See City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 181.
As of 2000, 35 African-Americans held statewide office -- certainly an improvement
from 1975 -- but the percentage of statewide elected officials who were African-American (5%)
was still significantly below the African-American proportion of the voting-age population
(11.9%). See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 156-58 (Nat'l Comm'n Report); H.R. Rep. No. 109-
478, at 33. The House Committee on the Judiciary found that in Mississippi, Louisiana, and
South Carolina -- all of which have been subject to preclearance since 1965 -- no African-
American had ever been elected to statewide office. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 33. And in
Alabama, only two African-Americans had ever been elected to statewide office as of 2006. See
S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 133 (citing Benefits and Costs 97 (responses of Fred D. Gray to
questions submitted by Senators Cornyn, Leahy, Coburn, and Kennedy) ("Gray Responses")).
Congress also heard evidence in 2006 that blacks were under-represented in state
legislatures in the South based on their percentage of the population. Specifically, the House
Committee on the Judiciary reported that in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South
Carolina, and North Carolina, blacks comprised 35% of the population, but only 20.7% of the
state legislators. See H.R. Rep. 109-478, at 33. The House Committee on the Judiciary similarly
found that the number of Latino elected officials had "failed to keep pace with [their] population
growth." See id. at 33-34. Shelby County objects to the Court's reliance on such evidence in
assessing the continued need for Section 5, arguing that "proportional representation is not a
constitutional aim." See Pl.'s Reply at 46. That may be true. But in upholding the
constitutionality of the 1975 reauthorization of Section 5 in City of Rome, the Supreme Court
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noted that the percentage of black elected officials in covered jurisdictions still fell short of their
total percentage of the population. See City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 181. Following City of Rome,
then, it is at least relevant that the percentage of minority elected officials continued to lag behind
the minority percentage of the population when Congress reauthorized Section 5 in 2006.
3. Section 5 Objections
The Supreme Court in City of Rome cited "'[t]he recent objections entered by the
Attorney General . . . to Section 5 submissions'" as a clear indication of the "'continuing need for
this preclearance mechanism.'" 446 U.S. at 181 (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 94-196, at 10-11). So,
too, did Congress in 2006 point to the "hundreds of objections interposed" by the Attorney
General in recent years as "[e]vidence of continued discrimination in voting" that warranted the
reauthorization of Section 5. See 2006 Amendments § 2(b)(4)(A), 120 Stat. at 577. Shelby
County, however, argues that objection-related data cannot sustain the constitutionality of
Section 5 for two reasons. First, Shelby County points to the fact that the number of Section 5
objections "has become exceedingly small" over the past several decades, as the Attorney
General objected to less than 1% of all preclearance submissions between 1982 and 2004. See
Pl.'s Reply at 56 (internal citations omitted). Second, Shelby County contends that objections are
not "legitimate proxies for the type of purposeful discrimination needed to reauthorize Section
5." Pl.'s Mot. at 32. Both of these contentions are somewhat misleading.
With respect to Shelby County's first argument, it is undeniable that the percentage of
preclearance submissions resulting in an objection -- which has always been low -- has continued
to decline steadily over time. See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 197 (Nat'l Comm'n Report).
Whereas the Justice Department objected to 4.06% of all preclearance submissions from 1968 to
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1972, the objection rate dropped in each successive five-year interval between 1972 and 2002,
reaching a low of .05% during the 1998 to 2002 time-frame. See Introduction to Expiring
Provisions 219 (attachment to Hasen Prepared Statement). Since 2002, the objection rate has
remained below 1%, with the Justice Department issuing only eight objection letters in response
to 4,628 preclearance submissions in 2003, three objection letters in response to 5,211
preclearance submissions in 2004, and one objection letter in response to 4,734 preclearance
submissions in 2005. See S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 13-14.
The decline in objection rates does not tell the full story, however. Notwithstanding the
low rates of objections in recent years, the Justice Department still objected to more than 700
proposed voting changes between 1982 and 2006. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 21; S. Rep.
No. 109-295, at 13. Moreover, the National Commission on the Voting Rights Act reported that
more objections were interposed by the Attorney General between 1982 and 2004 than between
1965 and 1982, with nine of the 16 states covered by Section 4(b) receiving more objections after
1982 than before. See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 172-73 (Nat'l Comm'n Report); see also
H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 21. To be sure, the two time-periods (1965 to 1982 and 1982 to 2004)
are not equal in length, but it remains true that a substantial number of objections have been
lodged since the 1982 reauthorization of Section 5. According to the National Commission on
the Voting Rights Act, the Justice Department objected to an average of more than four
preclearance submissions per month from August 1982 through December 2004. Id. at 172.
It is also significant to recall that a single objection can often affect thousands of voters,
as objections are lodged not only in response to small-scale electoral changes such as the moving
of a polling place, but also in response to large-scale changes such as state-wide redistricting
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plans. See Continuing Need 58 (Earls Responses). For example, in Alabama, the Justice
Department objected to 39 preclearance submissions from 1982 through 2004, see 1 Evidence of
Continued Need (Nat'l Comm'n Report) 259 (Map 5C), but these 39 objections included an
objection to a congressional redistricting plan and several objections to county-wide redistricting
plans, see 1 History, Scope, & Purpose 109-17 (appendix to statement of Bradley J. Schlozman,
Complete Listing of Objections Pursuant to Sections 3(c) and 5 of the Voting Rights Act of
1965). In Louisiana, the Justice Department objected to 88 voting changes between 1982 and
2004, see 1 Evidence of Continued Need (Nat'l Comm'n Report) 264 (Map 5F), including every
Louisiana House of Representatives redistricting plan that was submitted for preclearance.
Indeed, from the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965 through its reauthorization in 2006,
"[n]o Louisiana House of Representatives redistricting plan . . . has been precleared as initially
submitted." Introduction to Expiring Provisions 152 (responses of Theodore M. Shaw to
questions submitted by Senators Specter, Cornyn, Leahy, Kennedy, and Schumer) ("Shaw
Responses").
Alabama and Louisiana are by no means unique among covered jurisdictions with respect
to the receipt of objections in response to their redistricting plans. Even though redistricting
plans accounted for only 2.4% of the preclearance submissions from 1982 through 2004, they
accounted for 16.4% of the Section 5 objections during that time-frame. See U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights, Voting Rights Enforcement & Reauthorization: The Department of Justice's
Record of Enforcing the Temporary Voting Rights Act Provisions 33 (May 2006), available at
http://www.usccr.gov/pubs/051006VRAStatReport.pdf (last visited September 19, 2011). Given
that many of these redistricting plans were state- or county-wide, it is perhaps unsurprising that
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Section 5 objections from 2000 through May 2006 have aided an estimated 663,503 minority
voters. Continuing Need 58 (Earls Responses). According to data compiled by one expert, a
mere nine objections to South Carolina preclearance submissions during this time-frame served
to protect 96,143 African-American voters, while six objections to Texas preclearance
submissions served to protect 359,978 African-American and Hispanic voters. Id. Irrespective
of the decline in objection rates, then, there is strong evidence that Section 5 has remained a
"vital prophylactic" tool in "protecting minority voters from devices and schemes that continue to
be employed by covered States and jurisdictions." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 21.
There are many plausible explanations for the recent decline in objection rates, aside from
the optimistic one urged by Shelby County -- i.e., that "the discriminatory agenda of the covered
jurisdictions that existed in 1965 . . . no longer exists," Pl.'s Mot. at 29. To begin with, Section 5
submissions (and associated objections) are always greatest in the years immediately following
redistricting cycles, which occur at the beginning of the decade. See, e.g., Continuing Need 54
(Earls Responses); Introduction to Expiring Provisions 165-66 (Shaw Responses). It is therefore
to be expected that the number of preclearance submissions -- and hence, objections -- would be
low in a mid-decade year like 2005. See Continuing Need 54 (Earls Responses).
In addition, many have speculated that the Supreme Court's 2000 decision in Bossier II is
at least partially responsible for the post-2000 decline in objection rates. See, e.g., id. at 54, 69-
70; Preclearance Standards 14 (Posner Prepared Statement); 1 Evidence of Continued Need 198-
99 (Nat'l Comm'n Report). As previously explained, the Supreme Court in Bossier II "held that
discriminatory purpose under Section 5 no longer is co-extensive with the ordinary meaning of
discriminatory purpose or with the meaning of discriminatory purpose under the Fourteenth and
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Fifteenth Amendments." See Preclearance Standards 12 (Posner Prepared Statement). Instead,
in Bossier II the Supreme Court found that discriminatory purpose under Section 5 encompasses
only "the intent to cause retrogression." Id. Therefore, in order to object to a voting change
under the "purpose" prong of Section 5 after Bossier II, the Justice Department needed to find
"not simply that the jurisdiction officials' purpose was to discriminate, but that it was to make the
situation for minorities worse than before – i.e., that the officials intended to 'retrogress.'" 1
Evidence of Continued Need (Nat'l Comm'n Report) 198. The difficulty of proving that state
officials intended to retrogress could explain the decline in purpose-based objections (and hence,
total objections) in the wake of Bossier II. As one voting rights lawyer has pointed out, if the
Bossier II interpretation of "discriminatory purpose" had applied prior to 2000, it would have
required the Justice Department to preclear even the redistricting plan proposed by the notorious
Georgia "state legislator who openly declared his opposition to drawing a 'nigger district,'"
because the plan -- though motivated by an unabashed intent to discriminate -- was not
retrogressive. Id. at 199.
Other potential explanations for the recent decline in objection rates include under-
enforcement of Section 5 by the Justice Department, which some former attorneys in the Voting
Section believe to be the case, see 1 Evidence of Continued Need 197-98 (Nat'l Comm'n Report);
Continuing Need 54 (Earls Responses) (suggesting that there have been "circumstances where
the Department should have objected, but failed to"), or the possibility that the Justice
Department has increasingly relied on "more information requests" and other types of informal
communications with covered jurisdictions -- rather than objection letters -- as the primary means
of preventing discriminatory voting changes, Continuing Need 57 (Earls Responses). Finally,
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even if the decline in objection rates does reflect increased compliance with the Voting Rights
Act on the part of covered jurisdictions, as some have suggested, see, e.g., 1 History, Scope, &
Purpose 12 (prepared statement of Bradley J. Schlozman) (stating that the "tiny objection rate
reflects the overwhelming – indeed, near universal – compliance with the Voting Rights Act by
covered jurisdictions"), that is not necessarily indicative of a widespread change in racial
attitudes. Rather, it could just as easily mean that "covered jurisdictions have accepted Section 5
as a principle they must comply with whenever they make a voting change, like it or not, and they
have developed procedures for substantially increasing the likelihood of preclearance." 1
Evidence of Continued Need 200 (Nat'l Comm'n Report).
But whatever the explanation for the declining objection rate in recent years, the fact
remains that the Justice Department issued 754 objection letters between 1982 and 2006, see S.
Rep. 109-295, at 13, many of which were based on findings of discriminatory intent, see Nw.
Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 221. Shelby County is correct that not all objection letters "involve
actual intentional discrimination," see Pl.'s Reply at 58, given that Section 5 prohibits a
"somewhat broader swath of conduct," see Kimel, 528 U.S. at 81, than the Fifteenth Amendment
itself proscribes. But the Attorney General only denies preclearance to a voting change under
Section 5 if he cannot conclude that the change "neither has the purpose nor will have the effect
of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race or color." See 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(a).
In its attempt to minimize the significance of the objection-related data in the legislative record,
Shelby County ignores the substantial number of objections that the Attorney General has made
under Section 5's "purpose" prong in recent years -- even though, as the Nw. Austin I three-judge
court recognized, these intent-based objections "provide particularly salient evidence of
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potentially unconstitutional state action." 573 F. Supp. 2d at 252.
According to one study in the legislative record, as many as 43% of all Section 5
objections in the 1990s were based solely on discriminatory intent, while another 31% of
objections were based at least in part on discriminatory intent. See Preclearance Standards 136,
180 tbl. 2 (McCrary Study). In other words, "the intent prong was involved in a remarkable 74
percent of all objections in that decade." Id. Congress also heard testimony that until Bossier
II was decided, "the clear trend line, from the 1970s to the 1980s to the 1990s, was that
discriminatory purpose increasingly was the basis on which Section 5 objections were being
interposed." Id. at 13 (Posner Prepared Statement). From 1980 to 2000, the Attorney General
lodged as many as 421 objections that were at least partially based on discriminatory intent, with
234 of those objections based solely on discriminatory intent. Id. at 180 tbl. 2 (McCrary Study).
Purpose-based objections were particularly prevalent in the redistricting context, as
approximately 80% of the Justice Department's objections to post-1990 redistricting plans were
based on discriminatory intent. Id. at 13 (Posner Prepared Statement). In light of this data, the
House Committee on the Judiciary had ample support for its conclusion in 2006 that the voting
changes being sought by covered jurisdictions "were calculated decisions to keep minority voters
from fully participating in the political process." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 21.
The legislative record contains countless examples of objection letters since 1982 in
which the Justice Department has denied preclearance to a jurisdiction's proposed voting change
because the jurisdiction failed to establish the absence of a discriminatory purpose for its change.
For instance, in 2001, the all-white Board of Aldermen in Kilmichael, Mississippi, cancelled a
general election three weeks before it was scheduled to occur -- with no notice to the community
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-- after Census data showed that the town had recently become majority African-American, and
after a significant number of African-Americans had been qualified as candidates in the aldermen
and mayoral races. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 36-37; Continuing Need 60, 67 (Earls
Responses); S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 225, 230-32; 1 History, Scope, & Purpose 1617 (appendix
to statement of Bradley J. Schlozman, Copies of Objection Letters, by State, from 1980 to
October 17, 2006) (hereinafter, "Schlozman Appendix"). The Justice Department objected to the
town's decision to cancel the election, noting the suspicious "context in which the town [had]
reached its decision" -- that is, "only after black persons had become a majority of the registered
voters" and "only after the qualification period for the election had closed, and it [had] bec[o]me
evident that there were several black candidates for office." 1 History, Scope, & Purpose 1617
(Schlozman Appendix). Because "[t]he town's purported non-racial rationales for the decision
d[id] not withstand scrutiny," id., the Justice Department forced Kilmichael to reschedule the
election, whereupon the town elected its first African-American mayor, as well as three African-
American aldermen, see H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 37.
The year after it objected to Kilmichael's cancelled election, the Justice Department
objected to a redistricting plan proposed by the city of Albany, Georgia, based on its
determination that Albany, too, had not "carried its burden of showing that its proposed plan was
not designed with the intent to limit and retrogress the increased black voting strength." See 1
History, Scope, & Purpose 846 (Schlozman Appendix). The Justice Department examined
Albany's history of redistricting with respect to Ward 4, which, it found, revealed an "intent to
maintain Ward 4 as a district that remains at the . . . level of 70 percent white, thus eliminating
any ability of black voters to elect a candidate of choice in this district." Id. After the black
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population in Ward 4 doubled from 20% to 40% during the 1980s, Albany adopted a redistricting
plan that reduced the Ward's population to 30% black. Then, after the black population in Ward
4 increased from 30% to almost 51% during the 1990s, the city sought preclearance for another
redistricting plan that would have reduced the population in Ward 4 to 30% black. Id. at 846-47.
