IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
No. 125,083
In the Matter of the Petition of DEREK SCHMIDT, Attorney General,
to Determine the Validity of
Substitute for Senate Bill 563.
SYLLABUS BY THE COURT
In this original action brought by the Attorney General of Kansas to determine the
validity of the Legislature's reapportionment of state senatorial and representative
districts, it is held the legislative enactment is valid.
Original action. Decision announced May 18, 2022. Opinion filed June 21, 2022. Validity of
Substitute for Senate Bill 563, reapportioning state senatorial and representative districts, is upheld.
Derek Schmidt, attorney general, argued the cause, and Jeffrey A. Chanay, chief deputy attorney
general, Brant M. Laue, solicitor general, Dwight R. Carswell, deputy solicitor general, Shannon
Grammel, deputy solicitor general, and Kurtis K. Wiard, assistant solicitor general, were with him on the
petition and briefs for petitioner.
Mark P. Johnson, of Dentons US LLP, of Kansas City, Missouri, argued the cause, and Stephen
R. McAllister, of the same firm, was with him on the brief for intervenor Senator Thomas Holland.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
STEGALL, J.: For the first time in 20 years our court, as required by the Kansas
Constitution, is called on to review state reapportionment legislation for compliance with
state and federal law. Article 10, section 1 imposes on us a duty to review the Kansas
State House and Kansas State Senate reapportionment maps contained within Substitute
1
for Senate Bill 563 (Sub. SB 563) to ensure the district lines are "valid." We hold those
maps contain no constitutional errors.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Kansas has 40 senatorial districts and 125 representative districts. Kan. Const. art.
2, § 2; K.S.A. 4-101. Last year, the Kansas Legislature began the process of preparing to
redraw those districts according to the 2020 Census. Through in-person and virtual
meetings, the House and Senate Committees on Redistricting held a listening tour of 18
town hall meetings across the state. All meetings were live-streamed, and the public was
invited to submit written and/or oral testimony.
Also playing a role in the process is the document known as "the Guidelines." The
Proposed Guidelines and Criteria for 2022 Kansas Congressional and State Legislative
Redistricting are a set of principles that set forth "traditional redistricting criteria"
substantively the same as those used in the 2012 redistricting cycle. The Guidelines
provide calculations for the correct population metrics to determine district size, as well
as general priorities for the Legislature to consider.
The Senate Committee on Ways and Means introduced SB 563 on March 14,
2022, which contained proposed maps for both the Senate and House of Representatives.
After it was introduced, the bill was referred by the Senate Vice President (under the
authority of the Senate President) to the Senate Committee on Redistricting. The report of
the Senate Committee on Redistricting recommended that Sub. SB 563 be adopted as
amended. On March 16, the Senate Committee of the Whole adopted the report of the
Senate Committee on Redistricting and then proceeded to debate Sub. SB 563. Further
proposed amendments to Sub. SB 563 were all rejected. Sub. SB 563 was considered on
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final action on March 17. The Senate passed Sub. SB 563 by a vote of 28 to 8 (23
Republicans and 5 Democrats voting in favor; 4 Democrats and 4 Republicans opposed).
The House of Representatives then received Sub. SB 563 from the Senate. Sub.
SB 563 was referred to the Committee of the Whole on March 21, 2022. The Committee
of the Whole amended Sub. SB 563 to switch to the House's preferred map for
representative districts. Sub. SB 563 was then advanced to final action. On March 23, the
House passed Sub. SB 563 as amended by a vote of 112 to 9 (78 Republicans and 34
Democrats voting in favor; 6 Republicans and 3 Democrats opposed).
Thus, the two maps at issue here—colloquially known as the Kansas State Senate
map "Liberty 3" and the Kansas State House map "Free State 3F"—were approved by
bipartisan majorities.
