                            UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                            FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA



 STEPHEN LAROQUE, et al.

        Plaintiffs,
                v.                                        Civil Action No. 10-0561 (JDB)
 ERIC H. HOLDER, Jr., in his official
 capacity as Attorney General of the United
 States,

        Defendant.


                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

       Plaintiffs, four private citizens and a private membership association, bring a facial

challenge to the constitutionality of Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. §

1973c, and the 2006 amendments to Section 5, 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(b)-(d). Section 5, as amended,

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(a).

       Plaintiffs are residents of Kinston, North Carolina. In November 2008, Kinston voters

adopted a referendum that would have replaced the city's current partisan electoral system with a

nonpartisan system, in which anyone could run for local office and no candidate would be

affiliated with any political party on the ballot. See Compl. ¶¶ 1, 14-15. Because Kinston is a

covered jurisdiction under Section 5, it submitted its proposed voting change to the Attorney

General for "preclearance" (i.e., approval) under Section 5. The Attorney General declined to

                                                 1
preclear the referendum on the ground that "elimination of party affiliation on the ballot will

likely reduce the ability of blacks to elect candidates of choice." Id. ¶ 19. Kinston did not seek

administrative reconsideration of the Attorney General's objection, nor did it seek a declaratory

judgment from this Court authorizing the proposed electoral change. In April 2010, however,

plaintiffs, proponents of the nonpartisan-election referendum, filed this action. Plaintiffs argue

that Section 5, as reauthorized and as amended in 2006, exceeds Congress's enforcement

authority under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments (Count I) and that the 2006

amendments to Section 5 violate the nondiscrimination guarantees of the Fifth, Fourteenth and

Fifteenth Amendments (Count II). See id. ¶¶ 1, 33-34, 36-37.

       On December 20, 2010, this Court granted defendant's Motion to Dismiss [Docket Entry

11] on the ground that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring their claims. See LaRoque v. Holder,

755 F. Supp. 2d 156 (D.D.C. 2010) ("LaRoque I"). On July 8, 2011, the D.C. Circuit reversed,

concluding that plaintiffs had standing to bring Count I and directing this Court to consider the

merits of that claim. LaRoque v. Holder, 650 F.3d 777, 793, 796 (D.C. Cir. 2011) ("LaRoque

II"). The D.C. Circuit also directed this Court to consider whether plaintiffs had standing to

bring Count II, and, if so, to resolve the merits of that claim. Id. at 795-96. Shortly after the

D.C. Circuit's decision, this Court decided another challenge to Section 5 brought by Shelby

County, Alabama, in an opinion that involved some of the same issues raised here. Shelby

Cnty., Ala. v. Holder, --- F. Supp. 2d ---, No. 10-651, 2011 WL 4375001 (D.D.C. Sept. 21,

2011). This Court concluded in Shelby County that Congress did not exceed its enforcement

powers in reauthorizing Section 5's preclearance procedure in 2006. That decision resolves part

of plaintiffs' Count I claim here.


                                                  2
        Two of plaintiffs' remaining contentions, however, raise significant issues that have not

been addressed in any other decision on Section 5 and the Voting Rights Act. These claims

revolve around three amendments to Section 5 that Congress enacted in 2006. 42 U.S.C. §

1973c(b)-(d). The three amendments made two substantive changes to the standard applied in

deciding whether a voting practice or procedure should be precleared under Section 5. Plaintiffs

contend that the 2006 amendments exceed Congress's enforcement powers under the Fourteenth

and Fifteenth Amendments -- an argument no other challenger to the reauthorization of Section 5

has raised. Plaintiffs also contend that the amendments violate the equal protection component

of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, the federal government's equivalent of the

Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. This appears to be the first facial

challenge to a portion of Section 5 under equal protection principles. It is perhaps startling that

plaintiffs claim that Section 5, a law "[p]raised by some as the centerpiece of the most effective

civil rights legislation ever enacted," is actually racially discriminatory. See Shelby County,

2011 WL 4375001, at *1. Nonetheless, plaintiffs argue that Congress, in its effort to counteract

years of discrimination against minority voters, has overreached and harmed the interests of

white voters like plaintiffs.

        These two challenges call for different analyses and implicate different sets of caselaw,

but both, at bottom, ask how urgent the need for Congressional legislation was in 2006 and how

well Congress crafted the challenged legislation. Guided by the abundant Congressional record

and the Supreme Court's caselaw on Congress's enforcement powers and equal protection

principles, this Court concludes that the 2006 amendments to Section 5 are a careful solution to a

vitally important problem. It therefore holds that the amendments do not violate the Constitution


                                                 3
and that plaintiffs' facial challenges must be denied.

                                       BACKGROUND

                               I. History of the Voting Rights Act

       The history of the Voting Rights Act, and of Section 5 in particular, was discussed at

length in this Court's opinion in Shelby County. 2011 WL 4375001, at *2-15. That history need

not be repeated in full here, but a few important points bear emphasis. The Voting Rights Act

("the Act" or "the VRA") "was designed by Congress to banish the blight of racial discrimination

in voting." South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301, 308 (1966). The Act's core 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. Section 2 and many other provisions of the Voting Rights Act are permanent and apply

nationwide.

       In addition to the permanent, nationwide provisions, Sections 4(b) and 5 of Act impose

additional requirements on certain "covered" jurisdictions. Section 4(b) determines which

jurisdictions qualify as "covered." 42 U.S.C. § 1973b(b). Section 5 provides that a covered

jurisdiction cannot make any changes to its voting qualifications, standards, practices, or

procedures unless those changes are first "submitted to and approved by a three-judge Federal

District Court in Washington, D.C., or the Attorney General." Nw. Austin Mun. Util. Dist. No.

One v. Holder, 129 S. Ct. 2504, 2509 (2009) ("Nw. Austin II"); see 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(a).

"Preclearance" under Section 5 will only be granted if a jurisdiction can show that its proposed


                                                  4
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 "shift[s] the advantage of time and inertia from the perpetrators of the evil

to its victims," Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 328, by requiring covered jurisdictions to show that

changes are not discriminatory before they are enacted.