The Justice Department objected to the proposed plan, noting that "implicit" in the plan was "an
intent to limit black political strength in the city to no more than four districts." Id. at 847.
Another intent-based objection was lodged against the 2001 redistricting plan proposed
by Milden, Louisiana, in which the city "explicitly decided to eliminate one of the three existing
majority minority districts," even though "it was not compelled to redraw the district," and had
been "presented with an alternative that met all of its legitimate criteria while maintaining the
minority community's electoral ability." Id. at 1150-52. The Justice Department interposed yet
another intent-based objection to a redistricting plan submitted by Sumter County, South
Carolina, that same year, after the county council "explicitly decided to . . . eliminate one of the
four existing majority minority districts" despite the fact that the district's elimination had been
"easily avoidable." See 2 Voting Rights Act: Section 5 of the Act – History, Scope, and Purpose,
Hearing before the Subcomm. on the Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong.
2082-84 (Oct. 25, 2005) (hereinafter, "2 History, Scope, & Purpose") (Schlozman Appendix). In
explaining the basis of its objection, the Justice Department noted that the county had not been
forced to redraw the district and that it had rejected an alternative, non-retrogressive plan. Id. at
2083-84. Under the circumstances, the Justice Department was unable to conclude "that the
action in question was not motivated by a discriminatory intent to retrogress." Id. at 2084.
These are just a few examples of the post-1982 objections to redistricting plans that have
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been lodged -- at least in part -- on the basis of discriminatory intent. There are many others.
See, e.g., 1 History, Scope, & Purpose 433 (Schlozman Appendix) (objecting to 1998
redistricting plan by Tallapoosa County, Alabama, because "the history of the instant redistricting
process and its results raise serious concerns that the county . . . purposely impaired the ability of
black voters to elect a candidate of choice"); id. at 412 (objecting to Greensboro, Alabama's 1993
redistricting plan on the ground that "the opportunity for black voters to elect a representative of
their choice . . . appears to have been constrained deliberately"); id. at 1410 (objecting to
Mississippi's 1991 statewide legislative redistricting plan where it appeared "that the proposed
plan is calculated not to provide black voters in the Delta with the equal opportunity for
representation required by the Voting Rights Act"); id. at 830 (objecting to 2000 redistricting
plan for Webster County, Georgia's board of education, where the plan was created shortly after
the county had elected its first majority-black board, and the county's proffered reasons for the
plan appeared to be "merely pretexts for intentionally decreasing the opportunity of minority
voters to participate in the electoral process"); id. at 1611 (objecting to 1997 redistricting plan by
Grenada, Mississippi, based on "substantial direct and circumstantial evidence of discriminatory
purpose"); id. at 1516 (refusing to withdraw objection to Greenville, Mississippi's 1991
redistricting plan, which "appeared to have been motivated by a desire on the part of white city
councilmembers to retain white control of the city's governing body," and explaining that since
the plan's proposal, "white city officials [have] continue[d] to engage in race-based
decisionmaking and to design schemes the purpose of which is to avoid black control of city
government").
The Justice Department's intent-based objections over the last few decades have not been
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limited to redistricting plans. On several occasions, the Justice Department has suspected that
discriminatory purpose was a motivating factor in a covered jurisdiction's change of a polling
location. In 1992, for example, the Justice Department objected to Johnson County, Georgia's
decision to move a polling place from the county courthouse to the American Legion. In its
objection letter, the Justice Department noted that the American Legion had "a wide-spread
reputation as an all-white club with a history of refusing membership to black applicants" and
that "the American Legion hall, itself, is used for functions to which only whites are welcome to
attend." Id. at 727. Given its reputation and history, the American Legion created an obviously
"hostile and intimidating" atmosphere for black voters, and had "the effect of discouraging black
voters from turning out to vote." Id. Because Johnson County failed to meet its burden of
proving that its relocation of the polling place had neither a discriminatory purpose nor effect, the
Justice Department denied preclearance to the proposed change. See id.; see also 2 History,
Scope, & Purpose 2428 (Schlozman Appendix) (objecting to 1994 polling place change by
Marion County, Texas, where the change "appear[ed] to be designed, in part, to thwart recent
black political participation"); id. at 2579 (objecting to 1999 polling place change by Dinwiddie
County, Virginia, in part because "the sequence of events leading up to the decision to change the
polling place . . . tends to show a discriminatory purpose"); id. at 2302 (objecting to 1991 polling
place change proposed by district in Lubbock County, Texas, where polling "site selections . . .
would seem calculated to discourage turnout among minority voters").
So, too, has the Justice Department denied preclearance to jurisdictions' proposed
changes to their methods of election where there has been reason to believe that the changes were
racially inspired. For instance, the Justice Department objected to Bladen County, North
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Carolina's 1987 attempt to change its method of election for its board of county commissioners
from at-large elections to three double-member and one at-large district. Although the Justice
Department found that the change would not have a retrogressive effect, it nonetheless denied
preclearance to the change based on its inability to conclude "that the proposed election system is
free from discriminatory purpose." Id. at 1761. According to the Justice Department, the
evidence presented by the county demonstrated that "the responsible public officials [had]
desired to adopt a plan which would maintain white political control to the maximum extent
possible and thereby minimize the opportunity for effective political participation by black
citizens." Id. at 1762. Indeed, the Justice Department explained, "it appears that the board
undertook extraordinary measures to adopt an election plan which minimizes minority voting
strength." Id. A similar intent-based objection was interposed in response to Wilson County,
North Carolina's 1986 change to its system for electing county commissioners, in light of the
Justice Department's determination that the county's method of election had been purposefully
"designed and intended to limit the number of commissioners black voters would be able to
elect." Id. at 1731.
The legislative record also contains examples of objection letters issued in response to
jurisdictions' proposed annexations, in which the Justice Department has denied preclearance
based on its inability to conclude that the annexation was free from discriminatory animus. In
1990, for example, the Justice Department objected to the decision by Monroe, Louisiana, to
annex certain wards for the Monroe City Court, explaining that the annexations would have
reduced the black percentage of the City Court's jurisdiction from 48.4% to 39.2%. 1 History,
Scope, & Purpose 927 (Schlozman Appendix). The Justice Department also expressed concern
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regarding the timing of the annexations, noting that one of the annexed wards "had been eligible
to be added to the City Court jurisdiction since at least 1970," but that there had been "little or no
interest in implementing this change until immediately prior to the 1984 City Court primary
election, which we understand was marked by the presence of the first black candidate for the
City Court." See 1 History, Scope, & Purpose 927-28 (Schlozman Appendix); see also H.R.
Rep. No. 109-478, at 23. Similarly, the Justice Department in 1997 objected to the annexations
proposed by the city of Webster, Texas, where "the city's annexation choices appear[ed] to have
been tainted, if only in part, by an invidious racial purpose." 2 History, Scope, & Purpose 2492
(Schlozman Appendix).
Given these and the many other intent-based objections in the 15,000-page legislative
record, the House Committee on the Judiciary had good reason to conclude in 2006 that Section
5 was still fulfilling its intended function of preventing covered jurisdictions from implementing
voting changes "intentionally developed to keep minority voters and candidates from succeeding
in the political process." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 36.
4. More Information Requests
In reauthorizing Section 5 in 2006, Congress did not rely only on objection letters to
evaluate the continued existence of voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions; it relied as
well on so-called "more information requests" ("MIRs") by the Attorney General. See H.R. Rep.
No. 109-478, at 40; 2006 Amendments § 2(b)(4)(A), 120 Stat. at 577. An MIR is a formal letter
issued in response to a preclearance submission when the submission contains insufficient
information for the Attorney General to determine whether the proposed voting change violates
Section 5. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 40. When a covered jurisdiction receives an MIR, it
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can either (1) supply the requested information; (2) withdraw the proposed voting change; (3)
submit a new proposed change that supersedes the prior change; or (4) choose not to respond.
Id.; see also 2 Voting Rights Act: Evidence of Continued Need, Hearing Before the Subcomm.
on the Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 2545 (Mar. 8, 2006)
(hereinafter, "2 Evidence of Continued Need") (Luis Ricardo Fraga & Maria Lizet Ocampo, The
Deterrent Effect of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act: The Role of More Information Requests)
(hereinafter, "Fraga & Ocampo Study"). In its 2006 examination of MIRs, the House Committee
on the Judiciary found that "[t]he actions taken by a jurisdiction [in response to an MIR] are often
illustrative of a jurisdiction's motives." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 40. In particular, a covered
jurisdiction's decision to withdraw its proposed change, submit a superseding change, or not
respond to an MIR frequently constitutes a "tacit admission" that its originally-proposed change
was, in fact, discriminatory. See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 178 (Nat'l Comm'n Report).
It is significant, then, that between 1982 and 2003, at least 205 proposed voting changes
were withdrawn by covered jurisdictions after receipt of an MIR. Id.; see also H.R. Rep. No.
109-478, at 41. According to one study in the legislative record, MIRs resulted in a total of 855
withdrawals, superseding changes, and "no responses" by covered jurisdictions from 1990
through 2005. See 2 Evidence of Continued Need 2553 (Fraga & Ocampo Study). To be sure,
not all of these withdrawals, superseding changes, or "no responses" represent concessions on the
part of the covered jurisdiction that its initially-proposed voting change had an impermissible
discriminatory purpose or effect. It is plausible that covered jurisdictions choose to withdraw
their proposed electoral changes or not respond to MIRs for other reasons -- for example, because
"responding is more costly than not implementing the change." See, e.g., Continuing Need 113
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(Pildes Responses). But Shelby County is wrong to characterize voluntary withdrawals or "no
responses" to MIRs as showing only that "bureaucratic hurdles to preclearance erected by DOJ
have deterred covered jurisdictions from making nondiscriminatory voting changes." See Pl.'s
Mot. at 46. Although it is unlikely that all withdrawals, superseding changes, and "no responses"
represent successfully-thwarted attempts by covered jurisdictions to implement purposefully
discriminatory voting changes, Congress found that, together "[t]he increased number of
objections, revised submissions, and withdrawals over the last 25 years are strong indices of
continued efforts to discriminate." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 36; see also Continuing Need 112-
13 (Pildes Responses) (explaining the need for "more qualitative information on the reasons
jurisdictions respond as they do [to MIRs] to know what percentage of these responses in fact do
signal changes that would have violated the VRA," but recognizing the likelihood that at least
"some of these non-responses reflect the fact that the jurisdiction's proposed change would have
violated the VRA").
5. Judicial Preclearance Suits
Even more probative of the continued existence of voting discrimination than
withdrawals or "no responses" to MIRs, however, are the lawsuits in which a three-judge court
has denied preclearance to a covered jurisdiction's proposed voting change. As previously
explained, a covered jurisdiction may seek a declaratory judgment from a three-judge panel of
this Court that its proposed voting change has neither a discriminatory purpose nor effect instead
of submitting its change to the Attorney General for preclearance. See, e.g., Nw. Austin II, 129
S. Ct. at 2509; 42 U.S.C. § 1973c. Although most jurisdictions choose the latter route, some
have filed declaratory judgment actions seeking approval of their proposed voting changes since
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the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 255. Forty-
two of these declaratory judgment actions have been unsuccessful -- meaning that the three-judge
court either denied preclearance to the proposed change, the jurisdiction withdrew the change,
the case was dismissed, or a consent decree that cured the problem was reached. See 1 Evidence
of Continued Need 177, 235 (Nat'l Comm'n Report). Of these 42 unsuccessful declaratory
judgment actions, 25 occurred after 1982. Id. at 178, 270.
Most importantly, as the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I pointed out, "the legislative
record contains several examples of judicial decisions denying preclearance that reveal evidence
of intentional discrimination." 573 F. Supp. 2d at 255. In one particularly egregious example,
which occurred shortly before the 1982 reauthorization of Section 5, a three-judge panel of this
Court denied preclearance to Georgia's proposed 1981 congressional redistricting plan based on
its finding that the plan had a discriminatory purpose under Section 5. See 1 Evidence of
Continued Need 503-508 (ACLU Report); Busbee, 549 F. Supp. at 517. Georgia began its
congressional redistricting process after the 1980 census showed that the state's ten existing
districts -- all of which were majority-white with the exception of the Fifth District -- had
become severely malapportioned. Under the leadership of Joe Mack Wilson, Chair of the state's
House Reapportionment Committee, Georgia created a redistricting plan that maintained its nine
majority-white districts, and split the large, contiguous black population of the Atlanta
metropolitan area between the Fourth and Fifth Districts, thereby ensuring that blacks would still
comprise a majority of the Fifth District, but would only constitute 46% of the registered voters
there. See Busbee, 549 F. Supp. at 498-99. Because Georgia's plan increased the percentage of
blacks in the Fifth District, however, it was not retrogressive, and therefore "technically . . . [did]
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not have a discriminatory effect, as that term has been construed under the Voting Rights Act."
Id. at 516-17.
The three-judge court nonetheless denied preclearance to the plan based on its conclusion
that the plan had been "the product of purposeful racial discrimination." See id. at 517-18. In
reaching this determination, the court made an express finding that "Representative Joe Mack
Wilson is a racist." Id. at 500. The court cited Wilson's now-infamous statement that he did not
want to draw "nigger districts," id. at 501, as well as testimony from other Georgia legislators,
who conceded that they, too, had intentionally sought to "keep the Fifth District 'as white as
possible . . . but just within the limits . . . to satisfy the Voting Rights Act . . . .'" Id. (internal
citation omitted). As one state legislator explained, "'the motivation of the House leadership' in
creating the Fifth District . . . was to 'increase [the percentage of the black population] just
enough to say they had increased it [and] so that it would look like they had increased it, but they
knew they had not increased it enough to elect a black." Id. (internal citation omitted). Another
state senator admitted that he had felt obliged to vote for the plan because he "'[didn't] want to
have to go home and explain why I . . . was the leader in getting a black elected to the United
States Congress.'" Id. at 514 (internal citation omitted). These "[o]vert racial statements,"
together with Georgia's history of racial discrimination in voting, and the absence of any
legitimate non-racial reasons for the redistricting plan, convinced the three-judge court that the
plan had been enacted with a discriminatory purpose, and hence had "'no legitimacy at all under
our Constitution or under (Section 5).'" Id. at 517 (alteration in original) (quoting City of
Richmond v. United States, 422 U.S. 358, 378-79 (1975)).
In another, more recent declaratory judgment action, the Louisiana House of
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Representatives sought preclearance for its 2001 statewide redistricting plan, which eliminated a
majority-black district in Orleans Parish, and failed to create a comparable district anywhere else
in the state. See Def.'s Mot. at 37; Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 256; Continuing Need 28
(Arrington Responses); Introduction to Expiring Provisions 152 (Shaw Responses);
Reauthorization of the Act's Temporary Provisions: Policy Perspectives and Views from the
Field, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Property Rights of the
S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 42-44 (June 21, 2006) (hereinafter, "Policy
Perspectives") (responses of Debo Adegbile to questions submitted by Senators Kennedy, Leahy,
Cornyn, and Coburn) (hereinafter, "Adegbile Responses"). In the course of defending their plan,
Louisiana officials admitted that they had intentionally "'obliterated'" the majority-black district
in order to achieve what they characterized as "proportional" representation for white voters in
Orleans Parish. See Def.'s Br. in Supp. of Mot. for Summ. J., La. House of Reps. v. Ashcroft,
Civ. A. No. 02-62 (D.D.C. Jan. 17, 2003); see also Policy Perspectives 43 (Adegbile Responses).
