Cite as: 565 U. S. ____ (2012) 1
Per Curiam
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 11–713, 11–714 and 11–715
_________________
RICK PERRY, GOVERNOR OF TEXAS, ET AL.,
APPELLANTS
11–713 v.
SHANNON PEREZ ET AL
RICK PERRY, GOVERNOR OF TEXAS, ET AL.,
APPELLANTS
11–714 v.
WENDY DAVIS ET AL.
RICK PERRY, GOVERNOR OF TEXAS, ET AL.,
APPELLANTS
11–715 v.
SHANNON PEREZ ET AL.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
[January 20, 2012]
PER CURIAM.
The 2010 census showed an enormous increase in Texas’
population, with over four million new residents. That
growth required the State to redraw its electoral districts
for the United States Congress, the State Senate, and the
State House of Representatives, in order to comply with
the Constitution’s one-person, one-vote rule. See Georgia
v. Ashcroft, 539 U. S. 461, 488, n. 2 (2003). The State also
had to create new districts for the four additional congres-
2 PERRY v. PEREZ
Per Curiam
sional seats it received.
Texas is a “covered jurisdiction” under Section 5 of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. See 79 Stat. 439, 42 U. S. C.
§1973c(a); 28 CFR pt. 51, App. (2011). Section 5 suspends
all changes to a covered jurisdiction’s election procedures,
including district lines, until those changes are submitted
to and approved by a three-judge United States District
Court for the District of Columbia, or the Attorney Gen-
eral. See Northwest Austin Municipal Util. Dist. No.
One v. Holder, 557 U. S. 193, 198 (2009). This process,
known as preclearance, requires the covered jurisdiction
to demonstrate that its proposed change “neither has the
purpose nor will have the effect of denying or abridging
the right to vote on account of race or color.” §1973c(a).
This Court has been emphatic that a new electoral map
cannot be used to conduct an election until it has been
precleared. See, e.g., Clark v. Roemer, 500 U. S. 646, 652
(1991).
The day after completing its new electoral plans, Texas
submitted them to the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia for preclearance. The preclearance
process remains ongoing. Texas was unsuccessful in its
bid for summary judgment, and a trial is scheduled in the
coming weeks. Meanwhile, various plaintiffs—appellees
here—brought suit in Texas, claiming that the State’s
newly enacted plans violate the United States Constitu-
tion and §2 of the Voting Rights Act.1 Appellees alleged,
inter alia, that Texas’ enacted plans discriminate against
Latinos and African-Americans and dilute their voting
strength, notwithstanding the fact that Latinos and
African-Americans accounted for three-quarters of Texas’
——————
1 Section
2 prohibits “any State or political subdivision” from impos-
ing any electoral practice “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(a).
Cite as: 565 U. S. ____ (2012) 3
Per Curiam
population growth since 2000. A three-judge panel of the
United States District Court for the Western District of
Texas was convened. See 28 U. S. C. §2284. That court
heard argument and held a trial with respect to the plain-
tiffs’ claims, but withheld judgment pending resolution
of the preclearance process in the D. C. court. Cf. Branch
v. Smith, 538 U. S. 254, 283–285 (2003) (KENNEDY, J.,
concurring).
As Texas’ 2012 primaries approached, it became increas-
ingly likely that the State’s newly enacted plans would not
receive preclearance in time for the 2012 elections. And
the State’s old district lines could not be used, because
population growth had rendered them inconsistent with
the Constitution’s one-person, one-vote requirement. It
thus fell to the District Court in Texas to devise interim
plans for the State’s 2012 primaries and elections. See
Connor v. Finch, 431 U. S. 407, 414–415 (1977). After
receiving proposals from the parties and holding extensive
hearings, that court issued its interim plans. The court
unanimously agreed on an interim State Senate plan, but
Judge Smith dissented with respect to the congressional
and State House plans. Texas asked this Court to stay the
interim plans pending an appeal, arguing that they were
unnecessarily inconsistent with the State’s enacted plans.
This Court granted the stay and noted probable jurisdic-
tion. 565 U. S. ___ (2011).
Redistricting is “primarily the duty and responsibility
of the State.” Chapman v. Meier, 420 U. S. 1, 27 (1975).
The failure of a State’s newly enacted plan to gain pre-
clearance prior to an upcoming election does not, by
itself, require a court to take up the state legislature’s task.
That is because, in most circumstances, the State’s last
enacted plan simply remains in effect until the new plan
receives preclearance. But if an intervening event—most
commonly, as here, a census—renders the current plan
unusable, a court must undertake the “unwelcome obliga-
4 PERRY v. PEREZ
Per Curiam
tion” of creating an interim plan. Connor, supra, at 415.