On March 28, 2022, the Senate nonconcurred in the House's amendments and
requested a Conference Committee be appointed. The House acceded. The President of
the Senate and Speaker of the House appointed their respective chamber's members of the
Conference Committee. The Conference Committee issued its report on March 30, and
that same day, the Senate adopted the Conference Committee report by a vote of 29 to 11
(25 Republicans and 4 Democrats voting in favor; 4 Republicans and 7 Democrats
opposed). The House adopted it by a vote of 83 to 40 (80 Republicans and 3 Democrats
voting in favor; 36 Democrats and 4 Republicans opposed). The legislative record reveals
that some of the votes changed between the first vote described above to the March 30
vote due to the Conference Committee's addition to Sub. SB 563 of the State Board of
Education Map (which is not at issue in this matter).
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Sub. SB 563 was then enrolled and presented to Governor Laura Kelly on April 8,
2022. Governor Kelly signed Sub. SB 563 into law on April 15, and the Secretary of
State published Sub. SB 563 in the Kansas Register on April 21.
On April 25, Attorney General Derek Schmidt petitioned our court to determine
the validity of Sub. SB 563, as required by Article 10, section 1(b). The petition initiates a
unique original action in the Kansas Supreme Court. This one-of-a-kind action is "not
technically an adversary proceeding" even though there may be persons in opposition to
the apportionment. In re Senate Bill No. 220, 225 Kan. 628, 629-30, 593 P.2d 1 (1979).
Once the petition was filed, we entered a scheduling order permitting interested persons
to present their view by submitting a written statement, as required by Kansas
Constitution article 10, section 1(d). The scheduling order also provided directions for
any person wishing to file a motion to intervene or file an amicus brief.
This court received one motion to intervene from Senator Thomas Holland, a
Democrat from Baldwin City, who has served Senate District 3 since 2009. As a result of
the redrawn boundaries in Sub. SB 563, Senator Holland now lives in District 9, where
incumbent Republican Senator Beverly Gossage currently serves. Senator Holland
contests the procedure by which Sub. SB 563 was enacted and the new boundaries of
Districts 3 and 9.
DISCUSSION
Article 10, section 1 of the Kansas Constitution provides:
"(a) At its regular session in 1992, and at its regular session every tenth year
thereafter, the legislature shall by law reapportion the state senatorial districts and
representative districts on the basis of the population of the state as established by the
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most recent census of population taken and published by the United States census bureau.
...
"(b) Within 15 days after the publication of an act reapportioning the legislative
districts within the time specified in (a), the attorney general shall petition the supreme
court of the state to determine the validity thereof. The supreme court, within 30 days
from the filing of the petition, shall enter its judgment. Should the supreme court
determine that the reapportionment statute is invalid, the legislature shall enact a statute
of reapportionment conforming to the judgment of the supreme court within 15 days.
"(c) Upon enactment of a reapportionment to conform with a judgment under (b),
the attorney general shall apply to the supreme court of the state to determine the validity
thereof. The supreme court, within 10 days from the filing of such application, shall enter
its judgment. Should the supreme court determine that the reapportionment statute is
invalid, the legislature shall again enact a statute reapportioning the legislative districts in
compliance with the direction of and conforming to the mandate of the supreme court
within 15 days after entry thereof.
"(d) Whenever a petition or application is filed under this section, the supreme
court, in accordance with its rules, shall permit interested persons to present their views."
To determine whether a reapportionment act is "valid" under Article 10, section
1(b), we "examine both the procedure by which the act became law and the substance of
the apportionment act to determine that it satisfies constitutional requirements." In re
House Bill No. 3083, 251 Kan. 597, 601, 836 P.2d 574 (1992) (quoting In re Substitute
for House Bill No. 2492, 245 Kan. 118, Syl. ¶ 1, 775 P.2d 663 [1989]). We evaluate the
act for substantive compliance under both the federal and state Constitutions. To do this,
we (1) ensure the act comports with the "one person one vote" standard; and (2) ensure
the act does not invidiously discriminate.