       Section 5 was originally scheduled to sunset after five years, but Congress reauthorized it

in 1970 (for five years), 1975 (for seven years), 1982 (for twenty-five years), and 2006 (for

twenty-five years). Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2510. During the 2006 reauthorization,

Congress enacted three amendments to Section 5 that made two substantive changes to the scope

of the preclearance provision. Because of the importance of those changes to this litigation, the

portion of the Shelby County opinion describing the 2006 amendments is repeated in full here.

       In the amendment codified at 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(c), 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 School Board, 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

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 v.

United States, 425 U.S. 130, 141 (1976) (noting that "the purpose of s[ection] 5 has always been


                                                  5
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 House Hearing, 109th Cong. 12 (Nov. 1, 2005) (prepared statement of Mark A.

Posner).1 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 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.


       1
          For readability, the Court will use this short form for the many legislative hearings
cited throughout this opinion. An appendix to the opinion provides the full citation for each
hearing, along with information on where to find electronic copies of the hearings.

                                                  6
        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 Pub. L. No. 109-246, § 5(c), 120 Stat. 577, 581 (2006); 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 60) (emphasis omitted). 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 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


                                                   7
"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 Pub. L. No. 109-246, §§ 5(b), (d), 120 Stat. at 581; 42 U.S.C. §§ 1973c(b), (d).

                                    II. Challenges to Section 5

        Section 4(b)'s coverage formula and Section 5's preclearance regime have been

repeatedly upheld against constitutional challenges. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 337 (upholding

Section 5 after 1965 authorization); City of Rome v. United States, 446 U.S. 156, 183 (1980)

(upholding Section 5 after 1975 reauthorization); Lopez v. Monterey Cnty., 525 U.S. 266, 282-

83 (1999) (upholding Section 5 after 1982 reauthorization in narrow as-applied challenge). The

2006 reauthorization drew another set of constitutional challenges. Only days after the

reauthorization, a municipal utility district in Texas brought suit seeking to bail out of the Act's

requirements or 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.

Mun. Util. Dist. No. One v. Holder, 573 F. Supp. 2d 221, 230 (D.D.C. 2008) ("Nw. Austin I"),

rev'd and remanded, Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. 2504 (2009) (internal quotation marks and citation

omitted); see also LaRoque I, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 161 n.2 (describing procedure by which a

jurisdiction may "bail out" of Section 5 and terminate its obligation to seek preclearance for

election changes). A three-judge panel of this court found that the utility district was not eligible


                                                   8
for bailout and that Section 5 was constitutional. Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 283. The

utility district appealed, and the Supreme Court reversed. Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2517.

        The Supreme Court avoided the constitutional question by finding that the utility district

was statutorily eligible for bailout. Id. Although the Court therefore did not decide the

constitutional question, it noted that "the Act imposes current burdens and must be justified by

current needs." Id. at 2512. In light of the unquestioned improvement in minority voter

registration and turnout since the Act's passage in 1965, the Court warned that "[t]he Act's

preclearance requirements and its coverage formula raise serious constitutional questions." Id. at

2513.

        Ten months after the Supreme Court's decision in Northwest Austin, Shelby County,

Alabama filed a lawsuit challenging Section 5 on its face as beyond Congress's powers to

enforce the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. 2011 WL 4375001, at *16-18. This Court

upheld the constitutionality of Section 5, see id. at *80, and that decision is currently on appeal

to the D.C. Circuit.

                                  III. Kinston, North Carolina

        The plaintiffs in this case filed their complaint on April 7, 2010, a few weeks before

Shelby County was filed. See Compl. at 13. As described in this Court's previous opinion in

this case, see LaRoque I, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 156, the present action stems from an attempt by

voters in the city of Kinston, North Carolina to alter the partisan nature of Kinston's local

election system. See Compl. ¶ 1. Currently, a prospective candidate for political office in

Kinston must either be the winner of a party primary or an unaffiliated candidate who obtains a

sufficient number of signatures to have his or her name placed on the ballot. See id. In



                                                  9
November 2008, Kinston voters -- by an almost 2 to 1 margin -- passed a referendum that would

have amended the Kinston city charter to allow for nonpartisan elections, under which any

individual would be allowed to run for local political office and no candidate would be affiliated

with any political party on the ballot. See id. ¶¶ 1, 14-15.

       Kinston is a political subdivision of Lenoir County, North Carolina, which is a covered

jurisdiction, and hence Kinston, too, is subject to the provisions of Section 5. See Compl. ¶ 16;

28 C.F.R. pt. 51, 30 Fed. Reg. 9897 (Aug. 7, 1965) (Section 5 coverage determination for Lenoir

County, North Carolina); 28 C.F.R. § 51.6 (noting that "all political subunits within a covered

jurisdiction . . . are subject to the requirement of section 5"). Rather than seek bailout under

Section 4(a) of the Voting Rights Act, or a declaratory judgment from a three-judge panel of this

Court authorizing its proposed electoral change, Kinston submitted the proposed change to the

Attorney General for preclearance. See Compl. ¶ 16. On August 17, 2009, the Attorney General

issued a letter objecting to Kinston's proposed system of nonpartisan elections, on the ground

that the "elimination of party affiliation on the ballot will likely reduce the ability of blacks to

elect candidates of choice." Def.'s Mem. in Opp. to Plfs.' Mot. for Summ. J. ("Def.'s Opp.")

[Docket Entry 55], Statement of Facts, Ex. 2, at 2 (objection letter). As the Attorney General

explained, minority-preferred candidates in Kinston tend to be Democrats. Id. Statistical

analysis showed that such minority-preferred candidates needed a small amount of white

crossover voting to be elected, but that most white voters -- even Democrats -- would vote for a

white Republican over a black Democrat. Id. Some white Democrats, however, "maintain[ed]

strong party allegiance and w[ould] continue to vote along party lines, regardless of the race of

the candidate," often by voting a straight Democratic ticket. Id. The Attorney General found



                                                  10
that switching to a nonpartisan election system would eliminate minority-preferred candidates'

ability to "appeal to [Democratic] party loyalty" and to benefit from straight-ticket voting. Id.

Hence, "[r]emoving the partisan cue in municipal elections will, in all likelihood, eliminate the

single factor that allows black candidates to be elected to office." Id. The Attorney General

therefore refused to preclear the referendum. Id. at 3. On November 16, 2009, the Kinston City

Council voted not to seek administrative reconsideration of the Attorney General's objection or a

de novo review by this Court of Kinston's proposed change to nonpartisan elections. See Def.'s

Mem. in Supp. of Mot. to Dismiss [Docket 11], Ex. 1, Kinston City Council Meeting Minutes, at

19.