But in selectively applying the theory of "proportional representation" to advantage only white
voters in a particular area of the state, Louisiana officials ignored the fact that it was the black
population in Orleans Parish, not the white population, that had increased during the preceding
decade. See Continuing Need 28 (Arrington Responses). Moreover, the state made no attempt
to remedy blacks' statewide under-representation in proportion to their percentage of the
population, despite its avowed desire to achieve proportional representation for white voters in a
particular area of the state. See Def.'s Br. in Supp. of Mot. for Summ. J., La. House of Reps. v.
Ashcroft, Civ. A. No. 02-62 (D.D.C. Jan. 17, 2003); Policy Perspectives 43 (Adegbile
Responses); Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 256. Although the suit ultimately settled on the
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eve of trial when Louisiana agreed to restore the majority-black district, it nonetheless constitutes
a recent example of a covered jurisdiction's thwarted attempt to enact a voting change with the
express purpose of diminishing black electoral opportunity. See Policy Perspectives 43
(Adegbile Responses); Introduction to Expiring Provisions 152 (Shaw Responses). The case also
illustrates the need to look beyond preclearance-related data in assessing the continued
prevalence of intentional voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions, as the suit's eventual
resolution through a settlement agreement means that "there is no firm objection statistic or
declaratory judgment ruling that resulted from the litigation." Introduction to Expiring
Provisions 152 (Shaw Responses).
6. Section 5 Enforcement Suits
Yet another type of evidence that Congress relied on as illustrative of the continued
existence of voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions was section 5 enforcement actions
undertaken by the Justice Department in covered jurisdictions since 1982. See 2006
Amendments § 2(b)(4)(A), 120 Stat. at 577. The Voting Rights Act authorizes the Justice
Department -- as well as private citizens -- to bring suit under Section 5 to compel a covered
jurisdiction to submit its proposed voting change for preclearance. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F.
Supp. 2d at 256. Since 1982, there have been at least 105 successful Section 5 enforcement
actions in which a covered jurisdiction has either been ordered to submit its proposed voting
change for preclearance, or has voluntarily agreed to do so after a Section 5 enforcement suit was
filed. See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 186 (Nat'l Comm'n Report). Based on its review of
these cases, the House Committee on the Judiciary found that the failure by covered jurisdictions
to submit voting changes for preclearance under Section 5 often reflects more than a mere
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oversight. "[C]overed jurisdictions continue to resist submitting voting changes for
preclearance," the Committee noted in its 2006 report, explaining that "many defiant covered
jurisdictions and State and local officials continue to enact and enforce changes without the
Federal Government's knowledge." See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 41.
Historically, the most "defiant" of all the covered jurisdictions has been South Dakota,
where former South Dakota Attorney General William Janklow notoriously described the
preclearance requirement as "a facial absurdity" and advised against compliance, remarking, "I
see no need to proceed with undue speed to subject our State laws to a 'one-man' veto by the
United States Attorney General." Id. at 42. In accordance with Janklow's advice, South Dakota
sought preclearance for less than five of the more than 600 voting changes that it enacted
between 1976 and 2002. Id. Many of these voting changes "negatively impacted" the state's
Native American population, some of whom eventually filed an enforcement action to compel
the state to submit its voting changes for preclearance. Id. The suit resulted in a consent decree,
under which South Dakota finally agreed to fulfill its obligations under Section 5. Id.
The legislative record contains many examples of Section 5 enforcement suits initiated in
response to covered jurisdictions' implementation of voting changes without preclearance,
including several examples of suits in which the unprecleared voting changes appeared to have
been motivated by discriminatory animus. For instance, a Section 5 enforcement action was filed
in response to Prairie View, Texas's attempt to reduce the availability of early voting during its
racially-charged 2004 elections in Waller County. After two black students from historically
black Prairie View A&M University announced their intent to run for local office (one for the
Waller County Commissioners' Court, the county's governing body), the white district attorney
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threatened to prosecute all Prairie View A&M students who voted in the elections, claiming that
the students were not legal residents of the county. See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 185 (Nat'l
Comm'n Report); id. at 300 (Highlights of Hearings of the Nat'l Comm'n on the Voting Rights
Act) (hereinafter, "Nat'l Comm'n Hearing Highlights"). Shortly thereafter, the county sought to
reduce the availability of early voting at the polling places that were located closest to the Prairie
View A&M campus. This reduction in early voting opportunities would have made it much
more difficult for students to vote in the election's primary, because it was scheduled to take
place during the university's spring break, and students therefore had to vote in advance if they
planned to be out of town during their vacation. 1 Evidence of Continued Need 186 (Nat'l
Comm'n Report). The university chapter of the NAACP filed suit under Section 5, seeking to
enjoin Waller County from making this change to its voting practices without first receiving
preclearance, which prompted the county to agree to restore the early voting opportunities that
had previously been in place. Id. As a result, five times as many Prairie View A&M students
were able to vote in the primary, in which the African-American student seeking election to the
County Commissioners' Court won a narrow victory. Id.
Another Section 5 enforcement suit was brought in 1995 when Mississippi sought to
revive its dual voter registration system, which had originally been enacted "as part of the
'Mississippi Plan' to deny blacks the right to vote following the Constitutional Convention of
1890." Operation Push v. Allain, 674 F. Supp. 1245, 1251 (N.D. Miss. 1987), aff'd sub nom.,
Operation Push v. Mabus, 932 F.2d 400 (5th Cir. 1991); see also S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 223; 1
Evidence of Continued Need 176 (Nat'l Comm'n Report); H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 39. In
1987, a federal district court invalidated a revised version of Mississippi's dual registration
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system that the state had adopted in 1984, based on evidence that the revised system, like the
original one, "result[ed] in a denial or abridgment of the right of black citizens in Mississippi to
vote and participate in the electoral process." Operation Push, 674 F. Supp. at 1253.
Nevertheless, Mississippi proceeded to implement yet another dual registration system in 1995,
purportedly in an attempt to comply with the requirements of the National Voter Registration Act
("NVRA") of 1993. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 39. State officials "refused to submit the
change for preclearance" despite the fact that Mississippi's "maintenance of two registration
systems had previously been struck down as discriminatory." Id.
Private plaintiffs responded with a Section 5 enforcement action, as did the United States,
and the two cases were consolidated before a three-judge court. See Young v. Fordice, 520 U.S.
273, 280 (1997). The case eventually reached the Supreme Court, which unanimously held that
Mississippi was required to submit its dual registration system for preclearance. Id. at 291. Once
compelled to seek preclearance, Mississippi received an objection, based on the Attorney
General's inability to find that "the State's submitted NVRA procedures are not tainted by
improper racial considerations." Preclearance Standards 83 (appendix to statement of Brenda
Wright). As the Attorney General explained, the state's decision "to implement the requirements
of the NVRA in a manner that would cause the State to revert to a form of dual registration" was
"particularly noteworthy," given that "it occurred only a few years after a federal court had found
that a similar requirement had led to pronounced discriminatory effects on black voters." Id.
Of course, the reasons behind a failure to seek preclearance under Section 5 are not
always easy to discern. And there is no data in the legislative record revealing the percentage of
successful Section 5 enforcement actions that have ultimately resulted in a denial of preclearance
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on the basis of discriminatory intent. But as demonstrated by Mississippi's 1995 attempt to
revive its dual registration system, at least some of the 105 successful Section 5 enforcement
suits since 1982 have been initiated in response to covered jurisdictions' voting changes that were
subsequently found to be purposefully discriminatory.
7. Section 2 Litigation
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act prohibits the imposition of any voting practice or
procedure "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." 42 U.S.C. § 1973. Although a violation of
Section 2 does not require a showing of unconstitutional discriminatory intent, "Section 2 cases
have documented evidence that reveals a wide range of unconstitutional conduct by state and
local officials." See Impact and Effectiveness 971 (Katz Study). Based on its review of several
studies of Section 2 cases in the legislative record, the Senate Judiciary Committee identified six
reported Section 2 cases that resulted in either a judicial decision or a consent decree reflecting
that a covered jurisdiction had unconstitutionally discriminated against minority voters. See S.
Rep. No. 109-295, at 13, 65. A study conducted by Professor Ellen Katz and the Voting Rights
Initiative of the University of Michigan Law School identified an additional eight published
Section 2 cases since 1982 in which a court determined that a covered jurisdiction had engaged
in intentional discrimination against minority voters. See Impact and Effectiveness 986-91 (Katz
Study); see also Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 258. Hence, as the three-judge court in Nw.
Austin I explained, Congress "knew of a combined total of fourteen judicial findings of
intentionally discriminatory or unconstitutional state action" by covered jurisdictions since 1982
when it chose to reauthorize Section 5 in 2006. 573 F. Supp. 2d at 258.
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The Nw. Austin I court recognized that 14 "is not a great number of cases," especially
when compared to the 421 intent-based objection letters lodged by the Attorney General during
this time-frame. See id. But the court offered two explanations for the "relative scarcity" of
judicial findings of intentionally discriminatory or unconstitutional conduct by covered
jurisdictions. First, given Section 5's effectiveness in deterring covered jurisdictions from
enacting discriminatory voting changes in the first place, it is understandable that there would not
be many Section 2 cases challenging such practices. In other words, because most intentionally
discriminatory voting practices are blocked by Section 5 prior to their implementation, they are
unlikely to be the subject of a subsequent Section 2 challenge. See id. (citing Introduction to
Expiring Provisions (Shaw Responses 160)); see also Continuing Need 143 n.18 (Earls
Responses). Second, both the Senate Judiciary Committee and Professor Katz's study examined
only reported Section 2 cases. Yet as Professor Katz acknowledged, "[t]hese lawsuits, of course,
represent only a portion of the Section 2 claims filed or decided since 1982," given the high
number of Section 2 cases that settle or are resolved without a published opinion. See Impact
and Effectiveness 974 (Katz Study); see also Continuing Need 143 (Earls Responses). Indeed,
according to one witness who testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee, there have been
66 reported cases of Section 2 violations since 1982 in the nine states that are "substantially
covered" by Section 5, but there have been 587 unreported cases documenting such violations --
i.e., more than eight times as many unreported cases than reported cases revealing Section 2
violations by covered jurisdictions. See Continuing Need 143 (Earls Responses). It is to be
expected, then, that an analysis of intentional or unconstitutional discrimination based solely on
reported Section 2 cases would "seriously understate[] the findings." Id.
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Finally, it is significant to recall that courts will avoid deciding constitutional questions if
a case can be resolved on narrower, statutory grounds. See, e.g., Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at
2508. Courts therefore tend to refrain from finding that a jurisdiction engaged in
unconstitutional voting discrimination if there is another basis upon which to invalidate the
jurisdiction's challenged voting practice -- e.g., if the voting practice is found to violate the
Section 2 "results" test. See Continuing Need 143-44, 144 n.19 (Earls Responses); see also
Escambia Cnty. v. McMillan, 466 U.S. 48, 51 (1984) (declining to decide whether evidence of
discriminatory intent was adequate to support finding that at-large system of elections violated
the Fourteenth Amendment, given the lower court's conclusion that the system also violated
Section 2); White v. Alabama, 74 F.3d 1058, 1071 n.42 (11th Cir. 1996) (explaining that
"[b]ecause we dispose of the district court's judgment on the ground that it violates the Voting
Rights Act, we need not, and indeed, should not, discuss whether the judgment violates the Equal
Protection Clause"); United States v. Charleston Cnty., 316 F. Supp. 2d 268, 306-07 (D.S.C.
2003), aff'd, 365 F.3d 341 (4th Cir. 2004) (acknowledging that "the General Assembly's adoption
of the at-large system raises suspicions," but refusing to "disparage" those who enacted the
system by finding a constitutional violation absent more "compelling evidence" of discriminatory
intent, and instead, enjoining the at-large system as a violation of Section 2). As Professor
Pamela Karlan explained during her 2006 testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee,
"when courts decide cases on [Section 2] effects test reasons, they don't reach the question
whether there is also a discriminatory purpose. But let me tell you from my own experience that
if we had to show discriminatory purpose in lots of these cases, we could do it." Continuing
Need 6 (statement of Pamela S. Karlan). As a result, many instances of unconstitutional voting
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discrimination likely escape formal judicial condemnation.
Still, there have been at least 14 reported Section 2 cases involving judicial findings of
intentional or unconstitutional voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions since 1982. See
Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 258. Because the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I described
most of these Section 2 decisions in great detail, see 573 F. Supp. 2d at 259-62, this Court will
not endeavor to repeat the facts of all those cases here. But since Section 2 cases do offer very
"powerful evidence of continuing intentional discrimination," id. at 259, a few such cases warrant
mention, one of which was not addressed by Nw. Austin I.
In 2003, a federal district court assessing a Section 2 challenge to Charleston County,
South Carolina's at-large method of elections for its County Council declined to find that the
system had been adopted with an unconstitutional discriminatory purpose, but nonetheless
enjoined the system as a violation of Section 2. See Charleston Cnty., 316 F. Supp. 2d at 306. In
so doing, the court noted that county officials had engaged in many other forms of purposeful
voting discrimination in recent years. See id. at 290 n.23; see also Impact and Effectiveness 987-
88 (Katz Study). The court described the persistent problem of white poll officials "intimidating
and harassing" black voters in need of assistance at the polls, and quoted one member of the
Charleston County Election Commission, who said that she had "received complaints from
African-American voters concerning rude or inappropriate behavior by white poll officials in
every election between 1992 and 2002." See id. at 287 n.23. At one point, the official
harassment of elderly black voters at the polls became so egregious that it "prompted a
Charleston County Circuit Court to issue a restraining order against the Election Commission
requiring its agents to cease interfering with the voting process." Id. at 288 n.23.
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The court in Charleston Cnty. also noted two "recent episodes" of racial discrimination in
voting that it found particularly troubling. In the first, which occurred in 1991, the Charleston
County Council decided to "reduce[] the salary for the Charleston County Probate Judge . . .
following the election of the first and only African-American person elected to that position." Id.
at 289 n.23. That same judge had been forced to sue to have his election upheld by the South
Carolina Supreme Court, and even after the court affirmed the validity of the election, the judge
had to seek Justice Department intervention in order to be sworn into office. Id. at 289-90 n.23.
The second episode occurred after the 2000 Charleston County School Board elections, in which
African-Americans won a majority of the seats on the board for the first time in the county's
history. The county immediately responded by sponsoring "several pieces of legislation to alter
the method of election for the school board." Id. at 290 n.23. None of the five African-American
members of the board were consulted regarding their views on the change to the board's method
of election, id., and every African-American member of the legislative delegation voted against
the proposed change, S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 309. It later became apparent that the change
would have the effect of making the school board's method of election "an exact replica of the
old County Council structure" that the court in Charleston Cnty. had struck down as a violation
of Section 2. See Continuing Need 27-28 (Arrington Responses); see also S. Rep. No. 109-295,
at 309. This method of election was subsequently denied preclearance by the Attorney General.
Continuing Need 28 (Arrington Responses).