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We also consider the legislation's validity under the federal Voting Rights Act
(VRA)—even if no objection has been raised on that ground—because Article 10 directs
us to determine the Act's "validity," which we have said does not limit our automatic
review to only constitutional issues. In re House Bill No. 3083, 251 Kan. at 610. The
VRA protects against certain kinds of minority vote dilution in a redistricting plan. Just
because a plan satisfies the one person one vote standard, we will not assume it "is safe
from a successful challenge if it has discriminated against minorities." 251 Kan. at 610.
In the past, we have indicated that invidious discrimination may include
discrimination based on political party. See In re House Bill No. 2620, 225 Kan. 827, Syl.
¶ 4, 595 P.2d 334 (1979) ("Substantially equal districts may be invidiously discriminatory
because they were organized in such a way as to minimize or cancel out the voting
strength of racial or political elements of the voting population."). So the reader may
legitimately wonder whether claims of political gerrymandering in state maps are
justiciable under Article 10, section 1, after our decision today in Rivera v. Schwab, 315
Kan. ___ (No. 125,092, this day decided), slip op. at 35-36 (holding that such claims are
nonjusticiable in the context of a congressional map). But we expressly decline to reach
that question here as it is not necessary to the outcome since there are no colorable claims
of political gerrymandering and a review of the record reveals no significant evidence of
line drawing motivated by political gain. See In re House Bill No. 3083, 251 Kan. 597,
836 P.2d 574 (1992).
Sub. SB 563 is procedurally valid
Intervenor Senator Holland's arguments focus largely on the procedure by which
Sub. SB 563 was adopted. Senator Holland criticizes how the listening tour was
conducted, the speed with which Sub. SB 563 was adopted, the lack of Democratic
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participation in drafting the Senate map before it was introduced, and the fact that the
Legislature did not closely follow the Guidelines.
In past cases, when evaluating the procedure by which the reapportionment
legislation was passed, we have considered whether applicable legislative rules and
constitutional and statutory law concerning the enactment of legislation were followed.
If the legislation was tainted by procedural flaws that would not comport with all
constitutional requirements for lawmaking, or if there was evidence that formal
legislative meetings or action were conducted in secret, there could be a procedural
problem. In re House Bill No. 3083, 251 Kan. at 603; 2002 Substitute for House Bill
2625, 273 Kan. at 723. Senator Holland points to these statements in our caselaw and
argues by extension that the different, process-related grounds he cites likewise render
Sub. SB 563 invalid. We disagree.
The only procedural irregularities or defects that could, standing alone, provide an
independent basis for invalidating a reapportionment scheme are the requirements set
forth in the Kansas Constitution concerning the enactment of legislation—i.e., the
provisions that dictate how a bill must be passed by both houses of the Legislature and
signed by the Governor. In re House Bill No. 3083, 251 Kan. at 602-03; In re House Bill
No. 2620, 225 Kan. 827, 841, 595 P.2d 334 (1979); Harris v. Shanahan, 192 Kan. 183,
191, 200, 387 P.2d 771 (1963). The Attorney General, in his petition, has set forth a step-
by-step analysis of the procedure which Sub. SB 563 followed in arriving on the
Governor's desk. The procedural steps need not be repeated here. We have examined
them and conclude all necessary procedural steps were taken. The Act was properly
approved in public meetings by both the House and Senate, and it was signed into law by
Governor Kelly.