       Plaintiffs then filed this suit against the Attorney General. Plaintiffs are four2 Kinston

residents who are registered voters there, as well as a private membership association, the

Kinston Citizens for Non-Partisan Voting ("KCNV"), which is "dedicated to eliminating the use

of partisan affiliation in Kinston municipal elections." Compl. ¶¶ 2-7. The citizen-plaintiffs all

allege that they either campaigned or voted for the November 2008 referendum. See id. ¶¶ 2-6.

Two of the five claimed that they intended to run for election to the Kinston City Council in

November 2011; one of those later dropped out of the race. Id. ¶¶ 3-4; Plfs.' Notice of Filing at 1

[Docket Entry 57]. The remaining candidate, John Nix, alleges that as a registered Republican

voter running for office in a predominantly Democratic jurisdiction he has "a direct interest" in

running "on a ballot where he is unaffiliated with any party, against opponents similarly

unaffiliated, and without the preliminary need to either run in a party primary or obtain sufficient

signatures to obtain access to the ballot as a candidate." Compl. ¶ 3. All plaintiffs allege that the

       2
         The complaint lists five citizen plaintiffs, but plaintiff Lee Raynor died on February 20,
2011. Plfs.' Notice of Filing at 1 [Docket Entry 57].

                                                 11
Attorney General's "denial of Section 5 preclearance . . . completely nullified all of Plaintiffs'

efforts in support of the referendum." Id. ¶ 29. Plaintiffs further allege that Congress exceeded

its enforcement power in reauthorizing Section 5; that Congress exceeded its enforcement power

in enacting the amendments to Section 5 in 2006; and that the 2006 amendments violate the

equal protection component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Id. ¶¶ 1, 33-34,

36-37. Although plaintiffs' complaint clearly raised as-applied claims, they insisted during the

first motions hearing in this case that they were raising only facial challenges to the statute. See

LaRoque I, 755 F. Supp. 2d at 162-63; see also LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 783.

       Six African-American Kinston residents, along with the North Carolina State Conference

of Branches of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, joined the case

in August 2010 as intervenors in support of the Attorney General. See Order Granting Tyson, et

al.'s Mot. to Intervene [Docket Entry 24]. On December 16, 2010, this Court granted the

government's Motion to Dismiss, and on December 20, 2010, the Court issued a memorandum

order explaining that plaintiffs lacked standing to bring this challenge. [Docket Entries 41, 42.]

The Court made separate findings as to the referendum proponents, prospective candidates, and

voters. First, the Court found that the weight of caselaw holds that referendum proponents do

not suffer a concrete injury that confers standing to sue when a later action allegedly nullifies the

effect of their ballot initiative. LaRoque I, 759 F. Supp. 2d at 169-73. Second, the Court found

that whether the two proposed candidates would actually run was too speculative to support

standing. Id. at 173-75. It further found that the prospective candidates had no legally protected

interest in a nonpartisan electoral system because they did not allege that partisan electoral

systems were illegal. Id. at 175-80. Third, the Court found that the voters had alleged too



                                                 12
general an injury to their associational rights to support standing, and that they were not

prevented from supporting the candidates of their choice. Id. at 180-82. Finally, the Court found

that holding Section 5 unconstitutional would not revive the Kinston referendum, and that

plaintiffs' claims were therefore not redressable. Id. at 182-83.

       Plaintiffs appealed and the D.C. Circuit reversed. Treating plaintiffs' claims as purely

facial, the D.C. Circuit addressed only whether Nix, the prospective candidate, had standing.

650 F.3d at 783. As relevant here, the D.C. Circuit examined the record and found that it was

not unduly speculative that Nix would run for office. Id. at 788-89. The D.C. Circuit further

found that the passage of the referendum had granted Nix a legally protected interest in a

nonpartisan election system. Id. at 786. Finally, the court explained that if Section 5 were

unconstitutional, the Attorney General's actions pursuit to it would be ultra vires and void. Id. at

790-91. The Attorney General's objection to the referendum would therefore be void, and the

referendum would go into effect as if the objection had never happened. Id. Hence, the D.C.

Circuit concluded that Nix had standing to pursue the Count I claim that the reauthorization of

Section 5 exceeded Congress's enforcement powers. Id. at 792.

       The D.C. Circuit declined, however, to decide whether any plaintiff had standing to bring

Count II. Id. at 793-96. The court explained that Count II raised complex standing questions

that had not been fully briefed in either the district court or the court of appeals. Id. In

particular, Count II challenged only the amendments to Section 5, and it was unclear whether a

finding that the amendments were unconstitutional would revive the referendum. Id. at 794-95.

The court of appeals further questioned whether, given that plaintiffs' equal protection challenge

was only facial, plaintiffs had "met the requirement that litigants claiming injury from a racial



                                                  13
classification establish that they 'personally [have been] denied equal treatment by the

challenged discriminatory conduct.'" Id. at 795 (quoting United States v. Hays, 515 U.S. 737,

743-44 (1995)). The court stated that

       [w]ithout meaningful briefing on these issues, we are hesitant to decide plaintiffs'
       count-two standing. Of course, we could ask for additional briefing. But that
       would take time, and as plaintiffs' repeated requests for us to expedite this
       litigation so that it can be resolved before the November 2011 election indicate,
       time is of the essence. Given this, and given that plaintiffs themselves
       characterize count two as a fallback position, see Oral Arg. Tr. at 13:2-4, 15:11-
       15 (characterizing count two as an “alternative claim[]” that plaintiffs brought in
       case they lose on count one), we are reluctant to consume precious time resolving
       plaintiffs' standing to bring count two -- time the district court could instead
       devote to considering the merits of plaintiffs' principal argument, asserted in
       count one, that Congress's 2006 reauthorization of section 5 exceeded its
       Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendment enforcement powers.

650 F.3d at 796. Accordingly, the D.C. Circuit remanded to this Court to consider the merits of

Count I and whether plaintiffs had standing to pursue Count II. Id.