Even then, the plan already in effect may give sufficient
structure to the court’s endeavor. Where shifts in a
State’s population have been relatively small, a court may
need to make only minor or obvious adjustments to the
State’s existing districts in order to devise an interim plan.
But here the scale of Texas’ population growth appears
to require sweeping changes to the State’s current dis-
tricts. In areas where population shifts are so large that
no semblance of the existing plan’s district lines can be
used, that plan offers little guidance to a court drawing an
interim map. The problem is perhaps most obvious in
adding new congressional districts: The old plan gives no
suggestion as to where those new districts should be
placed. In addition, experience has shown the difficulty of
defining neutral legal principles in this area, for redistrict-
ing ordinarily involves criteria and standards that have
been weighed and evaluated by the elected branches in the
exercise of their political judgment. See, e.g., Miller v.
Johnson, 515 U. S. 900, 915–916 (1995); White v. Weiser,
412 U. S. 783, 795–796 (1973). Thus, if the old state dis-
tricts were the only source to which a district court could
look, it would be forced to make the sort of policy judg-
ments for which courts are, at best, ill suited.
To avoid being compelled to make such otherwise stand-
ardless decisions, a district court should take guidance
from the State’s recently enacted plan in drafting an
interim plan. That plan reflects the State’s policy judg-
ments on where to place new districts and how to shift
existing ones in response to massive population growth.
This Court has observed before that “faced with the neces-
sity of drawing district lines by judicial order, a court, as a
general rule, should be guided by the legislative policies
underlying” a state plan—even one that was itself unen-
forceable—“to the extent those policies do not lead to
violations of the Constitution or the Voting Rights Act.”
Cite as: 565 U. S. ____ (2012) 5
Per Curiam
Abrams v. Johnson, 521 U. S. 74, 79 (1997) (holding that
the District Court properly declined to defer to a pre-
cleared plan that used race as a predominant factor). For
example, in White, supra, an equal population challenge,
this Court reversed a District Court’s choice of interim
plan, and required the District Court to choose a plan
more closely resembling an enacted state plan, even
though the state plan itself had been held to violate the
one-person, one-vote principle. Similarly, in Upham v.
Seamon, although the state plan as a whole had been
denied §5 preclearance, this Court directed a District
Court to “defer to the legislative judgments the [state]
plans reflect,” insofar as they involved districts found to
meet the preclearance standard. 456 U. S. 37, 40–41
(1982) (per curiam). See also Whitcomb v. Chavis, 403
U. S. 124, 160–161 (1971) (equal protection challenge).
Section 5 prevents a state plan from being implemented
if it has not been precleared. But that does not mean that
the plan is of no account or that the policy judgments it
reflects can be disregarded by a district court drawing an
interim plan. On the contrary, the state plan serves as a
starting point for the district court. It provides important
guidance that helps ensure that the district court appro-
priately confines itself to drawing interim maps that
comply with the Constitution and the Voting Rights Act,
without displacing legitimate state policy judgments with
the court’s own preferences.
A district court making such use of a State’s plan must,
of course, take care not to incorporate into the interim
plan any legal defects in the state plan. See Abrams,
supra, at 85–86; White, supra, at 797. Where a State’s
plan faces challenges under the Constitution or §2 of the
Voting Rights Act, a district court should still be guided by
that plan, except to the extent those legal challenges are
shown to have a likelihood of success on the merits. Plain-
tiffs seeking a preliminary injunction of a statute must
6 PERRY v. PEREZ
Per Curiam
normally demonstrate that they are likely to succeed on
the merits of their challenge to that law. See Winter v.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 555 U. S. 7, 20
(2008). There is no reason that plaintiffs seeking to defeat
the policies behind a State’s redistricting legislation
should not also have to meet that standard. And because
the local district court—here, the District Court for the
Western District of Texas—will ultimately decide the
merits of claims under §2 and the Constitution, it is well
equipped to apply that familiar standard.
The calculus with respect to §5 challenges is somewhat
different. Where a State has sought preclearance in the
District Court for the District of Columbia, §5 allows only
that court to determine whether the state plan complies
with §5. Consistent with that design, we have made clear
that other district courts may not address the merits of §5
challenges. See, e.g., Perkins v. Matthews, 400 U. S. 379,
385 (1971). The local district court drafting an interim
plan must therefore be careful not to prejudge the merits
of the preclearance proceedings. The court should pre-
sume neither that a State’s effort to preclear its plan will
succeed nor that it will fail.
The need to avoid prejudging the merits of preclearance
is satisfied by taking guidance from a State’s policy judg-
ments unless they reflect aspects of the state plan that
stand a reasonable probability of failing to gain §5 pre-
clearance. And by “reasonable probability” this Court
means in this context that the §5 challenge is not insub-
stantial. That standard ensures that a district court is not
deprived of important guidance provided by a state plan
due to §5 challenges that have no reasonable probability of
success but still respects the jurisdiction and prerogative
of those responsible for the preclearance determination.