In a Section 2 case not discussed by the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I, Native
American residents of South Dakota challenged the state's 2001 legislative redistricting plan as
diluting Native American voting strength in violation of Section 2. See Bone Shirt v. Hazeltine,
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336 F. Supp. 2d 976 (D.S.D. 2004); see also Impact and Effectiveness 988-89 (Katz Study). In
assessing the plaintiffs' Section 2 challenge, the court described several recent instances of
intentional state-sponsored voting discrimination against Native Americans in South Dakota.
See Bone Shirt, 336 F. Supp. 2d at 1023-26. For example, in 2002 the state passed a law
requiring photo identification as a prerequisite to voting. When concerns were raised about the
effect of the law on the state's Native American population, one state legislator responded: "I'm
not sure we want that sort of person in the polling place." Id. at 1026 (internal quotation marks
and citation omitted). Another legislator conceded that the measure had been passed as a means
of "retaliating" against the recent rise in registration among Native American voters, after the
Native American vote had proven particularly significant in a close senate race. Id. The court
also described a 2003 challenge to a redistricting plan by Buffalo County, South Dakota, which
had "confined virtually all of the county's Indian population to a single district containing
approximately 1500 people." Id. at 1024. When members of the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe
brought suit, alleging that the plan had been "drawn and maintained for a discriminatory
purpose," the parties reached a settlement agreement, "with the county admitting that the plan
was discriminatory." Id. The court in Bone Shirt went on to list many other reports of
intentional voting discrimination against Native Americans in South Dakota, including cases in
which local poll officials "refused to register Indians," or "refused to provide them with enough
voter registration cards to conduct a voter registration drive." Id.
The legislative record describes several other Section 2 cases since 1982 that contain
judicial findings of purposeful voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions. See Impact and
Effectiveness 975-76, 987-94 (Katz Study). Two such cases from Shelby County's home state of
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Alabama warrant specific mention. Following the Dillard litigation, see supra pp. 29-30, in
which Alabama residents challenged the at-large electoral systems used by many cities, counties,
and school boards throughout the state (including in Shelby County), the town of North Johns
admitted that its at-large system for electing commissioners violated Section 2 and entered into a
consent decree, under which it agreed to implement a new electoral system with five single-
member districts. See Dillard v. Town of North Johns, 717 F. Supp. 1471, 1473 (M.D. Ala.
1989). When two African-American candidates for office sought "to take advantage of the new
court-ordered single-member districting plan," id. at 1476, the mayor refused to provide them
with the necessary financial disclosure forms that he had provided to all of the other candidates,
and that all candidates were required to complete in order to run for office under state law. Id. at
1474-76; Impact and Effectiveness 990 (Katz Study). The two African-American candidates
nonetheless remained on the ballot without completing the forms, and proceeded to win their
respective elections, whereupon the mayor refused to swear them into office. North Johns, 717
F. Supp. at 1475. The candidates then filed suit under Section 2, alleging purposeful
discrimination and seeking a court order certifying them as duly-elected members of the town
council. Id. at 1476. Granting this request, the federal district court found "that North Johns,
through its mayor, intentionally discriminated against [the candidates] because of their race." Id.
The court explained that the election of the two candidates would have resulted in a majority-
black town council, and that the mayor had "acted as he did in order to prevent this result, or at
least not to aid in achieving it." Id. The court was "convinced that, but for [the candidates'] race,
[the mayor] would have acted toward them as he acted toward other candidates; he would have
provided to them, in a timely manner, the [necessary] information and forms." Id.
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Similarly, a federal district court in Harris v. Siegelman, 695 F. Supp. 517 (M.D. Ala.
1988), found that intentional discrimination persisted in Alabama as late as the 1980s. In
assessing a Section 2 class action filed by black residents of the state, who alleged that the
manner in which poll officials had been appointed violated Section 2, the court described how
Alabama's "history of racial inhumanity continues into today." 695 F. Supp. at 525. Specifically,
the court found that "white poll officials continue to harass and intimidate black voters," and it
went on to cite "numerous instances" in which "white poll officials refused to help illiterate black
voters or refused to allow them to vote, where they refused to allow black voters to cast
challenged ballots, and where they were simply rude and even intimidating toward black voters."
Id. Although acknowledging that these occurrences are "much less frequent today than in the
past," the court found that "their impact is still dramatic and widespread in the black community
in light of this state's not-so-distant history of open and violent discrimination." Id.
8. Dispatch of Federal Observers
Additional evidence of intentional state-sponsored discrimination against minority voters
is revealed by the continued dispatch of federal observers to covered jurisdictions. Under
Section 8, the Attorney General may send federal observers to monitor any state or local elections
when "necessary to enforce the guarantees of the 14th or 15th amendment."13 See 42 U.S.C. §
13
Under the original version of the Act, federal observers could only be sent to monitor
elections in jurisdictions for which "federal examiners" had been appointed. See 1965 Act § 8.
Federal examiners "in the early days of the Act were empowered to help register minority
voters," 1 Evidence of Continued Need 179, and could be dispatched either to jurisdictions that
were covered by Section 4(b), or to non-covered jurisdictions that were subject to coverage by
federal court order, see 1965 Act §§ 3(a), 6. When Congress reauthorized the Act's temporary
provisions in 2006, it repealed the sections of the Act pertaining to federal examiners, and
amended Section 3(a) of the Act to authorize the direct assignment of federal observers to non-
covered jurisdictions where "appropriate to enforce the voting guarantees of the fourteenth or
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1973f(a)(2). Between 1982 and 2006, 300 to 600 federal observers were assigned annually to
observe elections in covered jurisdictions. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 44; S. Rep. No. 109-
295, at 96. Five of the six states originally covered by Section 5 -- Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama,
South Carolina, and Mississippi -- accounted for 66% of the 622 total federal observer
coverages14 during this time-frame, 1 Evidence of Continued Need 181 (Nat'l Comm'n Report),
with Mississippi alone accounting for 40% of all such coverages, H.R. Rep. No. 109-475, at 44.
In reauthorizing Section 5 in 2006, Congress cited the "tens of thousands of Federal observers
that have been dispatched to observe elections in covered jurisdictions" during the past 25 years
as evidence of "the continued need for [the] Federal oversight" provided by the temporary
provisions of the Voting Rights Act. See 2006 Amendments § 2(b)(5), 120 Stat. at 578.
Shelby County attempts to minimize the significance of this evidence, however, by
arguing that the dispatch of federal observers "indicates only that it was predicted that there
might be conduct with the effect of disenfranchising minority citizens, which might or might not
be purposeful discrimination." Pl.'s Mot. at 35. As a technical matter, Shelby County is correct.
But observers are not assigned to a particular polling location based on sheer speculation; they
are only dispatched if "there is a reasonable belief that minority citizens are at risk of being
disenfranchised." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 44 (emphasis added); see also 1 Evidence of
Continued Need 180 (Nat'l Comm'n Report) (explaining that "observers are sent because there
are reasonable grounds in the opinion of the Department of Justice to expect discrimination on
fifteenth amendment." 42 U.S.C. § 1973a(a); see also H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 91.
14
For purposes of this Opinion, each occasion when federal observers are dispatched to a
jurisdiction is referred to as one "observer coverage," although several individual observers may
have been present.
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Election Day") (emphasis added). It may be that some of the 622 observer coverages since 1982
have ultimately proven unnecessary, but the legislative record reveals many instances of
intentional voter discrimination at the polls, where the presence of federal observers has been
needed to protect access to the ballot for racial and language minorities.
Congress heard testimony from Alabama state senator Bobby Singleton as to the
importance of federal observers in preventing the intimidation of black voters at the polls in
Alabama. See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 182 (Nat'l Comm'n Report). Singleton described
one incident in 1992 in which he was taken to jail after attempting to prevent white poll officials
from "closing the doors on African-American voters . . . whom they did not want to come in,
[because] [they] . . . would have made a difference in the . . . votes on that particular day." Id. at
298 (Nat'l Comm'n Hearing Highlights). Barry Weinberg, former Deputy Chief of the Voting
Section of the Civil Rights Division of the Justice Department, similarly described the
harassment of black voters by white poll officials in Alabama, including one instance in which a
local poll official remarked in the presence of a federal observer that "niggers don't have
principle enough to vote and they shouldn't be allowed." See Voting Rights Act: Sections 6 and
8 – The Federal Examiner and Observer Program, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the
Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 30 (Nov. 15, 2005) (prepared
statement of Barry H. Weinberg). Weinberg also described various forms of discrimination
faced by language minority voters at the polls, who have sometimes "been denied the ballot
because they identified their street name according to common Spanish usage rather than the
formal English name." Id. at 34. On other occasions, prospective Hispanic voters have been
"admonished not to use Spanish when talking in the polling places," or have been asked to
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provide "on-the-spot evidence of their citizenship before being given a ballot," even though such
evidence is not required from Caucasian voters. Id. The legislative record describes one such
example of discrimination against Latinos in Arizona, in which men wearing "military or tool
belts" and black T-shirts reading "U.S. Constitutional Enforcement" approached Latinos waiting
in line to vote, demanding proof of citizenship. See 3 Voting Rights Act: Evidence of Continued
Need, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary,
109th Cong. 3976 (Mar. 8, 2006) (hereinafter, "3 Evidence of Continued Need") (Arizona Report
for the Nat'l Comm'n on the Voting Rights Act).
Congress heard evidence that in 1990, on the eve of an election marked by the presence
of an African-American candidate for one of North Carolina's Senate seats, 125,000 African-
American voters in North Carolina received postcards falsely informing them that if they had
moved within thirty days they could not vote. See 2 Evidence of Continued Need 1755
(appendix to statement of Wade Henderson). As recently as 2004, a sheriff in Alamance County,
North Carolina, "took a list of registered voters in his county that had Spanish surnames, and said
publicly that he would send deputies to the homes of each of those voters to verify that they were
citizens." Continuing Need 18 (testimony of Anita S. Earls). That same year, there were reports
of police being stationed outside polling sites in an "overwhelmingly Latino" area of Texas -- a
more subtle, yet "familiar form of voter intimidation." See S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 344.
The record contains several other examples of state-sponsored discrimination against
minority voters in Texas, including the 2004 closing of a polling place in a predominantly-black
precinct, despite the fact that "voters remained in line" and the closing was "contrary to state
law." Id. at 343. There were additional reports of minority voters "being turned away from their
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polling locations and asked to return at a later time" for no apparent reason. Id. And during the
Southern Regional Hearing of the National Commission of the Voting Rights Act, Professor
Vernon Burton testified that there had been "various kinds of intimidation and misinformation"
directed at black voters in Texas during the 2000 and 2002 elections, as well as "late change[s] of
polling places; dropping individuals from poll lists without cause; [and] not allowing individuals
to file challenge ballots." See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 298 (Nat'l Comm'n Hearing
Highlights). Professor Burton went on to describe a particularly disturbing incident in Wharton
County, Texas, in which the home of a campaign staff treasurer for an African-American
candidate for sheriff was burned. Id. As Professor Burton explained, the incident occurred
shortly after the treasurer had received "'threatening calls saying what would happen to her if she
did not get [the candidate's] – and we won't use the N word – sign out of her yard.'" Id.
9. Racially Polarized Voting and Vote Dilution
Congress also relied on evidence of racially polarized voting in reauthorizing Section 5 in
2006, noting that the persistence of racially polarized voting "in each of the jurisdictions covered
by the expiring provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 demonstrates that racial and
language minorities remain politically vulnerable, warranting the continued protections of the
[Act]." See 2006 Amendments § 2(b)(3), 120 Stat. at 577. Racially polarized voting "occurs
when voting blocs within the minority and white communities cast ballots along racial lines."
H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 34. The House Committee on the Judiciary in 2006 found that the
continued existence of racially polarized voting presented a "serious concern," id., for two
reasons. First, racially polarized voting effectively creates an "election ceiling" for minority
voters, as it renders them "powerless" to elect candidates of their choice in non-majority-minority
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districts. Id. Second, "[t]he potential for discrimination in environments characterized by
racially polarized voting is great." Id. at 35. That is because, as the three-judge court in Nw.
Austin I explained, racially polarized voting is "a necessary precondition for vote dilution to
occur," since it is racially polarized voting that "enables the use of devices such as multi-member
districts and at-large elections that dilute the voting strength of minority communities." See 573
F. Supp. 2d at 263 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). In other words, where
minorities and non-minorities tend to prefer different candidates, the ability of minorities to elect
their candidates of choice can be intentionally reduced through the adoption of a wide variety of
dilutive techniques, including the manipulation of district boundaries, the enactment of
discriminatory annexations, and the implementation of majority-vote requirements. See 2
Evidence of Continued Need 1721 (appendix to statement of Wade Henderson).
Hence, Congress was concerned by the evidence in the legislative record indicating that
"the degree of racially polarized voting in the South is increasing, not decreasing." 1 Evidence of
Continued Need 215 (Nat'l Comm'n Report). Congress heard testimony that in Shelby County's
home state of Alabama, there were 35 black representatives serving in the state legislature, only
one of whom had been elected from a majority-white district. See Benefits and Costs 97 (Gray
Responses). Evidence in the congressional record also revealed "high degree[s]" of racially
polarized voting in South Carolina and Louisiana. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 35. As one
expert on voting trends in Louisiana testified, "the racial differences in candidate preferences are
pervasive across offices. It doesn't matter whether the office at issue is state Representative, state
Senator, Governor, Mayor, District Attorney, or Public Service Commissioner. It could be for a
position as Recorder of Mortgages or Register of Conveyances"; regardless of the nature of the
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elected position, "[r]acially polarized voting remains pronounced and pervasive in Louisiana."
Voting Rights Act: The Continuing Need for Section 5, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the
Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong 59 (Oct. 25, 2005) (hereinafter,
"Continuing Need for Section 5") (prepared statement of Richard Engstrom).
A report in the legislative record on voting rights in Mississippi confirmed that racially
polarized voting remained pronounced and pervasive there as well, with blacks in Mississippi
"overwhelmingly tend[ing] to vote for blacks and whites almost unanimously vot[ing] for whites
in most black versus white elections." See 2 Evidence of Continued Need 1721 (appendix to
statement of Wade Henderson) (internal quotation marks omitted). Moreover, the report
explained, "[n]o black candidate has won election to Congress or the state legislature from a
majority-white district in Mississippi." Id. at 1722. And Mississippi is by no means unique
among southern states in this respect. Another study in the legislative record found that during
the 1980s and 1990s, "not a single black candidate won a majority-white district in the South."
Benefits and Costs 69 (responses of Drew S. Days III to questions submitted by Senators Cornyn,
Coburn, Kennedy, Leahy, and Schumer). According to the National Commission on the Voting
Rights Act, only 8% of all black U.S. representatives in 2000 were elected from majority-white
districts. 1 Evidence of Continued Need 159 (Nat'l Comm'n Report).
Shelby County objects to this Court's reliance on evidence of racially polarized voting in
assessing the continued need for Section 5, arguing that racially polarized voting constitutes
private conduct, not "governmental discrimination -- the only type of discrimination Congress is
empowered to remedy under the Fifteenth Amendment." See Pl.'s Mot. at 31. But Shelby
County fails to recognize the close link between racially polarized voting and intentional, state-
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sponsored minority vote dilution. It is only because of the continued existence of racially
polarized voting that covered jurisdictions can structure their electoral processes so as to
intentionally diminish the ability of minority voters to elect candidates of their choice. See
Continuing Need for Section 5 59 (prepared statement of Richard Engstrom). Although the
persistence of racially polarized voting -- in and of itself -- does not provide evidence of
unconstitutional voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions and their officials, the persistence
of measures that are intentionally designed to "dilute minority voting strength" does provide such
evidence, and these measures can only be effective in areas that are marked by racially polarized
voting.