                                          DISCUSSION

                                         I. OVERVIEW

       Before addressing the merits of plaintiffs' claims, the Court must address one unusual and

important issue that has arisen in this case. When this Court originally granted defendant's

Motion to Dismiss, the Court read plaintiffs' complaint as arguing that Congress had exceeded its

enforcement powers in reauthorizing Section 5 (Count I), and that the 2006 amendments to

Section 5 violated equal protection principles (Count II). That is, the Court saw Count I as

identical to the facial challenge raised in Shelby County and Northwest Austin, whereas Count II

raised a facial challenge to the amendments under a novel equal protection theory. The D.C.

Circuit's decision indicates that the court of appeals understood plaintiffs' claims the same way.

The D.C. Circuit summarized plaintiffs' claims as follows: "Count one of plaintiffs' complaint


                                                14
contends that section 5, as reauthorized in 2006, exceeds Congress’s Fourteenth and Fifteenth

Amendment enforcement powers. Count two contends that amendments made to section 5 in

2006 erect a facially unconstitutional racial-preference scheme." LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 780.3

The D.C. Circuit's discussion of redressability further suggests that it read Count I as a challenge

to all of Section 5 and Count II as a challenge to the amendments. In evaluating whether

plaintiffs had standing to bring Count II, the D.C. Circuit observed that it was unclear "what

would happen to the Kinston referendum and the Attorney General's decision to refuse

preclearance" if plaintiffs succeeded in having the amendments -- but not the general

preclearance regime -- declared unconstitutional. Id. at 794. By contrast, the D.C. Circuit

apparently assumed that all of Section 5 would be struck down if plaintiffs succeeded on their

Count I challenge. Compare id. at 791 with id. at 794-95.

       After the remand, however, plaintiffs emphasized that their Count I claim actually had

two subparts. See Mot. Hr'g Tr. [Docket Entry 66] 5:7-20, Oct. 26, 2011. The first part --

which, for the moment, the Court will refer to as Count I-A -- claims that the reauthorization of

Section 5's preclearance regime exceeded Congress's enforcement authority under the Fourteenth

and Fifteenth Amendments. Compl. ¶¶ 33-34. Count I-A is therefore similar to the claim raised

in Northwest Austin and Shelby County. But a second part, or Count I-B, claims that the

enactment of the 2006 amendments exceeded Congress's enforcement authority even if the

general preclearance regime is constitutional. Compl. ¶ 34. This claim was not raised in either

       3
           See also id. at 783 ("Count one alleges that in reauthorizing Section 5, Congress
exceeded its power to enforce the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments because the statute 'is
not a rational, congruent, or proportional means to enforce [those Amendments']
nondiscrimination requirements.' Count two contends that as a result of the amendments
Congress made to section 5 in 2006, the section 'violates the nondiscrimination requirements of
the Fifth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments.'" (quoting Compl. ¶¶ 34, 36)).

                                                 15
Northwest Austin or Shelby County, and was not identified by either this Court or the D.C.

Circuit in the prior decisions in this case. Finally, Count II claims that the 2006 amendments to

Section 5 violate the equal protection component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth

Amendment, the federal government's equivalent of the Equal Protection Clause. Compl. ¶¶ 36-

37.

       The Court has reviewed plaintiffs' complaint, summary judgment motion, and opposition

to the government's summary judgment motion. [Docket Entries 1, 23, 59]. The Court concludes

that plaintiffs have in fact raised their two-part claim in Count I throughout this litigation

(although they have not always been particularly clear about the nature of the claim), despite the

fact that this Court and the D.C. Circuit did not focus on Count I-B. The existence of Count I-B,

however, leaves this Court in an odd position in two ways.

       First, this Court, along with the three-judge court that decided Northwest Austin, has

already spent hundreds of pages opining that the reauthorization of the amended Section 5 was

within Congress's enforcement powers. Although neither the Northwest Austin opinion nor the

Shelby County opinion focused on the amendments to Section 5, both of those opinions

implicitly found that the amendments -- an integral part of Section 5 as enacted in 2006 --

represented a congruent and proportional, or rational, response to the problem of discrimination

in voting. This Court will not revisit its conclusion in Shelby County that long-standing, state-

sponsored, intentional discrimination in voting justified the reauthorization of Section 5's general

preclearance procedure. Count I-A is therefore denied for the same reasons given in Shelby

County. But the Court will not rely on its past implicit finding that the 2006 amendments

represent a congruent and proportional response to the problem of voting discrimination. This



                                                  16
Court therefore must decide whether specific evidence in the record before Congress justified the

enactment of the 2006 amendments.

       The second odd effect of this revised understanding of plaintiffs' claims is that the Court

must reconsider the issue of Count I standing. Count I-B raises distinct standing issues from

Count I-A; indeed, for standing purposes, Count I-B is more like Count II than Count I-A.

Although the D.C. Circuit's opinion directed this Court to address the merits of Count I, the D.C.

Circuit apparently did not envision a Count I decision addressing the constitutionality of only the

amendments. And finding only the amendments unconstitutional under Count I would raise

quite different standing issues from finding all of Section 5 unconstitutional, as the D.C. Circuit

pointed out in its discussion of Count II. See LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 794-95. Hence, although

the D.C. Circuit's mandate directs this Court to consider the merits of Count I, the opinion as a

whole leads this Court to believe that it must first address whether plaintiffs have standing on the

aspect of their Count I claim that challenges only the amendments.

       This opinion will therefore proceed as follows. The Court will begin by discussing

whether plaintiffs have standing to bring Count I-B, their claim that the enactment of the

amendments to Section 5 in 2006 exceeded Congress's enforcement powers. The Court will also

consider whether Count I-B is unripe or moot. The Court will then address the merits of Count

I-B, determining whether the amendments are proper enforcement legislation under the three-

part test laid out in City of Boerne v. Flores, 521 U.S. 507, 520 (1997). Finally, the Court will

turn to Count II, plaintiffs' claim that the amendments violate the equal protection principles of

the Fifth Amendment. The Court will first consider whether plaintiffs have standing to bring the

claim, then whether the claim succeeds on the merits.