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We will not invalidate reapportionment legislation solely because of allegations
that the Legislature has not adhered to the Guidelines. We take no issue with claims that
the Guidelines contain good redistricting policies (though we decline to affirmatively
describe the Guidelines with appellations such as "good government" or "best practices"
because courts are ill-suited to make the kinds of policy pronouncements contained in the
Guidelines). But even accepting at face value the idea that the Guidelines should have
been followed, a failure to do so cannot as a matter of law render the subsequent
legislation procedurally invalid. Situations may arise where legislative policies create
competing interests which the Legislature must balance. See, e.g., Essex v. Kobach, 874
F. Supp. 2d 1069, 1083, 1091 (D. Kan. 2012) (expressing "reluctan[ce]" to rely very
heavily on the Legislature's adopted guidelines, instead relying on federal constitutional
guidance and only "considering to a much lesser degree the state's legislative policies
guiding redistricting"); Bolz v. State Farm Mut. Ins. Co., 274 Kan. 420, 424, 52 P.3d 898
(2002) ("Where the legislature declares the public policy and there is no constitutional
impediment, the question of the wisdom, justice, or expediency of the legislation is for
the legislature and not for the courts."); Hunt v. Eddy, 150 Kan. 1, 4, 90 P.2d 747 (1939)
("No principle of law is more firmly established in our system of jurisprudence than the
principle that the lawmakers possess the sole authority to determine what legislative
policies will advance the public interest. Such policies present questions of statecraft and
are determined by the legislative branch of government, and not by the courts. Courts are
concerned only with the [constitutional] validity of the enactment. [Citations omitted.]").
Thus, our consideration of validity is grounded in the following inquiry—does the
redistricting legislation comport with procedural requirements for lawmaking and
substantive constitutional and statutory requirements? A failure by the Legislature to
follow its own guidelines may, in certain limited circumstances, be a leading indicator
that there could be a procedural or substantive problem with the legislation. But Senator
Holland does not advance this argument. Rather, he suggests the alleged irregularities and
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departures from the Guidelines provide an independent basis to challenge the maps.
Therefore, the alleged defects raised by Senator Holland do not call into question the
constitutional validity of the procedure by which Sub. SB 563 became law. We find that
Sub. SB 563 is procedurally valid.
Sub. SB 563 is substantively valid
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment "requires that a State
make an honest and good faith effort to construct districts, in both houses of its
legislature, as nearly of equal population as is practicable." Reynolds v. Sims, 377 U.S.
533, 577, 84 S. Ct. 1362, 12 L. Ed. 2d 506 (1964); see also In re Senate Bill 220, 225
Kan. at 633 (describing the equal protection underpinnings of reapportionment and
remarking that "[t]his doctrine has been popularized as 'one person-one vote'"). Yet
absolute mathematical precision "is hardly a workable constitutional requirement," as it is
"a practical impossibility to arrange legislative districts so that each one has an identical
number of residents." Reynolds, 377 U.S. at 577.
Given this, the United States Supreme Court has held that state redistricting plans
with a relative overall range of less than 10%—plus or minus 5% from the "ideal"
population—are presumed valid. Evenwel v. Abbott, 578 U.S. 54, 60, 136 S. Ct. 1120,
194 L. Ed. 2d 291 (2016); In re House Bill No. 3083, 251 Kan. at 606. The "ideal district"
population is calculated by dividing the total population of the state by the number of
legislative districts drawn by the reapportionment act. In re Senate Bill 220, 225 Kan. at
634. Plans that have population deviations over 10% may still be valid, but they "must be
justified by a rational state policy." 225 Kan. at 634. The fact that the map could have
been drawn with a lower deviation from the ideal population is irrelevant to our inquiry.
In re 2002 Substitute for Senate Bill 256, 273 Kan. 731, 733, 45 P.3d 855 (2002).
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Based on new census data, Kansas' total population is 2,937,880. This makes
73,447 the ideal population for the Senate districts. The largest deviation in any of
Liberty 3's 40 Senate districts is District 5, which is 3.95% above the ideal population.
The smallest Senate district is District 3, which is 3.4% below the ideal population. This
means that Liberty 3 has a total deviation of 7.35%—well within the range to pass
constitutional muster. See 273 Kan. at 734 (approving a deviation of 9.27%).
The ideal population for the House districts is 23,503. In Free State 3F, the largest
deviation in any of the 125 House districts is District 44, which is 3.59% above the ideal
population. The smallest House district is District 112, which has a population deviation
of 3.94% below the ideal population. This means that the Free State 3F map has a total
population deviation of 7.53%. This too is lower than the population deviations of prior
House maps upheld by this court. See 2002 Substitute for House Bill 2625, 273 Kan. at
723 (approving a deviation of 9.95%). Both maps satisfy the one person-one vote
principle.