Shelby County argues, however, that the Attorney General is incorrect to rely even on
evidence of intentional minority vote dilution in justifying the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5,
since "Section 5 enforces the Fifteenth Amendment" and "claims alleging purposeful vote
dilution are cognizable under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment – not
under the Fifteenth Amendment." See Pl.'s Reply at 47. The Supreme Court has never
"explicitly decided[] that the Fifteenth Amendment applies to dilution claims." See Bossier II,
528 U.S. at 359 n.11 (Souter, J., concurring in part, dissenting in part); see also supra pp. 63-64.
But the Court in City of Rome relied on evidence of minority vote dilution in upholding the
constitutionality of the 1975 reauthorization of Section 5 as a valid exercise of Congress's
Fifteenth Amendment enforcement authority. See 446 U.S. at 181 (quoting Congress's finding
that "'[a]s registration and voting of minority citizens increases [sic], other measures may be
resorted to which would dilute increasing minority voting strength'") (internal citation omitted).
Regardless of whether intentional state-sponsored minority vote dilution violates the Fifteenth
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Amendment, then, Shelby County's argument that such evidence cannot be used to sustain the
2006 reauthorization of Section 5 is directly refuted by City of Rome.15
Shelby County's position on the irrelevance of intentional dilutive measures is also at
odds with the history and purpose of Section 5. According to Shelby County, the so-called
"second generation barriers" to voting that "do not interfere with the right to vote, but instead
limit the effectiveness of that vote," cannot be used to justify Section 5's constitutionality,
see Pl.'s Reply at 21, because Section 5 was intended to combat only those tactics that were
aimed at direct disenfranchisement, rather than indirect "dilutive mechanisms," id. at 48. But
Section 5 never had such a limited purpose. To the contrary, Congress specifically designed the
preclearance requirement in order to prohibit covered jurisdictions from implementing any and
all discriminatory voting changes, regardless of the form they might take. See, e.g., Continuing
Need 41 (Earls Responses) (explaining that "Section 5 was not intended merely to increase
minority registration rates, but rather to make sure that covered jurisdictions did not put in place .
15
In City of Rome, Justice Rehnquist, joined by Justice Stewart in dissent, voiced
concerns as to the majority's reliance on evidence of vote dilution in justifying the 1975
reauthorization of Section 5, arguing that any "disparate impact associated with
nondiscriminatory electoral changes . . . result[ing] from bloc voting" cannot establish
"congressional power to devise an effective remedy for prior constitutional violations." Id. at
217 (Rehnquist, J., dissenting). But Justice Rehnquist's objection to the use of such evidence
stemmed from the fact that, in City of Rome, the city had proven that its dilutive electoral
changes were not purposefully discriminatory. Id. at 214. Justice Rehnquist went on to explain
that where states seek "to prevent the participation of blacks in local government by measures
other than outright denial of the franchise," Congress can "of course remedy and prevent such
purposeful discrimination." Id. (emphasis added). Here, Shelby County has not proven -- nor
even alleged -- that all instances of state-sponsored minority vote dilution in the legislative
record are free from discriminatory animus. Hence, even under the more limited view of
Congress's enforcement authority endorsed by Justice Rehnquist in City of Rome, the evidence of
purposefully dilutive measures in the 2006 legislative record could provide valid grounds for the
reauthorization of Section 5.
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. . a host of other practices that would negate or dilute the voting strength of newly enfranchised
black voters."). Prior to the enactment of Section 5, covered jurisdictions were able to perpetuate
minority disenfranchisement by adopting new, deceptive discriminatory techniques as soon as the
old ones had been struck down. Although the primary focus of Section 5 in 1965 may have been
those techniques that were being used to prevent blacks from entering polling places and casting
ballots, "the preclearance requirement was not enacted to authorize covered jurisdictions to pour
old poison into new bottles." See Bossier II, 528 U.S. at 366 (Souter, J., concurring in part,
dissenting in part). It is for this reason that the Supreme Court in Allen held that Section 5 bars
not only those voting changes that interfere with minorities' access to the ballot, but also those
changes that interfere with the weight of the ballots cast. See Allen, 393 U.S. at 569 (recognizing
that "[t]he right to vote can be affected by a dilution of voting power as well as by an absolute
prohibition on casting a ballot"); see also Continuing Need 36 (Arrington Responses) (explaining
that the Act has always been "about more than just the mere ability to cast a vote . . . The vote
must be counted and must count").
Although Shelby County seeks to portray "second generation barriers" to voting as novel
creations of the 1980s and 1990s, such dilutive measures have long been employed by covered
jurisdictions as a means of intentionally discriminating against minority voters. See, e.g.,
Evidence of Continued Need 209 (explaining that vote dilution "consists of mechanisms
employed by whites since the First Reconstruction in the nineteenth century"); Introduction to
Expiring Provisions 206 (prepared statement of Chandler Davidson) (noting that dilutive tactics
were "widely used in the Nineteenth Century when black males could vote" and "began to be
used once more in the mid-Twentieth Century, particularly after the abolition of the white
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primary, as increasing numbers of blacks began to be able to exercise the franchise"). Indeed,
Congress relied on evidence of these purposefully dilutive mechanisms in each of its previous
reauthorizations of Section 5. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 36. In its 2006 report, the House
Committee on the Judiciary specifically found that the voting changes being sought by covered
jurisdictions -- which included "enacting discriminatory redistricting plans; switching offices
from elected to appointed positions; relocating polling places; enacting discriminatory
annexations and deannexations; setting numbered posts; and changing elections from single
member districts to at-large voting and implementing majority vote requirements" --
"resemble[d] those techniques and methods used in 1965, 1970, 1975, and 1982." Id. This Court
sees no reason, then, why the continued existence of these dilutive techniques, as well as the
continued existence of racially polarized voting -- a necessary precondition for such techniques to
be effective -- cannot support the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5.
10. Section 5's Deterrent Effect
Any assessment of the persistence of intentional voting discrimination by covered
jurisdictions must also take into account "the number of voting changes that have never gone
forward as a result of Section 5." See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 24. In 2006, the House
Committee on the Judiciary found that Section 5 has deterred covered jurisdictions "from even
attempting to enact discriminatory voting changes," as covered jurisdictions "'tend to understand
that submitting discriminatory changes is a waste of taxpayer time and money and interferes with
their own timetables, because the chances are good that an objection will result.'" Id. (quoting 1
Evidence of Continued Need 177 (Nat'l Comm'n Report)). In light of Section 5's substantial
deterrent effect, any evaluation of the continued existence of purposeful voting discrimination by
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covered jurisdictions cannot be based solely on the number of intent-based objections lodged by
the Attorney General, or the number of lawsuits in which a three-judge court has denied
preclearance to a covered jurisdiction's racially-motivated voting change. Rather, the assessment
of the continued need for Section 5 must also account for those intentionally discriminatory
voting changes that have been abandoned by covered jurisdictions prior to the formal
preclearance process, simply as a result of Section 5's existence.
Congress in 2006 heard testimony from a number of voting rights practitioners and
scholars as to how Section 5 has prevented the enactment of discriminatory voting changes
"'under the radar screen [in ways] that may not appear easily in statistics.'" See Nw. Austin I, 573
F. Supp. 2d at 264 (quoting Introduction to Expiring Provisions 17 (testimony of Theodore
Shaw)). As one civil rights lawyer in Alabama testified, "Section 5 provides a powerful deterrent
. . . and based on my experience, I strongly believe that the continued Section 5 coverage in
Alabama is not only necessary but it is imperative." Benefits and Costs 4 (statement of Fred D.
Gray). Other witnesses similarly expressed the view that "[t]he number of objections does not
capture the Act's tremendous deterrent effect." Continuing Need 100 (Karlan Responses); id. at
141 (prepared statement of Anita S. Earls); Introduction to Expiring Provisions 166 (Shaw
Responses); Impact and Effectiveness 66 (prepared statement of Joseph D. Rich). One witness
interpreted the decline in objection rates not as an indication that Section 5 is no longer needed,
but as a sign of Section 5's success in preventing covered jurisdictions from submitting
discriminatory voting changes for preclearance in the first place. As she explained, "[i]f there
was an environmental regulation that limited pollution levels, cleaner air would not signify that it
is no longer needed, but that it is sufficiently serving its purpose and must be renewed."
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Continuing Need 68 (Earls Responses).
The three-judge court in Nw. Austin I provided "several concrete examples" of cases in
which "formal objections were unnecessary to thwart discriminatory voting changes," because
the mere existence of Section 5 served to deter covered jurisdictions from "proposing certain
changes once they realized the proposals would prompt objections." See 573 F. Supp. 2d at 265.
Several witnesses highlighted the significance of Section 5 not just as a deterrent to the
enactment of discriminatory voting changes, but also as a kind of "bargaining chip" for minority
voters, ensuring that minority political participation remains a "central consideration" in the
structuring of electoral processes. See Continuing Need 190-91 (prepared statement of Pamela S.
Karlan); see also Impact and Effectiveness 66 (prepared statement of Joseph D. Rich).
Unfortunately, it is simply not possible to determine the number of purposefully
discriminatory voting changes that have been deterred by Section 5. See, e.g., Continuing Need
114 (Pildes Responses) (noting that "the extent to which the existence of § 5 creates an effective
deterrent effect is extremely difficult, perhaps impossible, to quantify"); Introduction to Expiring
Provisions 73 (Hasen Responses) (explaining that the magnitude of Section 5's "deterrent effect
cannot be quantified from the record"). Nor is it possible to determine -- at least to any
reasonable degree of certainty -- whether, in the absence of Section 5, covered jurisdictions
would resort to a host of unconstitutional, discriminatory voting practices. See Introduction to
Expiring Provisions 39-40 (Hasen Responses); see also Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 267
(recognizing that "no one can know for sure what would happen if section 5 were allowed to
expire"). Nevertheless, in examining whether Section 5 remains "justified by current needs,"
Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2512, it is significant to recall Congress's finding in 2006 that the
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preclearance requirement has continued to deter covered jurisdictions from even attempting to
adopt discriminatory voting changes in the first place. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 24. It
therefore seems fair to assume that the instances of intentional voting discrimination documented
in the legislative record represent only a fraction of those instances that otherwise would have
occurred in the absence of Section 5, given the number of "discriminatory voting changes that
have never materialized" as a result of the preclearance requirement. See id. at 36.
C. Section 5 as a Congruent and Proportional Response to a Continuing History and
Pattern of Unconstitutional Conduct by Covered Jurisdictions
1. A Continuing History and Pattern of Unconstitutional Conduct
Having reviewed the evidence of unconstitutional voting discrimination in the 2006
legislative record, the Court must now answer the central question posed by this case: "does the
2006 legislative record contain sufficient evidence of contemporary discrimination in voting to
justify Congress's decision to subject covered jurisdictions to section 5 preclearance for another
twenty-five years?" See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 265. In other words, did Congress
possess the requisite "evidence of a pattern of constitutional violations on the part of the States,"
Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 729, which is needed to satisfy the second step of the three-part Boerne
analysis? For several reasons, this Court agrees with the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I that
"the 2006 legislative record is plainly adequate to justify section 5's 'strong remedial and
preventive measures.'" 573 F. Supp. 2d at 271 (quoting Boerne, 521 U.S. at 526).
First, the legislative record amassed by Congress in support of the 2006 reauthorization of
Section 5 is at least as strong as that held sufficient to uphold the 1975 reauthorization of Section
5 in City of Rome. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 265-66, 270-71. In City of Rome, the
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Supreme Court looked to three types of evidence in evaluating whether Section 5 remained
justified by current needs: evidence of (1) continued racial disparities in voter registration; (2) the
number of minority elected officials; and (3) the nature and number of Section 5 objections. In
1975, there were 16, 17.8, and 23.6 percentage point disparities in voter registration rates
between blacks and whites in Louisiana, North Carolina, and Alabama -- disparities that the
Supreme Court characterized as "significant." See S. Rep. No. 94-295, at 779; see also City of
Rome, 446 U.S. at 180. In 2004, there were 14.2, 17.8, and 19.2 percentage point disparities in
voter registration rates between blacks and non-Hispanic whites in Virginia, Arizona, and
Florida, and disparities of over 40 percentage points in voter registration rates between Hispanics
and non-Hispanic whites in Arizona, California, Virginia, Georgia, and North Carolina.
See 2004 U.S. Census Report. These disparities are certainly comparable to those deemed
"significant" by the Supreme Court in City of Rome.
With respect to minority elected officials, in 2006, just as in 1975, Congress recognized
the significant progress that had been made as far as the number of African-American elected
officials in covered jurisdictions, but also found that African-Americans remained under-
represented in state legislatures in the South based on their percentage of the population.
See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 33. Congress additionally found that three of the covered states
that had never elected a black representative to statewide office as of 1975 (Mississippi,
Louisiana, and South Carolina) still had never elected a black representative to statewide office
as of 2006. Id.
In terms of the objection-related statistics in the legislative record -- the third category of
evidence relied on by the Supreme Court in City of Rome -- Congress in 2006 acknowledged that
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the objection rate had been lower in recent years than in the years immediately prior to the 1975
reauthorization of Section 5. But Congress also received evidence indicating that the objection
rate has always been below 5%, see Introduction to Expiring Provisions 219 (attachment to
Hasen Prepared Statement), and that there were still more than 700 objections lodged by the
Attorney General since 1982, see H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 21, with more objections lodged
after 1982 than before, see 1 Evidence of Continued Need 172-73 (Nat'l Comm'n Report). In
light of this data, the House Committee on the Judiciary had good reason to conclude that the
evidence of voting discrimination in the 2006 legislative record still "resemble[d]" the evidence
before Congress when it reauthorized Section 5 in 1975. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 6. This
"resemblance" of the 2006 legislative record to the 1975 legislative record is critical, given that
Boerne and later cases applying the congruence and proportionality framework have repeatedly
cited the legislative record at issue in City of Rome as containing precisely the kind of evidence
needed to sustain remedial, prophylactic enforcement legislation like Section 5. See Nw. Austin
I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 271 (citing Boerne, 521 U.S. at 530; Fla. Prepaid, 527 U.S. at 640; Garrett,
531 U.S. at 369, 373-74).
In addition to the three categories of evidence relied on by the Supreme Court in City of
Rome, Congress in 2006 identified several other forms of evidence that bear directly on the
persistence of unconstitutional voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions. As previously
mentioned, one study in the legislative record revealed that there were 421 objections lodged
between 1982 and 2006 in which the Attorney General denied preclearance to a covered
jurisdiction's proposed voting change based on his inability to find that the change was not
motivated by a racially discriminatory purpose. See Preclearance Standards 180 tbl. 2 (McCrary
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Study). Another study found that 205 voting changes were withdrawn by covered jurisdictions
after receipt of an MIR, thereby suggesting that the covered jurisdiction may have known that its
change could not withstand federal scrutiny. See 1 Evidence of Continued Need 178 (Nat'l
Comm'n Report). There were 25 unsuccessful judicial preclearance suits filed since 1982,
including some in which preclearance was denied on the basis of discriminatory intent. See Nw.
Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 266. And there were at least 105 successful Section 5 enforcement
actions between 1982 and 2006, some of which led to the abandonment of unprecleared voting
changes by covered jurisdictions, while others led to intent-based denials of preclearance after
covered jurisdictions were forced to submit their voting changes for federal review. See 1
Evidence of Continued Need 185-86 (Nat'l Comm'n Report); see also Preclearance Standards 83
(appendix to statement of Brenda Wright). From 1982 to 2006, there were tens of thousands of
federal observers dispatched to monitor elections in covered jurisdictions, see 2006 Amendments
§ 2(b)(3)-(4), (8), 120 Stat. at 577-78, many of whom played a key role in preventing the
attempted intimidation and harassment of minority voters at the polls, see H.R. Rep. No. 109-
478, at 44. And perhaps most importantly, there were at least 14 reported Section 2 cases since
1982 involving judicial findings of intentional or unconstitutional voting discrimination by
covered jurisdictions. Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 258. As the three-judge court in Nw.
Austin I pointed out, "all this evidence becomes even more compelling given Congress's finding
that section 5's preclearance requirement has deterred covered jurisdictions from even attempting
to implement an unknown and unknowable number of [voting] changes." Id. at 266.
It is noteworthy that the evidence of unconstitutional voting discrimination in the 2006
legislative record far exceeds the evidence of unconstitutional discrimination found sufficient to
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uphold the challenged legislation in both Hibbs and Lane. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at
271. In Hibbs, a male employee of the Nevada Department of Human Resources brought suit
under the FMLA after he was discharged for failing to return to work because he had been caring
for his ailing wife. Nevada contended that Congress had exceeded its Fourteenth Amendment
enforcement authority by abrogating state sovereign immunity in the FMLA. Rejecting this
challenge, the Supreme Court held that Congress "had evidence of a pattern of constitutional
violations on the part of the States in this area," which justified enactment of the remedial § 5
legislation. 538 U.S. at 729. In so holding, the Supreme Court relied on just four pieces of
evidence:
(1) a Senate Report citation to a Bureau of Labor Statistics survey revealing disparities in
private-sector provision of parenting leave to men and women; (2) submissions from two
sources at a hearing on the Parental and Medical Leave Act of 1986 . . . that public-sector
parental leave policies "diffe[r] little" from private-sector policies; (3) evidence that 15
States provided women up to one year of extended maternity leave, while only 4 States
provided for similarly extended paternity leave; and (4) a House Report's quotation of a
study that found that failure to implement uniform standards for parenting leave would
"leav[e] Federal employees open to discretionary and possibly unequal treatment."
Lane, 541 U.S. at 528 n.17 (citation omitted) (summarizing Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 728-33).
In other words, the Supreme Court upheld the challenged provision of the FMLA as
responsive to a documented history and pattern of unconstitutional conduct by the states, based
solely on (1) a survey that found discriminatory parental leave practices by private-sector
employers, not state employers; and (2) three other forms of evidence of employers'
discriminatory practices with respect to parental leave, despite the fact that the FMLA provision
at issue provided for family leave, not parental leave. See Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 746-48 (Kennedy,
J., dissenting). The majority concluded that evidence relating to parental leave was "relevant
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because both parenting and family leave provisions respond to 'the same gender stereotype: that
women's family duties trump those of the workplace.'" Id. at 748 (quoting 538 U.S. at 731 n.5).
But as Justice Kennedy pointed out in dissent, "the question is not whether the family leave
provision is a congruent and proportional response to general gender-based stereotypes in
employment . . . [but] whether it is a proper remedy to an alleged pattern of unconstitutional
discrimination by States in the grant of family leave." Id. at 749.
In Lane, the Supreme Court upheld Title II of the ADA as applied to claims by the
disabled alleging that they had been denied access to the courts based on "statistical, legislative,
and anecdotal evidence of the widespread exclusion of persons with disabilities from the
enjoyment of public services." Lane, 541 U.S. at 529. Significantly, however, the Supreme
Court in Lane identified only "two reported cases finding that a disabled person's federal
constitutional rights were violated" as a result of being denied access to the courts. Id. at 544
(Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting) (citing 541 U.S. at 525 n.14). Aside from those two cases, the only
evidence that the Court identified with respect to "due process 'access to the courts'" violations
was (1) the testimony of two witnesses before a House subcommittee as to the "'physical
inaccessibility' of local courthouses," even though neither witness "reported being denied the
right to be present at constitutionally protected court hearings"; and (2) a report by the ADA Task
Force on the Rights and Empowerment of Americans with Disabilities, which contained "a few
anecdotal handwritten reports of physically inaccessible courthouses." Id. at 545. As Chief
Justice Rehnquist noted in dissent, these types of anecdotes do "not state a constitutional
violation," since "[a] violation of due process occurs only when a person is actually denied the
constitutional right to access a given judicial proceeding." Id. at 546. Yet the majority in Lane
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found this evidence sufficient to establish "a pattern of unconstitutional treatment in the
administration of justice," at least when viewed against the "backdrop of pervasive unequal
treatment in the administration of state services and programs." Id. at 524.
The evidence relied on by the Supreme Court to uphold the challenged legislation in
Hibbs and Lane "pales in comparison to the extensive record Congress compiled when extending
section 5." Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 271. Just on the subject of formal judicial findings
of unconstitutional conduct, Congress in 2006 identified three times as many reported cases since
1982 in which covered jurisdictions committed unconstitutional voting discrimination against
minority voters (6) than the number of cases Lane identified in which a state unconstitutionally
denied a disabled person access to the courts (2). Compare S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 65 with
Lane, 541 U.S. at 544 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting) (citing 541 U.S. at 525 n.14). This is
particularly remarkable, as the Nw. Austin I court noted, "given that section 5 was actively
deterring constitutional violations throughout the period under review." 573 F. Supp. 2d at 272.
But, of course, there is much more in the 15,000-page record supporting the 2006
reauthorization of Section 5. The circumstantial evidence of unconstitutional voting
discrimination relied on by Congress also far outweighs the circumstantial evidence of
unconstitutional discrimination relied on by the Supreme Court in Hibbs and Lane. In Lane, for
example, the Court cited as circumstantial evidence of unconstitutional discrimination the
testimony of several disabled persons as to the physical inaccessibility of local courthouses --
even though physical inaccessibility, in and of itself, does not reflect a constitutional violation.
See 541 U.S. at 546 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting) (explaining that "[w]e have never held that a
person has a constitutional right to make his way into a courtroom without any external
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assistance"). By contrast, many of the examples of voting discrimination cited by Congress in
support of the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5 are highly suggestive of unconstitutional
conduct: whether it be Kilmichael, Mississippi's decision to cancel its 2001 local elections in
which a significant number of African-Americans sought office immediately after new Census
data revealed that African-Americans recently had become a majority of the town's population;
Charleston County, South Carolina's sudden decision in 2000 to change the method of election
for its school board to one that had recently been struck down as discriminatory, just after
African-Americans won a majority of seats on the board for the first time; Alabama poll officials'
1992 attempts to "close the doors" on African-American voters before the voting hours were
over; Louisiana's 2001 decision to purposefully "obliterate" a majority-black district in Orleans
Parish; South Dakota's passage of a photo identification law in 2002 that state legislators
conceded was adopted in order to "retaliate" against the recent rise in Native American voter
registration; Mississippi's 1995 attempt to revive its dual registration system without seeking
preclearance, even though prior versions of the system had all been invalidated as discriminatory;
or Waller County, Texas's suspiciously-timed reduction in voting opportunities for Prairie View
A&M students immediately before a 2004 election that was marked by the presence of two black
Prairie View A&M students as candidates for office. None of these incidents resulted in a formal
judicial finding of unconstitutional voting discrimination. Yet each case -- and many others like
them in the 15,000-page legislative record -- supports the conclusion that unconstitutional voting
discrimination persists in covered jurisdictions, notwithstanding the deterrent effect of Section 5.
In evaluating whether Congress properly found a history and pattern of unconstitutional
conduct sufficient to justify the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5, it is also significant to recall
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the deference to which Congress is entitled when it legislates to enforce the substantive
guarantees of the Fifteenth Amendment. As the Supreme Court acknowledged in Nw. Austin II,
"[t]he Fifteenth Amendment empowers 'Congress,' not the Court, to determine in the first
instance what legislation is needed to enforce it." 129 S. Ct. at 2513. And as explained earlier,
Congress acts at the pinnacle of its constitutional enforcement authority when it legislates to
protect a fundamental right, or when it legislates to prohibit discrimination against a suspect
class. See supra pp. 65-66. In reauthorizing Section 5 in 2006, Congress did both.
Moreover, Congress's determination that there is a continued need for Section 5 was not
based on a perfunctory review of a few isolated examples of voting discrimination by covered
jurisdictions. Instead, Congress "approached its task seriously and with great care." Nw. Austin
I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 265. It held 22 hearings over the course of eight months, and heard
testimony from 92 witnesses, including Justice Department attorneys, law professors, social
scientists, and civil rights litigators. In addition to that testimony, the evidence that Congress
collected consisted of statistical and other analyses, objection letters, law review articles, judicial
decisions, and first-hand accounts of discrimination. Ultimately, Congress amassed a 15,000-
page legislative record in support of its decision to renew Section 5 -- a record that the Supreme
Court has described as "sizeable," Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2513, and that dwarfs those
deemed sufficient in Lane and Hibbs. Shelby County points out that "[i]t is the quality of the
evidence that matters – not the quantity of evidence." See Pl.'s Reply at 38. But the Supreme
Court has often acknowledged the quantity of the evidence considered by Congress in the course
of assessing the sufficiency of that evidence. See, e.g., Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 309 (describing
the legislative history of the Act as "voluminous"). And surely Congress's judgment that
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"extending the expiring provisions of the Voting Rights Act is still necessary," S. Rep. No. 109-
295, at 2, is all the more valuable given the "sheer bulk of the record showing both continued
problems and significant improvements," id. at 15, which Congress reviewed prior to reaching its
conclusion.
There are additional reasons to accord significant weight to Congress's 2006 decision to
renew Section 5. First, Congress in 2006 did not enact new legislation, but instead reauthorized
legislation that had already been in effect for more than 40 years. During those 40 years, the
Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of Section 5 on four separate occasions, each time
finding that "circumstances continued to justify the provision[]." See Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at
2510 (citing Georgia, 411 U.S. 526; City of Rome, 446 U.S. 156; Lopez, 525 U.S. 266); see also
Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 334. Twice, the Supreme Court has assessed facial challenges to
Section 5 like the one raised here by Shelby County, and both times the Court has found that
Section 5 passed constitutional muster based on evidence of continued voting discrimination by
covered jurisdictions. See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 334; City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 182.
The Supreme Court in Nw. Austin II made clear that past discrimination alone cannot
sustain Section 5, see 129 S. Ct. at 2511, but the Court by no means suggested that history was
irrelevant to the constitutional analysis. In Boerne and the cases applying the congruence and
proportionality framework since Boerne, the Supreme Court has acknowledged the significance
of an established history of unconstitutional discrimination in evaluating the need for remedial
enforcement legislation, often citing examples of discrimination at least several decades old in
order to justify the challenged legislation. See, e.g., Lane, 541 U.S. at 524 (describing the
historical "backdrop" of discrimination against the disabled, and citing examples of such
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discrimination dating from the late 1970s); Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 729 (recognizing "[t]he history of
the many state laws limiting women's employment opportunities," and providing examples of
cases upholding the validity of such laws as far back as 1873); Richard L. Hasen, Congressional
Power to Renew the Preclearance Provisions of the Voting Rights Act After Tennessee v. Lane,
66 OHIO ST . L.J. 177, 200 (2005) (interpreting Lane to mean that "old" evidence of voting
discrimination could be used to support a reauthorization of Section 5).
When courts assess individual instances of alleged voting discrimination like those
described in the 2006 legislative record -- for example, in the context of a Section 2 suit or a
direct constitutional challenge -- they also look to historical evidence to determine whether there
has been intentionally discriminatory, unconstitutional conduct. As the Supreme Court explained
in Rogers v. Lodge, "[e]vidence of historical discrimination is relevant to drawing an inference of
purposeful discrimination, particularly in cases . . . where the evidence shows that discriminatory
practices were commonly utilized, that they were abandoned when enjoined by the courts or
made illegal by civil rights legislation, and that they were replaced by practices which, though
neutral on their face serve to maintain the status quo." 458 U.S. at 625; see also Charleston
Cnty., 573 F. Supp. 2d at 305 (explaining that under Arlington Heights, "[t]he historical
background of the jurisdiction's decision" must be considered in determining whether
"discriminatory intent was in fact a motivating factor in a jurisdiction's enactment of
legislation"). Given the significance of historical context in assessing both the general need for
remedial, prophylactic enforcement legislation and whether particular instances of alleged voting
discrimination do, in fact, amount to constitutional violations, it is clear that any assessment of
the continued need for Section 5 cannot be undertaken in a historical vacuum.
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This Court agrees with the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I that Congress's "predictive
judgment" as to the continued need for Section 5 warrants "particular respect," given that it was a
prediction based "on experience, requiring less in the way of conjecture than when Congress
enacts legislation for the first time." 573 F. Supp. 2d at 267. In reauthorizing Section 5 in 2006,
Congress could not be certain as to whether unconstitutional voting discrimination would
increase in the absence of Section 5, and whether, just as in 1965, private enforcement actions
would once again prove insufficient to protect minorities' voting rights if Section 5 were allowed
to expire. But courts "must accord substantial deference to the predictive judgments of Congress
. . . particularly when, as here, those predictions are so firmly rooted in relevant history and
common sense." Id. (quoting McConnell v. FEC, 540 U.S. 93, 165 (2003)) (internal quotation
marks and citations omitted). As the Supreme Court noted in Nw. Austin II, Congress is a co-
equal Branch that is empowered under the Fifteenth Amendment "to determine in the first
instance what legislation is needed to enforce it," and courts must be cautious when engaging in
the grave and delicate role of assessing the constitutionality of carefully-considered legislation.
See 129 S. Ct. at 2513. And in 2006, Congress concluded after many months of deliberation and
compilation of a massive record that "a failure to reauthorize the temporary provisions [of the
Voting Rights Act], given the record established, would leave minority citizens with the
inadequate remedy of a Section 2 action," which, in light of past experience, would not be
"enough to combat the efforts of certain States and jurisdictions to discriminate against minority
citizens in the electoral process." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 57.
Congress's predictive judgment was based not only on the established pre-1965 history of
unconstitutional state-sponsored voting discrimination in the South, but also on evidence of
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Section 5's substantial deterrent effect over 40 years. Most importantly, it was based on the
extensive 15,000-page legislative record replete with direct and circumstantial evidence of
contemporary voting discrimination by covered jurisdictions -- voting discrimination that
occurred despite the existence of Section 5. This Court finds, then, that Congress satisfied its
burden in 2006 of identifying a continuing "history and pattern of unconstitutional . . .
discrimination by the States," Garrett, 531 U.S. at 368, which was sufficient to justify the
reauthorization of Section 5 as remedial, prophylactic enforcement legislation.