                                                 17
                                            II. COUNT I

                                            A. Standing

        Article III of the U.S. Constitution "limits the 'judicial power' of the United States to the

resolution of 'cases' and 'controversies,'" Valley Forge Christian Coll. v. Am. United for

Separation of Church & State, Inc., 454 U.S. 464, 471 (1982), and the doctrine of standing

serves to identify those "'Cases' and 'Controversies' that are of the justiciable sort referred to in

Article III," Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560 (1992). "As an aspect of

justiciability, the standing question is whether the plaintiff has 'alleged such a personal stake in

the outcome of the controversy' as to warrant invocation of federal-court jurisdiction and to

justify exercise of the court's remedial powers on his behalf." Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490,

498-99 (1975) (quoting Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 204 (1962)); see also Sierra Club v.

Morton, 405 U.S. 727, 731-32 (1972).

        To establish the "irreducible constitutional minimum of standing," a plaintiff must allege

(1) an "injury in fact," defined as "an invasion of a legally protected interest which 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, 504 U.S. at 560-61 (internal

quotation marks and citations omitted). In order for an injury to be "concrete and

particularized," it must "affect the plaintiff in a personal and individual way," so a plaintiff must

do more than raise "a generally available grievance about government -- claiming only harm to

his and every citizen's interest in proper application of the Constitution and laws." Id. at 561 n.1,

573.



                                                  18
       The injury, causation, and redressability requirements will be discussed in turn.

Following the lead of the court of appeals, this Court will primarily address whether candidate

John Nix has standing to bring this claim. LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 792.

       1. Injury

       The D.C. Circuit found that Nix was injured by the operation of Section 5's general

preclearance procedure -- and the resultant suspension of the nonpartisan-election referendum --

in two ways. First, in a system of nonpartisan elections, Nix "could get his name on the general-

election ballot more cheaply and easily." LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 783. Under Kinston's current

regime, he must either win a partisan primary or collect signatures from 4% of qualified voters to

be placed on the ballot; under a nonpartisan regime, he would only need to file a candidacy

notice and pay a filing fee. Id. at 783-84. Second, Nix's chances of winning the election would

"substantially improve" if the referendum were precleared and nonpartisan elections went into

effect, because "Democratic candidates would lose the benefit of party-line straight-ticket voting

and other strategic advantages stemming from their overwhelming registered-voter advantage."

Id. at 784 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). As the D.C. Circuit explained, Nix

has a legally protected interest in such competitive advantages because the nonpartisan election

regime would have been enacted in Kinston but for Section 5, "which he claims is

unconstitutional and thus void." Id. at 786.

       The Court finds that Nix's injury is identical whether the challenge is to the amendments

or to the preclearance procedure in general. In either case, Nix alleges that the suspension of the

referendum denied him competitive advantages to which he had a legally protected right. The

questions of causation and redressability are more complex in a challenge to only the



                                                19
amendments, but the question of injury is not.

       2. Causation

       The causation question is more difficult. In plaintiffs' general challenge to Section 5, it

was clear that the operation of the preclearance regime had caused the suspension of the

referendum, and hence had caused Nix's injury. In the challenge to the amendments, however,

defendant makes several arguments as to why the amendments did not cause the suspension of

the referendum, and hence did not cause Nix's competitive injuries.

       Defendant argues first that the Department of Justice did not rely at all on subsection (c)

-- the subsection that provides that "[t]he term 'purpose' in subsections (a) and (b) of this section

shall include any discriminatory purpose" -- in refusing to preclear the referendum. Def.'s Opp.

at 24. The Attorney General's objection letter, which focuses entirely on retrogressive effect and

never mentions discriminatory purpose, supports defendant's arguments. See Def.'s Opp.,

Statement of Facts, Ex. 2 (objection letter). There is no indication in the record that the

Department of Justice has ever claimed that a racially discriminatory purpose motivated the

referendum; indeed, the objection letter concedes that "the motivating factor for this change may

be partisan." Id. Nor have plaintiffs offered any reason to believe that the Attorney General

relied on subsection (c) in denying preclearance to the referendum. Accordingly, the Court

agrees with the government that subsection (c) did not cause plaintiffs' injuries, and plaintiffs

therefore do not have standing to challenge that provision.

       Subsections (b) and (d), however, govern the "effects" prong of Section 5, and the

Attorney General denied preclearance because of the referendum's retrogressive effects. See

Def.'s Opp., Statement of Facts, Ex. 2 (objection letter). The government nonetheless contends



                                                 20
that subsections (b) and (d) did not cause plaintiffs' injuries because their application is limited to

the districting context. Def.'s Opp. at 24-25. Based on the text of the statute, the Court

disagrees. Subsection (b) provides that: "Any voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or

standard, practice, or procedure with respect to voting that has the purpose of or will have the

effect of diminishing the ability of any citizens of the United States on account of race or color . .

. to elect their preferred candidates of choice denies or abridges the right to vote within the

meaning of subsection (a) of this section." 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(b). Subsection (d) explains that

"[t]he purpose of subsection (b) of this section is to protect the ability of such citizens to elect

their preferred candidates of choice." 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(d). Hence, by their terms, both

subsections apply to "[a]ny voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice, or

procedure with respect to voting," and nothing in the text limits their application to districting.

        The fact that subsections (b) and (d) were meant to overrule Ashcroft, a case about a

districting plan, does not mean that their application is limited to districting. Indeed, although

the specific considerations outlined in Ashcroft apply most naturally in the districting context, its

broader holding -- that a totality of the circumstances test rather than a singular focus on

minorities' ability to elect governs preclearance of voting changes -- could be and was applied to

other types of voting procedure changes, including one quite similar to the referendum at issue

here. In 2004, the Charleston County Legislative Delegation to the South Carolina General

Assembly attempted to change the nonpartisan elections for the Board of Trustees of the

Charleston County School District to partisan elections. See Letter from R. Alexander Acosta,

Assistant Attorney General, to C. Havird Jones, Jr., Senior Assistant Attorney General (Feb. 26,

2004). The Attorney General denied preclearance, finding that the change would diminish



                                                  21
minorities' ability to elect their candidates of choice. Id. at 2. In doing so, he specifically noted

that he was applying a "totality of the circumstances" test under Ashcroft, and he considered,

among other things, whether minority-preferred elected officials supported the change. Id. at 1-

2. Hence, Ashcroft’s broad holding did apply to changes like those at issue here, and the

amendments partially overruling it do as well. Indeed, a comparison of the objection letter in

this case and the objection letter in the Charleston County School District case strongly suggests

that the Attorney General applied a different standard here than he did there. Compare id. with

Def.'s Opp., Statement of Facts, Ex. 2 (objection letter).