We next examine the House and Senate maps for invidious discrimination and
hold there are no credible allegations the state legislative maps were intentionally drawn
to assign citizens to certain districts based on race or any other protected class. See In re
House Bill No. 3083, 251 Kan. 597. And after reviewing the population breakdown in
districts with significant minority populations in connection with the VRA inquiry below,
we conclude the Legislature did not impermissibly "excessive[ly] or unjustifi[ably] use . .
. race in redistricting." 2002 Substitute for House Bill 2625, 273 Kan. at 720-21 (citing
Shaw v. Reno, 509 U.S. 630, 632, 113 S. Ct. 2816, 125 L. Ed. 2d 511 [1993]).
Senator Holland gestures toward a vague discriminatory intent in the legislative
enactment by arguing that Sub. SB 563 is invalid because it violates section 4(a) of the
Guidelines—which directs "Districts should be as compact as possible and contiguous"—
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since District 3 and District 9 are not as "compact . . . and contiguous" as possible.
Senator Holland similarly argues that the Legislature failed to follow section 4(b) of the
Guidelines by dividing District 9, which previously was contained within a single county,
into four counties, and dividing District 3, which previously was contained in two
counties, into four counties. Senator Holland alleges this was intentionally done to pit
him as a Democratic senator against an incumbent Republican senator.
However, Senator Holland does not allege any facts sufficient to raise a
constitutional concern relating to discrimination. Put another way, even if we assume as
true everything Senator Holland alleges about Districts 3 and 9 and the legislative intent
behind them, we still could not conclude the districts are invalid forms of discrimination.
While section 4(b) of the Guidelines does state that "[t]he integrity and priority of
existing political subdivisions should be preserved to the extent possible," our caselaw
has tempered this language in the past. "The mere fact that a political entity, such as a
county, is split does not vitiate the act." In re House Bill No. 3083, 251 Kan. at 607-08
(citing In re Substitute for House Bill No. 2492, 245 Kan. at 127). Moreover, even though
"'[r]edistricting may pit incumbents against one another or make very difficult the
election of the most experienced legislator[, t]he reality is that districting inevitably has
and is intended to have substantial political consequences.'" (Emphasis added.) In re
2002 Substitute for Senate Bill 256, 273 Kan. at 734 (quoting Gaffney v. Cummings, 412
U.S. 735, 753, 93 S. Ct. 2321, 37 L. Ed. 2d 298 [1973]).
Sub. SB 563 pits two sets of senatorial incumbents against each other: Senators
Holland and Gossage in District 9, and Republican Senators Michael Fagg and Rick
Wilborn in District 14. In the House, there are three sets of incumbent contests, all
between Republican incumbents: Representatives Ron Ryckman and Megan Lynn in
District 49; Representatives Steven Johnson and Clarke Sanders in District 69; and
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Representatives Jim Minnix and Tatum Lee in District 118. Sub. SB 563 is not invalid on
this ground that it pits too many incumbents against one another.
Finally, we conduct an analysis of the maps for compliance with the federal VRA.
In 1965, Congress invoked the power conferred by § 2 of the Fifteenth Amendment and
enacted the VRA to accomplish "what the Fifteenth Amendment had sought to bring
about 95 years earlier: an end to the denial of the right to vote based on race." Brnovich
v. Democratic National Committee, 594 U.S. ___, 141 S. Ct. 2321, 2330-31, 210 L. Ed.
2d 753 (2021).
The Voting Rights Act, 52 U.S.C. § 10301 (2018) (formerly 42 U.S.C. § 1973)
provides:
"(a) No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or
procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner
which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to
vote on account of race or color . . . .
"(b) A violation of subsection (a) is established if, based on the totality of
circumstances, it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or election in
the State or political subdivision are not equally open to participation by members of a
class of citizens protected by subsection (a) in that its members have less opportunity
than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect
representatives of their choice. The extent to which members of a protected class have
been elected to office in the State or political subdivision is one circumstance which may
be considered: Provided, That nothing in this section establishes a right to have members
of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in the population."