2. The Congruence and Proportionality of Section 5
The third and final step of the Boerne analysis requires the Court to decide whether
Section 5 still constitutes a "congruent and proportional" response to the problem that it targets.
Shelby County casts Section 5 as an unduly broad remedial measure, arguing that "[l]ike RFRA,
Section 5's 'sweeping coverage ensures its intrusion at every level of government, displacing laws
and prohibiting official actions' regarding any change in voting laws." Pl.'s Reply at 21 (quoting
Boerne, 521 U.S. at 532). In a sense, Shelby County is correct: Section 5 does require covered
jurisdictions to seek preclearance for all changes to their voting practices or procedures,
regardless of how trivial or innocuous those changes may be. See, e.g., Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct.
at 2511 (noting that "the preclearance requirement applies broadly"). But Section 5 is
nonetheless limited in meaningful ways. Indeed, the Supreme Court in Boerne praised Section 5
as an exemplary congruent and proportional remedy, pointing to the Act's temporal and
geographic limits as a means of distinguishing it from RFRA, which lacked a "termination date
or termination mechanism." See Boerne, 521 U.S. at 532-33. For purposes of assessing the
congruence and proportionality of Section 5 as reauthorized in 2006, then, it is significant that
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"the limiting features of section 5 the Court believed so compelling in the City of Boerne cases
all remain in place today." Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 274.
Despite Shelby County's suggestion that Section 5 has been transformed from an
"emergency" provision into a "permanent" intrusion on state sovereignty, see Pl.'s Reply at 43,
Congress in 2006 did not choose to make Section 5 permanent. Instead, it extended the
preclearance requirement for 25 years, and provided for congressional reconsideration of the
Act's temporary provisions in 15 years. See S. Rep. No. 109-295, at 5; 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a)(7),
(8). Although 25 years is longer than the 7 year extension of Section 5 upheld by the Supreme
Court in City of Rome, the 2006 extension is the same length as the 1982 extension. And
Congress had at least two good reasons for selecting 25 years as the length of the extension.
First, a renewal period of more than 20 years was needed to cover two decennial redistricting
cycles. Because "most section 5 activity 'occurs during redistricting, which only happens every
ten years following each census,' a shorter extension would [have] 'capture[d] only one
redistricting cycle,'" which would not have provided as much "'evidence . . . to allow Congress to
make the same reasoned determination regarding renewal'" that the 2006 Congress was able to
make as a result of the previous 25-year renewal of Section 5 in 1982. See Nw. Austin I, 573 F.
Supp. 2d at 267 (internal citation omitted); see also Introduction to Expiring Provisions 167
(Shaw Responses). Second, a shorter extension period would not have encouraged as many
covered jurisdictions to seek bailout. Under the 1982 Amendments, a covered jurisdiction
petitioning for bailout must demonstrate that it has complied with the Act's requirements for the
past ten years. See 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a). Any renewal of Section 5 for a period of less than ten
years therefore "'would [have] completely nullif[ied] the current incentive [for] covered
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jurisdictions to maintain clean voting records." Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 267 (internal
citation omitted).
For these reasons, Congress decided that "another 25 years of remedial measures (for a
total of 67 years of remedial measures under the VRA until 2032) remains appropriate given the
near century of discrimination the Act is designed to combat." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 58.
Like the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I, this Court "see[s] no basis for questioning this
quintessentially legislative judgment." 573 F. Supp. 2d at 268. Although the 25-year renewal
period is substantial, the fact that Section 5 continues to be temporally limited distinguishes it
from every piece of legislation that has been struck down by the Supreme Court as lacking
congruence and proportionality under Boerne.
In addition to its termination date, Section 5 also remains limited by its termination
mechanism, as jurisdictions may bailout of Section 5 coverage if they meet certain statutory
requirements. See Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2509; 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(a). The Court in Boerne
pointed to the existence of this termination mechanism, which "ensure[d] that the reach of the
Voting Rights Act was limited to those cases in which constitutional violations were most
likely," as indicative of Section 5's congruence and proportionality. See 521 U.S. at 533. Since
Boerne, the bailout provision has remained in effect. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 55 (noting
that "H.R. 9 preserves those same provisions" that were cited approvingly by the Court in
Boerne, as covered jurisdictions may still "escape coverage by showing the danger of substantial
voting discrimination has not materialized during the preceding (now ten) years"). Under 42
U.S.C. § 1973b(a), a jurisdiction may seek to terminate its coverage under Section 5 by filing a
declaratory judgment action demonstrating that, for the past ten years, "it has not used any
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forbidden voting test, has not been subject to any valid objection under § 5, and has not been
found liable for other voting rights violations; it must also show that it has 'engaged in
constructive efforts to eliminate intimidation and harassment' of voters, and similar measures."
Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2509 (quoting §§ 1973b(a)(1)(A)-(F)).
Shelby County questions whether bailout is "a realistic option," citing the fact that only
6% of the jurisdictions originally covered by the Act have successfully bailed out since 1965.
See Pl.'s Reply at 33. But this statistic is misleading. Since 1984 -- when the 1982 Amendments
liberalizing the bailout procedure went into effect -- the Attorney General has consented to every
bailout action that has been filed. See Berman Decl. ¶¶ 27, 29. Indeed, since the initiation of this
lawsuit in April 2010, the Attorney General has consented to an additional seven bailout suits
that have been filed by covered jurisdictions. See Def.'s Second Notice of Supp. Info. [Docket
Entry 81] at 2; Def.'s Mot. at 72; Berman Decl. ¶ 27. Congress heard testimony during the 2006
reauthorization hearings from J. Gerald Hebert, former Acting Chief of the Civil Rights Division
of the Justice Department, who, at the time of his testimony, had represented all of the covered
jurisdictions to successfully bail out since 1984. See Voting Rights Act: An Examination of the
Scope and Criteria for Coverage Under the Special Provisions of the Act, Hearing Before the
Subcomm. on the Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 90 (Oct. 20, 2005)
(hereinafter, "Scope and Criteria") (prepared statement of J. Gerald Hebert) (hereinafter, "Hebert
Prepared Statement"). According to Hebert, the reason for the low number of successful bailout
actions is not that "jurisdictions are applying and being denied" but that "jurisdictions are just not
applying." Id.
There are several plausible explanations for this failure to seek bailout. As Professor
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Karlan noted during her 2006 testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, it is possible that
"jurisdictions have not sought bailout because they have not satisfied all the conditions . . . and
see no point in a futile effort to bail out." Continuing Need 93 (Karlan Responses). This, of
course, could mean that the criteria for bailout are overly rigorous; but Congress in 2006 heard
testimony that "[m]ost of the factors to be demonstrated are easily proven for jurisdictions that do
not discriminate in their voting practices." See Scope and Criteria 90 (Hebert Prepared
Statement) (rejecting the contention that "the criteria [for bailout] are . . . too difficult to meet").
Accepting that the bailout requirements are appropriately tailored to identify those jurisdictions
with "clean" voting rights records, which appears to be the case, see id. at 104 (describing the
bailout requirements as "perfectly tailored"), the failure of so many covered jurisdictions to seek
bailout likely means that these jurisdictions -- or governmental units within these jurisdictions --
have, in fact, committed voting rights violations in recent years, thereby justifying their
continued coverage under the Act.
Another possible reason for the low bailout rate is the minimal administrative cost
associated with preclearance, and the fact that covered jurisdictions see no need to avoid the
preclearance requirement. Congress in 2006 heard testimony from Donald Wright, General
Counsel of the North Carolina State Board of Elections, who indicated that most preclearance
submissions "are routine matters that take only a few minutes to prepare using electronic
submission formats" that are "readily available." Policy Perspectives 313 (prepared statement of
Donald M. Wright). Wright characterized the practical cost of preclearance as "insignificant" --
with the exception of redistricting submissions, which tend to be relatively infrequent -- and he
went on to explain that the "consensus" among election officials in North Carolina is that Section
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5 imposes "a manageable burden providing benefits in excess of costs and time needed for
submissions." Id. Other witnesses similarly testified that the benefits of Section 5 far outweigh
its costs, given that the preparation of a preclearance submission is no more than "a small
administrative act." See Benefits and Costs 25 (testimony of Fred D. Gray); Continuing Need 64
(Earls Responses) (explaining that "the majority" of officials "did not find Section 5 requirements
to be burdensome").16
Indeed, in the Nw. Austin litigation, six states covered in whole or in part by Section 4(b)
-- Louisiana, California, North Carolina, Arizona, Mississippi, and New York -- submitted an
amicus brief in which they urged the Supreme Court not to strike down Section 5, arguing that
"the benefits of Section 5 greatly exceed the minimal burdens that Section 5 may impose on
States and their political subdivisions." See Amicus Br. for North Carolina, Arizona, California,
Louisiana, Mississippi and New York, Nw. Austin II, 2009 WL 815239, at *2, 17 (Mar. 25,
2009). According to these states, Section 5 does not constitute "an undue intrusion on state
sovereignty," because the administrative preclearance process is both "expeditious and cost-
effective," and any burden that Section 5 imposes on covered jurisdictions is more than justified
by Section 5's "substantial benefits." Id. at *1-2. Section 5's minimal administrative burden -- at
least according to these six states -- stands in stark contrast to the "heavy litigation burden"
16
The Court recognizes that administrative costs of compliance are not the only costs
imposed by Section 5. See, e.g., Bossier II, 528 U.S. at 336 (referring to "the 'substantial'
federalism costs that the preclearance procedure already exacts") (quoting Lopez, 525 U.S. at
282). Nevertheless, an assessment of a remedial statute's practical costs is relevant in
determining whether it constitutes congruent and proportional legislation. See, e.g., Boerne, 521
U.S. at 534 (describing the "substantial costs RFRA exacts, both in practical terms of imposing a
heavy litigation burden on the States and in terms of curtailing their traditional general regulatory
power").
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imposed by RFRA. See Boerne, 521 U.S. at 534.17
In addition to the evidence indicating that the practical cost of Section 5 compliance is
low, Congress in 2006 received evidence indicating that the practical cost of Section 2 litigation
is high. As one expert explained during her 2006 testimony before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, Section 2 litigation is both time-consuming and costly, as it requires attorneys "to
assemble plaintiffs with standing, file a case and engage in discovery," and "even on an expedited
schedule, trial will be months and possibly a year after the new law is put in place." Continuing
Need 61 (Earls Responses). Section 2 litigation places a heavy burden on minority plaintiffs,
who not only must fund the litigation, but also must prove that particular voting practices are, in
fact, discriminatory (unlike Section 5, which shifts the burden to covered jurisdictions to prove
that their voting changes are non-discriminatory). See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 328. Moreover,
even if minority plaintiffs are able to satisfy this evidentiary burden, Section 2 -- unlike Section 5
-- can only eradicate discriminatory voting practices after they have already been implemented to
the detriment of minority voters. See Def.'s Mot. at 55-57.
For all these reasons, several witnesses who testified during the 2006 reauthorization
hearings speculated that in the absence of Section 5, Section 2 would prove insufficient to protect
minority voting rights. See, e.g., Benefits and Costs 80 (responses of Armand Derfner to
questions submitted by Senators Cornyn, Coburn, Leahy, Kennedy, and Schumer) (describing
Section 2 cases as "expensive and time-consuming to litigate and hard to win," and refuting the
position that "Section 5 is not needed because other litigation will do the job"); Continuing Need
17
No states have sought to join in Shelby County's well-publicized challenge to Section
5.
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15 (testimony of Pamela S. Karlan) (explaining that Section 2 suits demand "huge amounts of
resources" and that Section 2 litigation is not "an adequate substitute in any way" for Section 5).
The inadequacy of alternative remedies like Section 2 in combating continued voting
discrimination by covered jurisdictions further confirms that Section 5 is "congruent and
proportional" to the problem that it targets. Cf. Garrett, 531 U.S. at 373 (noting that the Voting
Rights Act was only enacted after "traditional litigation had proved ineffective" in the course of
describing why the Act reflects an appropriately "detailed but limited remedial scheme").
Perhaps the most significant way in which Section 5 remains limited, however, is through
its application to only "those states with the most severe histories of discrimination" in voting.
See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 274. Since it was first enacted in 1965, Section 5 has never
applied nationwide, but has always targeted specific jurisdictions with a "long history of racial
disenfranchisement and dilution." Continuing Need 103 (Karlan Responses); see also supra pp.
11, 22. Boerne and its progeny have repeatedly highlighted Section 5's selective coverage in
explaining why it constitutes appropriately tailored remedial legislation. See, e.g., Boerne, 521
U.S. at 532-33 (comparing RFRA's nationwide application to the provisions of the Voting Rights
Act upheld in Katzenbach, which "were confined to those regions of the country where voting
discrimination had been most flagrant"); Garrett, 531 U.S. at 373 (explaining that the Voting
Rights Act, unlike Title I of the ADA, was targeted at "those areas of the Nation where abundant
evidence of States' systematic denial of [voting] rights was identified"); Fla. Prepaid, 527 U.S. at
647 (contrasting the "various limits" contained in the Voting Rights Act with the absence of any
such limits in the Patent and Plant Variety Protection Remedy Clarification Act). And like the
other limiting features of Section 5 that were lauded by the Supreme Court in Boerne, the
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coverage formula embodied in Section 4(b) remained unchanged when Congress reauthorized
Section 5 in 2006.
Given that Congress preserved all of Section 5's traditional limiting features when it
reauthorized Section 5 in 2006 (including its selective geographic scope, its termination date, and
its termination mechanism), after it heard testimony as to the low administrative costs imposed
by preclearance and the inability of Section 2 litigation to effectively prevent unconstitutional
voting discrimination, this Court sees no reason to question Congress's considered judgment that
Section 5 remains congruent and proportional to the problem that it targets.18 The question
remains, however, whether the geographical limitation of Section 5 through the coverage formula
of Section 4(b) is itself vulnerable to challenge.
IV. The Constitutionality of Section 4(b)
Shelby County challenges Section 4(b) on the ground that it unconstitutionally
differentiates between states in violation of "the principle of equal sovereignty" embodied in the
Tenth Amendment and Article IV of the Constitution, and that, like Section 5, it does not
constitute "'appropriate' enforcement legislation." See Pl.'s Mot. at 35; Compl. ¶ 43(c). Since
Katzenbach, it is well-established that "[t]he doctrine of the equality of States . . . does not bar
[the] approach" of selectively applying remedial legislation to only those "geographic areas
where immediate action seem[s] necessary." 383 U.S. at 328-29. Nevertheless, the Supreme
Court in Nw. Austin II made clear that "a departure from the fundamental principle of equal
sovereignty requires a showing that a statute's disparate geographic coverage is sufficiently
18
To the extent that Katzenbach's rationality standard rather than Boerne's congruence
and proportionality test provides the proper mode of analysis, the Court finds for the same
reasons that the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5 withstands scrutiny under Katzenbach.
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related to the problem that it targets." See 129 S. Ct. at 2512. According to Shelby County, "the
decades-old data fossilized in the coverage formula bear no relation whatsoever to 'current
political conditions' in those jurisdictions'" and "the 'evils' identified by Congress as a basis for
reauthorizing Section 5 are not 'concentrated in the jurisdictions singled out for preclearance.'"
Pl.'s Reply at 23 (quoting Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2512). Hence, Shelby County contends,
Section 4(b)'s coverage formula is no longer "sufficiently related" to the problem that it targets.