       This does not end the causation inquiry, however, because the question remains whether

the Attorney General would have come to the same ultimate conclusion under the

Ashcroft standard. If so, the amendments did not cause plaintiffs' injury. Neither party has made

any serious effort to answer or analyze that question. Under the Supreme Court's decision in

Federal Election Commission v. Akins, 524 U.S. 11 (1998), however, the Court believes that

plaintiffs succeed on the causation prong. In Akins, plaintiffs challenged the Federal Election

Commission's ("FEC") determination that the American Israel Public Affairs Committee

("AIPAC") did not have to follow certain registration and disclosure rules under the Federal

Election Campaign Act ("FECA") because AIPAC's "major purpose" was not nominating or

electing political candidates. Id. at 14-18. Plaintiffs sued the FEC, arguing that the "major

purpose" test misinterpreted FECA. The Supreme Court agreed that plaintiffs' inability to obtain

information that would otherwise have been disclosed was a concrete, particularized injury. Id.

at 20-21. The FEC argued, however, that plaintiffs did not have standing because FEC's alleged

misinterpretation of FECA might not have caused their injury, given that the FEC could have --



                                                  22
and, under the evidence in the record, likely would have -- exercised its discretion to exempt

AIPAC from the FECA's requirements. See id. at 25. The Supreme Court nonetheless held that

plaintiffs had standing. It explained:

        [W]e cannot know that the FEC would have exercised its prosecutorial discretion
        in this way. Agencies often have discretion about whether or not to take a
        particular action. Yet those adversely affected by a discretionary agency decision
        generally have standing to complain that the agency based its decision upon an
        improper legal ground. If a reviewing court agrees that the agency misinterpreted
        the law, it will set aside the agency's action and remand the case -- even though
        the agency (like a new jury after a mistrial) might later, in the exercise of its
        lawful discretion, reach the same result for a different reason. Thus respondents'
        "injury in fact" is "fairly traceable" to the FEC's decision not to issue its
        complaint, even though the FEC might reach the same result exercising its
        discretionary powers lawfully.

Id. at 25 (internal citations omitted).

        Here, too, plaintiffs claim that the Attorney General employed the wrong legal standard -

- namely, the allegedly unconstitutional preclearance standard in subsections (b) and (d) rather

than the test laid out in Ashcroft. The fact that the Attorney General could have reached the

same result under the correct standard, as the FEC could have "reach[ed] the same result

exercising its discretionary powers lawfully," does not negate causation under Akins. This case

is not exactly like Akins – among other things, the Attorney General's "discretion" to make

preclearance decisions is not as broad as the FEC's authority was under FECA – but the Court

sees no reason that those differences dictate a different result here. Accordingly, under Akins,

the Court holds that plaintiffs have established that subsections (b) and (d) caused their injury.

        3. Redressability

        Plaintiffs offer various arguments for why their injury -- the postponement of the

referendum -- will be redressed if this Court finds the 2006 amendments unconstitutional. Their



                                                 23
primary argument is that subsections (b), (c), and (d) cannot be severed from subsection (a),

which contains the core preclearance provision. Consol. Reply Mem. in Supp. of Plfs.' Mot. for

Summ. J. & in Opp. to Def.'s and Intervenors' Mot. for Summ. J. & Intervenors' Renewed Mot.

to Dismiss ("Plfs.' Opp.") [Docket Entry 59] at 39-44. Hence, according to plaintiffs' theory,

finding that the amendments are unconstitutional would mean that all of Section 5 must be struck

as unconstitutional. Id. And, as the D.C. Circuit explained, striking Section 5 as

unconstitutional would revive the referendum. This is so because if "Section 5 is

unconstitutional, the Attorney General's actions pursuant to that unconstitutional statute would

be void." LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 791.

       Contrary to plaintiffs' argument, the Court agrees with the government that the

amendments are severable from subsection (a)'s general preclearance provision. When possible,

courts sever unconstitutional portions of a statute rather than striking the whole statute. Free

Enter. Fund v. Pub. Co. Accounting Oversight Bd., 130 S. Ct. 3138, 3161 (2010). Severance is

possible when the remaining portion of the statue is "(1) constitutionally valid, (2) capable of

functioning independently, and (3) 'consistent with Congress' basic objectives in enacting the

statute.'" Def.'s Opp. at 26 (quoting United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220, 258-259 (2005)).

"The presence of a severability clause, which expressly sets forth congressional intent that a

statute stand in the event one of its provisions is struck down, makes it extremely difficult for a

party to demonstrate inseverability." Consumer Energy Council v. Fed. Energy Regulatory

Comm'n, 673 F.2d 425, 441 (D.C. Cir. 1982).

       All three conditions are met here. Subsection (a) is constitutionally valid and capable of

functioning without the 2006 amendments. Other than one purely stylistic change, subsection



                                                 24
(a) is the version of Section 5 that was in effect before the 2006 amendments, and that version

was upheld against numerous constitutional challenges. See Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 337; City

of Rome, 446 U.S. at 183; Lopez, 525 U.S. at 282-83; see generally Shelby County, 2011 WL

4375001.

       The presence of a severability clause demonstrates that severing the amendments would

be "consistent with Congress' basic objectives in enacting the statute." The Voting Rights Act's

severability clause provides that

       [i]f any provision of [the Voting Rights Act] or the application thereof to any
       person or circumstances is held invalid, the remainder of [the Voting Rights Act]
       and the application of the provision to other persons not similarly situated or to
       other circumstances shall not be affected thereby.

42 U.S.C. § 1973p. Accordingly, it was Congress's considered judgment that Section 5 without

the Bossier II and Ashcroft "fixes" was better than no Section 5 at all. Plaintiffs argue that the

severability clause has been part of the Voting Rights Act since 1965, and thus cannot speak to

the 2006 Congress's intent. But this Court must presume that Congress was aware of the clause

when it reauthorized and amended Section 5, and that it affirmatively intended the severability

clause to apply to the amendments. See Koog v. United States, 79 F.3d 452, 463 n.12 (5th Cir.