The purpose of the VRA is to create minority opportunity districts, but it does not
require maximization of minority voting strength. Rather, in certain defined
circumstances it prohibits dilution of the minority vote by (1) "cracking" the group
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among numerous districts, and (2) "packing" as many members of a minority group into
one district as possible. 2002 Substitute for House Bill 2625, 273 Kan. at 720.
In this instance, we need not make a deep dive into the VRA to declare the maps
valid. This is because the numbers recited below demonstrate clearly and absolutely that
no "cracking" or "packing" has occurred. We have historically held that districts in
Wyandotte and Sedgwick Counties merit special attention because minority populations
in some of those districts may be large enough to trigger VRA protections.
Senate District 4 in Wyandotte County has been retained and is currently
represented by a Black senator. In 2012, District 4 had a voting age Black population of
33.6%. In 2022, District 4 has a Black population of 34.1%. Senate District 4 also has a
significant Hispanic population. In 2012, the voting age Hispanic population was 29.8%.
In 2022, the Hispanic population in District 4 is 29.2%. Minority populations were not
diluted in District 4.
Senate District 25 in Sedgwick County has been retained. This district has a
significant Hispanic population. In 2012, the Hispanic population in District 25 was 21%.
In 2022 District 25 has a Hispanic population of 22.6%. Minority populations were not
diluted in District 25.
Senate District 29 in Sedgwick County has been retained. District 29 is
represented by a Black senator. In 2012, District 29 had a Black voting age population of
24.3%. In 2022, it retains a 26.2% Black percentage. Senate District 29 also has a
significant Hispanic population. In 2012, the Hispanic population in District 29 was
23.8%. In the 2022 plan, District 29 has a Hispanic voting age population of 22%.
Minority populations were not diluted in District 29.
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Given this, none of the Kansas senatorial districts created in 2022 Substitute for
Senate Bill 563 violate the provisions of the Voting Rights Act. And no one has
challenged the senatorial map on this ground.
Because there are more House districts to examine than the Senate, below we
provide two charts showing population changes between 2012 and 2022 in House
districts with significant Black and Hispanic populations:
Black population in relevant Wyandotte (W) and Sedgwick (S) County House districts:
District 2012 2022
34 (W) 37.5% 36.1%
35 (W) 40.2% 43%
36 (W) 23.2% 22.5%
84 (S) 33% 32.3%
89 (S) 29.8% 30.1%
Hispanic population in relevant Wyandotte (W) and Sedgwick (S) County House districts:
District 2012 2022
31 (W) 31.5% 34.1%
32 (W) 59.9% 57.2%
34 (W) 32.3% 34.5%
92 (S) 23.7% 23.1%
103 (S) 40.4% 40.7%
As these numbers demonstrate, none of these House districts has been subject to
minority vote dilution. Additionally, some of the public comment received suggested
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possible minority vote dilution in other districts. After a careful examination, however,
we find there is no evidence that the Legislature engaged in unacceptable techniques such
as racially gerrymandering, cracking, or packing minority districts when it redrew the
House and Senate districts. No evidence has been presented of "invidious discrimination
against any group of the state's citizens which would impermissibly impair their
constitutionally protected right to vote." In re House Bill No. 2620, 225 Kan. at 841. We
therefore find Sub. SB 563 does not violate section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, 52 U.S.C.
§ 10301.
CONCLUSION
As this court has previously stated: "It is not a perfect plan. No district
apportionment plan ever is." 225 Kan. at 840-41. We hold that Sub. SB 563 passes
constitutional muster. The Legislature used the procedure required by the Kansas
Constitution to pass the bill. The legislative maps contained in Sub. SB 563 also satisfy
the constitutional requirement of one person, one vote; they are not discriminatory; they
satisfy the requirements of the Voting Rights Act; and they raise no additional
constitutional concerns.
Judgment is entered upholding the validity of Sub. SB 563.
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