The Supreme Court in Nw. Austin II did not explicate the precise nature of the showing
needed to determine whether Section 5's disparate geographic coverage remains "sufficiently
related" to the problem that it targets. Several justices during oral argument seemed to suggest
that Congress might have to undertake a comparative analysis of unconstitutional voting
discrimination in covered versus non-covered jurisdictions and prove that the "States that are
now covered . . . are markedly different from the noncovered jurisdictions" in order to justify
Section 5's continued selective application. Nw. Austin II Oral Arg. Tr. at 22 (Apr. 29, 2009)
(Kennedy, J.); see also id. at 48 (Roberts, C.J., asking whether it is counsel's "position that today
southerners are more likely to discriminate than northerners"?); id. at 54 (Alito, J., asking counsel
whether "there is no [greater] discrimination in voting in Virginia than in North Carolina or in
Tennessee or in Arkansas or in Ohio"?); id. at 30 (Scalia, J., pressing counsel as to whether the
legislative record shows only that section 5 is still "needed" in covered jurisdictions, or also that
Section 5 is needed more in covered jurisdictions than in "the rest of the country"). Significantly,
however, the Supreme Court in Katzenbach did not conduct any detailed comparative analysis of
voting discrimination in covered versus non-covered jurisdictions when it upheld Section 4(b) in
1966, nor did the Court in City of Rome undertake such a comparative analysis when it upheld
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Section 5 (and its selective application) in 1980.
Hence, the Attorney General argues that it was sufficient for Congress in 2006 to choose
"to continue covering the jurisdictions that it had already subjected to the preclearance
requirement and that had not bailed out . . . based on findings that voting discrimination
continued to exist in those specific jurisdictions and that Section 5 preclearance remained
necessary to protect minority voting rights there." Def.'s Supp. Mem. [Docket Entry 75] at 3. No
comparative showing as to the precise degree of voting discrimination in covered versus non-
covered jurisdictions was necessary, the Attorney General contends, given that a set of
jurisdictions was lawfully subjected to preclearance in 1965 -- and in subsequent reauthorizations
of the Voting Rights Act -- and Congress learned that those same jurisdictions continued to
warrant coverage in 2006. See id. Ultimately, however, this issue need not be parsed further
here, because Congress in 2006 did examine both (1) whether voting discrimination persisted in
the jurisdictions traditionally covered by Section 4(b), and (2) whether voting discrimination
remained more prevalent in these jurisdictions than in the jurisdictions not subject to
preclearance under the Act. See Def.'s Supp. Mem. at 4.
This Court has already described in great detail the evidence in the legislative record
documenting the contemporary existence of unconstitutional voting discrimination by covered
jurisdictions. In assessing whether this evidence is sufficient to justify the continued application
of Section 5 to these jurisdictions, it is useful to start with Katzenbach -- the only Supreme Court
case in which the Court has outlined the precise nature of the showing needed to sustain Section
4(b). There, South Carolina argued -- like Shelby County does here -- that the coverage formula
was "awkwardly designed in a number of respects," 383 U.S. at 329, and it criticized the formula
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for excluding "certain localities which do not employ voting tests and devices, but for which
there is evidence of voting discrimination by other means," id. at 330-31. But the Supreme Court
dismissed these arguments as "largely beside the point." Id. at 329. Congress was not required
to create a perfect fit between the coverage formula and the states where voting discrimination
was the most prevalent, the Court explained, "so long as the distinctions drawn have some basis
in practical experience." Id. at 331 (emphasis added).
The Court in Katzenbach further suggested that Congress was not even required to
document evidence of unconstitutional voting discrimination in each of the states covered by
Section 4(b).19 According to the Court, Congress began working "with reliable evidence of
actual voting discrimination in a great majority of the States and political subdivisions affected
by the new remedies of the Act," and it created a formula that "was relevant to the problem of
voting discrimination." Id. at 329 (emphasis added). That formula -- based on the presence of a
voting test or device in a particular jurisdiction as well as low voter registration or turnout in that
19
This view would also seem to be supported by cases like Hibbs, in which the Supreme
Court upheld remedial enforcement legislation with nationwide application without requiring a
showing of unconstitutional conduct by every state to which the legislation applied. See, e.g.,
United States v. Blaine Cnty., Mon., 363 F.3d 897, 906 (9th Cir. 2004) (explaining that, based on
Hibbs, "it is clear that Congress need not document evidence of constitutional violations in every
state to adopt a statute that has nationwide applicability"); but see Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 741-43
(Scalia, J., dissenting) (criticizing the majority's failure to "even attempt to demonstrate that each
one of the 50 States covered by [the challenged legislation] was in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment"); Lane, 541 U.S. at 564 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (stating that he "would not . . .
abandon the requirement that Congress may impose § 5 prophylactic legislation only upon those
particular States in which there has been an identified history of relevant constitutional
violations"). It certainly would seem odd to place a higher evidentiary burden on Congress when
it seeks to tailor its remedies to those states where the remedies are most needed than when it
chooses to forego any attempt at tailoring, and instead simply enacts remedial legislation on a
nationwide scale. On the other hand, one could argue that a higher evidentiary showing is
justified in all circumstances in which Congress departs "from the fundamental principle of equal
sovereignty." 129 S. Ct. at 2512.
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jurisdiction -- was "relevant" because of the "long history" of states using these tests and devices
as a tool for perpetuating minority disenfranchisement. See id. at 330. Once Congress had
constructed this "relevant" formula -- which was rational "in both practice and theory," id. --
Congress was "entitled to infer a significant danger of the evil in the few remaining States and
political subdivisions covered by s[ection] 4(b) of the Act," id. at 329, "at least in the absence of
proof that they have been free of substantial voting discrimination in recent years," id. at 330.
Shelby County argues that the coverage formula is no longer "relevant" in 2006 because it
is based on voter registration and turnout data that "is now 38 years old and will be 59 years old
when the 2006 reauthorization expires," Pl.'s Mot. at 37, and because the "statutory coverage
factors are tied to the ability to cast a ballot" whereas Section 5 today is directed primarily at so-
called "second generation barriers" to voting, and not at states' attempted "interference with ballot
access." Pl.'s Supp. Mem. [Docket Entry 74] at 4; see also Pl.'s Mot. at 38. Certainly the
continued reliance on arguably outdated data is fair cause for concern. But ultimately Shelby
County misses the point. As previously explained, see supra pp. 11, 22, the specific election
years that have come to be used as "triggers" for coverage under Section 4(b) were never selected
because of something special that occurred in those years; instead, they were chosen as mere
proxies for identifying those jurisdictions with established histories of discriminating against
racial and language minority voters. See, e.g., Continuing Need 99 (Karlan Responses); id. at
110 (Pildes Responses). Notwithstanding the passage of time since the coverage formula was
last updated, "[t]he identity of the jurisdictions with that pervasive history and contemporary
voting discrimination has not changed." Id. at 103 (Karlan Responses). It is for this reason that
Chairman Sensenbrenner was so vigorously opposed to the Norwood Amendment's proposed
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"updating" of Section 4(b) in 2006, which would have made the coverage formula dependent on
voter turnout and registration data from the three most recent presidential elections. As
Chairman Sensenbrenner explained, any "updating" of the coverage formula along these lines
would eviscerate Section 5, since the coverage formula "is not, and I repeat 'not' predicated on
these [voter turnout and registration] statistics alone." See 152 Cong. Rec. H5181. In 1965,
states were only covered by Section 4(b) if "they applied discriminatory voting tests. And it was
this aspect of the formula that brought these jurisdictions with the most serious histories of
discrimination under Federal scrutiny," Chairman Sensenbrenner explained. Id.
It is also this aspect of the coverage formula -- that is, its link to jurisdictions with proven
histories of racial discrimination in voting -- that the Supreme Court has repeatedly cited in
noting that Section 5 constitutes an appropriate congruent and proportional remedy. See, e.g.,
Boerne 521 U.S. at 533 (contrasting Section 5's limited application with RFRA's nationwide
scope, and noting that the preclearance requirement "was placed only on jurisdictions with a
history of intentional discrimination in voting"); Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 741-43 (Scalia, J., dissenting)
(suggesting that the Court in City of Rome upheld "the most sweeping provisions of the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 . . . as a valid exercise of congressional power under § 2 of the Fifteenth
Amendment" only because those provisions "were restricted to States 'with a demonstrable
history of intentional racial discrimination in voting'") (quoting City of Rome, 446 U.S. at 177).
By preserving Section 4(b)'s existing coverage formula in 2006 -- under which
jurisdictions are subject to preclearance if they maintained a voting test or device in 1964, 1968,
or 1972, and had voter turnout or registration below 50% in that year's presidential election,
see 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(b) -- Congress ensured that Section 4(b) would continue to focus on those
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jurisdictions with the worst historical records of voting discrimination. At the same time,
Congress did not merely extend the preclearance requirement to these jurisdictions as a
"[p]unishment for long past sins," Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2525 (Thomas, J., concurring in
judgment in part, dissenting in part). Rather, Congress found substantial evidence of
contemporary voting discrimination by the very same jurisdictions that had histories of
unconstitutional conduct, which, it concluded, justified their continued coverage under the Act.
Finally, Congress found that any over- or under-inclusiveness in Section 4(b) could be remedied
through use of the bailout provision in Section 4(a), and the bail-in provision in Section 3(c).
See Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 274.
To the extent that an additional showing of a meaningful difference in voting
discrimination between covered and non-covered jurisdictions was nonetheless required to
demonstrate that the Act's coverage remains "sufficiently related to the problem that it targets,"
the legislative record does contain such evidence. For example, the study of Section 2 litigation
conducted by Ellen Katz and the Voting Rights Initiative at the University of Michigan Law
School found that 64 of the 114 reported Section 2 cases with outcomes favorable to minority
voters were filed in covered jurisdictions. See Impact and Effectiveness 974 (Katz Study).
Although a Section 2 violation does not require proof of unconstitutional discriminatory intent,
"many of the same factors required to make a finding of intentional discrimination" are the
factors used to determine whether there has been a violation of Section 2. See Def.'s Reply at 25;
see also Impact and Effectiveness 986 (Katz Study). Accordingly, the fact that more than 56% of
the successful Section 2 suits since 1982 have been filed in covered jurisdictions -- even though
those jurisdictions contain only 39.2% of the country's African-American population, 31.8% of
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the Latino population, 25% of the Native American population, and less than 25% of the overall
population -- suggests that unconstitutional discrimination remains more prevalent in covered
than in non-covered jurisdictions. See Impact and Effectiveness 974; see also Introduction to
Expiring Provisions 43-44 (responses of Chandler Davidson to questions submitted by Senators
Cornyn and Leahy). The disproportionate number of successful Section 2 suits in covered
jurisdictions is all the more remarkable considering that "Section 5 blocks and deters
discrimination in covered jurisdictions, and, consequently, one would expect to see fewer Section
2 cases there." Def.-Int. Cunningham and Pierson's Supp. Mem. [Docket Entry 73] at 14.
There is also evidence in the legislative record indicating that five of the six Deep South
states originally covered by Section 5 (namely, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and
South Carolina) accounted for as many as 66% of all federal observer coverages since 1982. See
H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 24-25. This would certainly seem to suggest that minority voter
intimidation and harassment continues to pose a greater problem in covered than in non-covered
states -- and that it continues to pose a particularly severe problem in the Deep South. In
addition, Congress received evidence in 2006 suggesting that minority candidates are less likely
to succeed in elections in covered than in non-covered jurisdictions, see Impact and Effectiveness
1008 (Katz Study) (explaining that the majority of Section 2 cases finding a lack of minority
candidate success have arisen in covered jurisdictions), and that racial appeals in elections were
more prevalent in covered than in non-covered jurisdictions, see id. at 1003 (Katz Study) (noting
that 63.2% of the Section 2 suits that found political campaigns to be characterized by racial
appeals arose in covered jurisdictions). Finally, there is evidence in the record indicating that
racially polarized voting is much more pronounced in covered than in non-covered jurisdictions.
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See Continuing Need 48 (Earls Responses). One study that assessed elections involving both
minority and white candidates found that "virtually all such elections in covered jurisdictions had
levels of white bloc voting at 70% or above while less than two thirds of such elections in non-
covered jurisdictions had white bloc voting at 70%." Id. In other words, there was a "wide
divergence" in the severity of racial bloc voting in covered and non-covered jurisdictions, which
reflects "an important empirical finding demonstrating that minorities have less ability to
participate equally in the political process in covered jurisdictions." Id.
Hence, although the legislative record is primarily focused on the persistence of voting
discrimination in covered jurisdictions -- rather than on the comparative levels of voting
discrimination in covered and non-covered jurisdictions -- the record does contain several
significant pieces of evidence suggesting that the 21st century problem of voting discrimination
remains more prevalent in those jurisdictions that have historically been subject to the
preclearance requirement. Like the three-judge court in Nw. Austin I, this Court declines to
second-guess Congress's 2006 determination to preserve the traditional coverage formula --
targeting those jurisdictions with proven histories of racial discrimination in voting -- which was
upheld in Katzenbach and "discussed with approval in the City of Boerne cases," 573 F. Supp. 2d
at 279, particularly given the 2006 legislative record demonstrating a continued prevalence of
voting discrimination in covered jurisdictions notwithstanding the considerable deterrent effect
of Section 5 in those jurisdictions over the preceding 25 years. Accordingly, this Court finds that
Section 4(b)'s disparate geographic coverage remains "sufficiently related" to the problem that it
targets.
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CONCLUSION
On the eve of the 2006 reauthorization of Section 5, many academics wondered whether,
given the effectiveness of Section 5 in deterring unconstitutional conduct, Congress would be
able to compile a sufficient record of recent unconstitutional voting discrimination to support
Section 5's continued existence; in other words, had Section 5 become "a victim of its own
success." See, e.g., Samuel Isaacharoff, Is Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act a Victim of Its
Own Success?, 104 COLUM . L. REV . 1710 (2004). One scholar characterized this phenomenon as
the "Bull Connor is Dead" problem: given the fact that "[m]ost of the original racist elected
officials are out of power," and that "those who remain in power . . . have for the most part been
deterred by preclearance," would Congress be able to point toward "a record of recent state-
driven discrimination . . . supporting renewal" of Section 5 in 2006? Hasen, 66 OHIO ST . L.J. at
177. Based on the evidence contained in the 15,000-page legislative record, this Court concludes
that Congress did just that. Despite the effectiveness of Section 5 in deterring unconstitutional
voting discrimination since 1965, Congress in 2006 found that voting discrimination by covered
jurisdictions had continued into the 21st century, and that the protections of Section 5 were still
needed to safeguard racial and language minority voters. Understanding the preeminent
constitutional role of Congress under the Fifteenth Amendment to determine the legislation
needed to enforce it, and the caution required of the federal courts when undertaking the "grave"
and "delicate" responsibility of judging the constitutionality of such legislation -- particularly
where the right to vote and racial discrimination intersect -- this Court declines to overturn
Congress's carefully considered judgment.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will deny Shelby County's motion for summary
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judgment, and grant the motions for summary judgment filed by the Attorney General and the
defendant-intervenors. A separate order has been filed on this date.
/s/
JOHN D. BATES
United States District Judge
Dated: September 21, 2011
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