1996); see also Alaska Airlines, Inc. v. Brock, 480 U.S. 678, 686 n.8 (1987) (noting that

severability clause applies to later provisions that amend a law). Moreover, nothing in the

legislative history suggests a reason to question this presumption. Certainly, several members of

Congress made clear that they thought the Bossier II and Ashcroft fixes were important, but

there was no serious discussion of whether failing to reauthorize Section 5 at all was preferable

to reauthorizing Section 5 as construed by those cases. See Leavitt v. Jane L., 518 U.S. 137,

143-144 (1996) (statements indicating that Congress preferred complete statute do not


                                                 25
undermine case for severability because "[t]his mode of analysis, if carried out in every case,

would operate to defeat every claim of severability").

       The Court therefore concludes that each of the amendments is severable from subsection

(a), the general preclearance procedure. Hence, the Court rejects plaintiffs' primary

redressability argument. The question then is whether there is any other reason that finding

subsections (b) and (d) unconstitutional would redress plaintiffs' injury. The Court finds that

there is such a reason.

       First, the D.C. Circuit's opinion makes clear that the Attorney General's objection would

be nullified if the amendments were struck down as unconstitutional. The D.C. Circuit explained

that if all of Section 5 is unconstitutional, the Attorney General's actions pursuant to it would be

void. LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 791. Similarly, if the amendments are unconstitutional, the

Attorney General's actions pursuant to them would be void. Although subsection (a) contains

the actual preclearance procedure, the Attorney General's actions were indeed made "pursuant

to" subsections (b) and (d) in addition to subsection (a), because subsections (b) and (d) now

define the key terms in subsection (a).

       The question then is what would happen to the Kinston referendum if the Attorney

General's original objection were nullified, but Section 5's general preclearance procedure

remained in place. Because the D.C. Circuit considered only the situation where Section 5 was

struck down in its entirety, it did not provide guidance on this issue. Moreover, because this is a

novel situation, neither party has identified any case on point. As a matter of logic, however, it

would seem that the referendum would have to be precleared under the pre-2006 version of

Section 5 before it could go into effect. Cf. Ashcroft, 539 U.S. at 490 (remanding to district



                                                 26
court to reconsider whether districting plan could be precleared in light of standard laid out by

Supreme Court). Any other course of action would lead to the anomalous result that the Kinston

referendum -- unlike every other election law -- could go into effect without ever being

precleared. Moreover, contrary to the government's view, the Court does not believe that

Kinston would be able to make a discretionary decision not to seek such reconsideration of the

referendum. See United States' Resp. to Plfs.' Br. Regarding Suggestion of Mootness at 3-4

[Docket Entry 69]. Preclearance of the Kinston referendum under the pre-2006 version of

Section 5 would not be "reconsideration" as that term is usually used in this context. Rather, it

would be a routine action to seek preclearance of an election change that had not yet been

through the (proper) process.

       Assuming that the referendum would have to be precleared under the pre-2006 standard,

the final question is whether it would, in fact, be precleared under that standard. If it is clear that

the referendum would not be precleared under any standard, plaintiffs' claims are not redressable

and they have no standing to challenge the 2006 amendments. As with the causation prong,

neither party has analyzed this issue in any detail. But, again as with the causation prong, the

Court finds this question governed by Akins. After explaining that causation was not defeated

simply because an agency that "based its decision upon an improper legal ground" could reach

the same decision on a proper legal ground, the Supreme Court disposed of the "redressability"

prong in a single sentence: "For similar reasons, the courts in this case can redress respondents'

injury in fact." 524 U.S. at 25 (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, as in Akins, the injury is

redressable because the Attorney General will have to reconsider preclearance of the referendum

under the Ashcroft standard if plaintiffs succeed, even though the Attorney General "might later,



                                                  27
in the exercise of [his] lawful discretion, reach the same result for a different reason." Id.; see

also Townes v. Jarvis, 577 F.3d 543, 546-48 (4th Cir. 2009) (relying on Akins to find that habeas

petitioner could challenge Parole Board's decision that allegedly violated Due Process and Equal

Protection Clauses, even though Board might deny parole even applying proper standard).

       The Court therefore finds that Nix has standing to challenge subsections (b) and (d), but

not subsection (c).4 For the same reasons given in its first opinion in this case, see LaRoque I,

755 F. Supp. 2d at 168-73, 180-82, the Court concludes that referendum proponents do not have

standing; that the voters' allegation that their associational rights are burdened is too generalized

to support standing; and that the voters are not precluded from supporting their candidates of

choice. KCNV, however, does have standing to challenge subsections (b) and (d), because it has

established that one of its "members would otherwise have standing to sue in [his] own right"

and "the interests at stake are germane to the organization's purpose." Friends of the Earth, Inc.

v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 181 (2000).

       4. Effect in this case

       Finding that the plaintiffs do not have standing as to subsection (c), of course, means that



       4
         Plaintiffs might also have standing to challenge the amendments as part of their
challenge to the general preclearance regime (Count I-A), for which they have standing.
LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 792. That is, plaintiffs could argue that the enactment of the general
preclearance regime exceeds Congress's enforcement power, and that the amendments are simply
an aspect of Congress's overreach in reauthorizing Section 5. This formulation of their argument
is academic as to subsections (b) and (d), but could change the outcome in subsection (c). As the
Court reads plaintiffs' papers, however, their argument is that even if the general preclearance
mechanism is constitutional, the substantive standard laid out in subsections (b) through (d) is
unconstitutional. See generally Plfs.' Opp. (devoting separate sections to Count I-A, Count I-B,
and Count II); Plfs.' Notice of Filing, Ex. 1, at 2 [Docket Entry 36] (letter to Court describing
claims). Because plaintiffs are challenging the constitutionality of the amendments separately
from the entire preclearance standard, they must establish standing for that challenge. See U.S.
Ecology, Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior, 231 F.3d 20, 24 (D.C. Cir. 2000).

                                                  28
this Court does not have jurisdiction to find that amendment constitutional or unconstitutional on

the merits. See Lujan, 504 U.S. at 559-60. However, as the D.C. Circuit explained, time is of the

essence in this case, and plaintiffs have already been through one appeal and remand. LaRoque

II, 650 F.3d at 795. Solely in order to obviate any possible need for another remand, and in the

unusual circumstances of this case, this Court will explain how it would rule on the merits of

subsection (c) if plaintiffs could establish standing on that claim. Should the D.C. Circuit

disagree with this Court's conclusion on standing, it will then be able to address the merits

immediately.