And the reasonable probability standard adequately bal-
ances the unique preclearance scheme with the State’s
sovereignty and a district court’s need for policy guidance
Cite as: 565 U. S. ____ (2012) 7
Per Curiam
in constructing an interim map. This Court recently noted
the “serious constitutional questions” raised by §5’s intru-
sion on state sovereignty. Northwest Austin, 557 U. S., at
204. Those concerns would only be exacerbated if §5
required a district court to wholly ignore the State’s poli-
cies in drawing maps that will govern a State’s elections,
without any reason to believe those state policies are
unlawful.
Appellees, however, contend that §5 demands exactly
that. In their view, this Court’s precedents require district
courts to ignore any state plan that has not received §5
preclearance. But the cases upon which appellees rely
hold only that a district court may not adopt an unpre-
cleared plan as its own. See Lopez v. Monterey County,
519 U. S. 9 (1996); McDaniel v. Sanchez, 452 U. S. 130
(1981). They say nothing about whether a district court
may take guidance from the lawful policies incorporated in
such a plan for aid in drawing an interim map. Indeed, in
Upham this Court ordered a District Court to defer to the
unobjectionable aspects of a State’s plan even though that
plan had already been denied preclearance.
In this case, the District Court stated that it had
“giv[en] effect to as much of the policy judgments in the
Legislature’s enacted map as possible.” 1 App. 182. At
the same time, however, the court said that it was re-
quired to draw an “independent map” following “neutral
principles that advance the interest of the collective public
good.” Id., at 169–170. In the court’s view, it “was not
required to give any deference to the Legislature’s enacted
plan,” and it instead applied principles that it determined
“place the interests of the citizens of Texas first.” Id., at
171. To the extent the District Court exceeded its mission
to draw interim maps that do not violate the Constitution
or the Voting Rights Act, and substituted its own concept
of “the collective public good” for the Texas Legislature’s
determination of which policies serve “the interests of the
8 PERRY v. PEREZ
Per Curiam
citizens of Texas,” the court erred.
In proclaiming its ability to draw an interim map “with-
out regard to political considerations,” the District Court
relied heavily on Balderas v. Texas, No. 6:01cv158, 2001
U. S. Dist. LEXIS 25740 (ED Tex., Nov. 14, 2001)
(per curiam), summarily aff’d, 536 U. S. 919 (2002). 1
App. 182. But in Balderas there was no recently enacted
state plan to which the District Court could turn. Without
the benefit of legislative guidance in making distinctly
legislative policy judgments, the Balderas court was per-
haps compelled to design an interim map based on its own
notion of the public good. Because the District Court here
had the benefit of a recently enacted plan to assist it, the
court had neither the need nor the license to cast aside
that vital aid.
Some specific aspects of the District Court’s plans seem
to pay adequate attention to the State’s policies, others do
not, and the propriety of still others is unclear. For exam-
ple, in drawing State House districts in North and East
Texas, the District Court closely followed the State’s poli-
cies. See 1 App. 173; 5 id., at 25–26. Although Texas’
entire State House plan is challenged in the §5 proceed-
ings, there is apparently no serious allegation that the
district lines in North and East Texas have a discrimina-
tory intent or effect. 1 id., at 187, n. 4. The District Court
was thus correct to take guidance from the State’s plan in
drawing the interim map for those regions. But the court
then altered those districts to achieve de minimis popula-
tion variations—even though there was no claim that the
population variations in those districts were unlawful.
Id., at 171, and n. 8. In the absence of any legal flaw in
this respect in the State’s plan, the District Court had no
basis to modify that plan.2
——————
2 This Court has stated that court-drawn maps are held to a higher
standard of acceptable population variation than legislatively enacted
Cite as: 565 U. S. ____ (2012) 9
Per Curiam
The District Court also erred in refusing to split voting
precincts (called “voter tabulation districts” in Texas) in
drawing the interim plans. Id., at 90, 102–103. That
choice alone prevented the District Court from following
the lead of Texas’ enacted plan—which freely splits pre-
cincts—in many areas where there were no legal chal-
lenges to the plan’s details. See id., at 102–103, 116, n. 24.
The District Court was apparently motivated by a well-
intentioned desire to save Texas the time and expense of
reconfiguring precincts, and to ensure that the court’s
interim plan could be implemented in time for the upcom-
ing election. Id., at 90, 102–103, 109. But the State’s plan
accepted the costs of splitting precincts in order to accom-
plish other goals, and Texas law expressly allows recasting
precincts when redistricting. See Tex. Elec. Code Ann.
§42.032 (West 2010). If a State has chosen to accept the
burden of changing its precincts, and its decision to do so
is otherwise lawful, there is no warrant for a district court
to ignore the State’s decision. Of course, in this case it
may well be that Texas will reexamine this issue in light
of the exigencies caused by the impending election.
The District Court also appears to have unnecessarily
ignored the State’s plans in drawing certain individual
districts. For example, the District Court drew an interim
District 77 that resembles neither the State’s newly enact-
ed plan, nor the previous plan in effect prior to the 2010
census. The court said that it did so in response to alleged
constitutional violations. 1 App. 174–175. But the court
did not say that those allegations were plausible, much
less likely to succeed. Nor did the District Court rely on a
finding that the relevant aspects of the state plan stood a
——————
maps. See, e.g., Abrams v. Johnson, 521 U. S. 74, 98 (1997). But this
Court has also explained that those “stricter standard[s]” are not
triggered where a district court incorporates unchallenged portions of a
State’s map into an interim map. Upham v. Seamon, 456 U. S. 37, 42–
43 (1982) (per curiam).
10 PERRY v. PEREZ
Per Curiam
reasonable probability of failing to gain §5 preclearance,
see supra, at 6. Without such a determination, the Dis-
trict Court had no basis for drawing a district that does
not resemble any legislatively enacted plan.
The court’s approach in drawing other districts was
unclear. The interim plan’s Congressional District 33, for
example, disregards aspects of the State’s plan that ap-
pear to be subject to strong challenges in the §5 proceed-
ing. See 3 id., at 600–601; 5 id., at 12–14. That much
seems appropriate, but there are grounds for concern with
the path the District Court followed from there. The
court’s order suggests that it may have intentionally
drawn District 33 as a “minority coalition opportunity
district” in which the court expected two different minority
groups to band together to form an electoral majority.
1 id., at 147. The order is somewhat ambiguous on this
point—some portions suggest that the court deliberately
designed such a district, other parts suggest that it drew
the district solely as a response to population growth in
the area. Compare id., at 146–147 (“Because much of the
growth that occurred in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex
was attributable to minorities, the new district 33 was
drawn as a minority coalition opportunity district”), with
id., at 144 (“The Court has nowhere expressly sought to
increase the performance of any opportunity district above
benchmark”). If the District Court did set out to create a
minority coalition district, rather than drawing a district
that simply reflected population growth, it had no basis for
doing so. Cf. Bartlett v. Strickland, 556 U. S. 1, 13–15
(2009) (plurality opinion).
Because it is unclear whether the District Court for the
Western District of Texas followed the appropriate stand-
ards in drawing interim maps for the 2012 Texas elec-
tions, the orders implementing those maps are vacated,
and the cases are remanded for further proceedings con-
sistent with this opinion.
Cite as: 565 U. S. ____ (2012) 11
Per Curiam
The judgment shall issue forthwith.
It is so ordered.
Cite as: 565 U. S. ____ (2012) 1
THOMAS, J., concurring in judgment
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
Nos. 11–713, 11–714 and 11–715
_________________
RICK PERRY, GOVERNOR OF TEXAS, ET AL.,
APPELLANTS
11–713 v.
SHANNON PEREZ, ET AL
RICK PERRY, GOVERNOR OF TEXAS, ET AL.,
APPELLANTS
11–714 v.
WENDY DAVIS, ET AL.
RICK PERRY, GOVERNOR OF TEXAS, ET AL.,
APPELLANTS
11–715 v.
SHANNON PEREZ, ET AL.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
[January 20, 2012]
JUSTICE THOMAS, concurring in the judgment.
The Court proceeds from the premise that court-drawn
interim plans are necessary in part because Texas’ newly
enacted redistricting plans are unenforceable for lack of
preclearance under §5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Ante, at 1–3. In my view, Texas’ failure to timely obtain
§5 preclearance of its new plans is no obstacle to their
implementation, because, as I have previously explained,
§5 is unconstitutional. See Northwest Austin Municipal
Util. Dist. No. One v. Holder, 557 U. S. 193, 212 (2009)
(THOMAS, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissent-
ing in part). Although Texas’ new plans are being chal-
2 PERRY v. PEREZ
THOMAS, J., concurring in judgment
lenged on the grounds that they violate the Federal Con-
stitution and §2 of the Voting Rights Act, they have not
yet been found to violate any law. Accordingly, Texas’
duly enacted redistricting plans should govern the upcom-
ing elections. I would therefore vacate the interim orders
and remand for the United States District Court for the
Western District of Texas to consider appellees’ constitu-
tional and §2 challenges in the ordinary course.