                                           B. Ripeness

       The Court declines the government's invitation to find that plaintiffs' challenge is not ripe

for review. This case is not like Texas v. United States, 523 U.S. 296 (1998), upon which the

government relies. There, the state of Texas made certain changes to its educational system that

had the potential to affect voting. Id. at 298-99. The Department of Justice found that the

specific changes at issue did not affect voting and did not require preclearance, but that "under

certain foreseeable circumstances their implementation may" require preclearance. Id. at 299.

Texas sought a declaratory judgment that Section 5 did not apply. Id. The Supreme Court found

that Texas's claim was not ripe because a long sequence of events had to occur before the

preclearance issue could arise, and it might never arise. Id. at 300. Moreover, Texas had asked

the Court to hold that it was impossible for the educational changes to affect voting, and the

Court explained that "[w]e do not have sufficient confidence in our powers of imagination to

affirm such a negative." Id. at 301. Moreover, because Texas was currently implementing the

educational changes without any impediment, the Court found that Texas would suffer no



                                                29
hardship by deferring review until it was clear that review would be necessary. Id. at 301-02.

       Here, in contrast, the Attorney General has already objected to the referendum and

thereby harmed Nix's interests. This is not a case about events that might never happen.

Moreover, although the parties admittedly disagree about how the statute will be applied, the

Court finds that there is sufficient information to construe the statute and make a judgment as to

its facial validly. That other parties could later bring as-applied claims does not mean this facial

challenge is not ripe.

                                            C. Mootness

       Plaintiffs' complaint alleged that Nix planned to run for Kinston city council in

November 2011. That election occurred during the course of this litigation. Nix lost, coming in

fourth out of six candidates running for three seats. Plfs.' Br. Regarding Suggestion of Mootness

at 1 [Docket Entry 67]. Plaintiffs have, however, submitted a copy of Nix's campaign website, in

which he promises to run again in the next election in November 2013. Id., Ex. C. Plaintiffs and

the government agree that the case is therefore not moot. Because election litigation frequently

outlasts election cycles, Nix's injury is of the type that is "capable of repetition, yet evading

review." LaRouche v. Fowler, 152 F.3d 974, 978-79 (D.C. Cir. 1997); see also LaRoque II, 650

F.3d at 788. Nix is likely -- indeed, nearly certain -- to suffer the same injury in his 2013 run for

Kinston city council. See LaRouche, 152 F.3d at 978-79. Accordingly, the Court finds that this

action is not moot.

                                             D. Merits

       1.    Standard of Review

       The parties dispute whether the claim that Congress exceeded its enforcement power in


                                                  30
enacting the amended Section 5 should be reviewed under the rationality standard set forth in

Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 324, or under the more rigorous test laid out in City of Boerne v. Flores,

521 U.S. 507, 520 (1997). This Court considered the identical issue in Shelby County. See 2011

WL 4375001, at *21-34. For the reasons given there, the Court will review plaintiffs' claims

under Boerne's "congruence and proportionality" test.

       2.   The Scope of the Constitutional Right At Issue

       In determining whether the 2006 amendments are within Congress's enforcement power,

the first step under Boerne is "to identify with some precision the scope of the constitutional

right at issue." See Bd. of Trs. of Univ. of Ala. v. Garrett, 531 U.S. 356, 365 (2001); see

also Tennessee v. Lane, 541 U.S. 509, 522 (2004). 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 Nev. Dep't of Human Res. v. Hibbs, 538 U.S. 721, 736 (2003). 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 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


                                                 31
enforcement legislation under the Reconstruction Amendments. See 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, 87 (2006). Hence, "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.

       The amendments to Section 5 protect two fundamental rights. First, they seek to protect

the right to vote -- a "fundamental political right, because [it is] preservative of all rights," Yick

Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356, 370 (1886). Second, they 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 protects two of the most crucial

constitutional rights, Congress's enforcement powers are at its peak when it legislates to ensure

that voting is free from racial discrimination. See Nathaniel Persily, The Promise and Pitfalls of

the New Voting Rights Act, 117 YALE L.J. 174, 176 (2007) (hereinafter Persily, Promise and

Pitfalls) (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.'"

Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 270 (quoting Hibbs, 538 U.S. at 736).

       3. Evidence of Unconstitutional Discrimination in the Legislative Record and the
        Congruence and Proportionality of Section 5


                                                  32
       Given this definition of "the constitutional right at issue," Garrett, 531 U.S. at 365, the

next question is whether Congress identified "a history and pattern" of unconstitutional, state-

sponsored voting discrimination that justified the 2006 amendments to Section 5. Id. at 368. If

the Court finds that Congress has identified such a pattern, it must then consider whether the

challenged law is congruent and proportional to the identified violations. Boerne, 521 U.S. at

520, 530-32. In answering these second and third Boerne inquiries, the Court will consider

subsection (c) and subsections (b) and (d) separately. Before doing so, however, one general

argument plaintiffs press throughout their briefs must be addressed.

               1. The expansion of the preclearance standard

       Plaintiffs vehemently argue that the amendments cannot be a congruent and proportional

response to discrimination in voting, regardless of the evidence Congress amassed during the

2006 reauthorization, because "any 2006 expansion of the 1965 preclearance standard would be

unconstitutional given the dramatic improvements in the covered jurisdictions." Plfs.' Opp. at

33. Under their argument, there is a bright-line rule that any expansion of Section 5 is now per

se unconstitutional under Boerne.

       The Court rejects this simplistic argument for several reasons. First, even if the

amendments are an expansion of Section 5's preclearance standard, that does not ipso facto make

them unconstitutional. Congress has previously expanded substantive provisions of the Voting

Rights Act, even in the face of unquestionably improved voting conditions, without thereby

rendering the VRA unconstitutional. In 1982, for instance, Congress significantly expanded the

VRA by providing that acts related to voting that were discriminatory in effect, as well as those

that were discriminatory in purpose, violated Section 2 of the Act. Presumably employing



                                                 33
Katzenbach's rationality review, the Supreme Court summarily affirmed that the post-1982

Section 2 was constitutional. Miss. Republican Exec. Comm. v. Brooks, 469 U.S. 1002, 1003

(1984).

          Plaintiffs' bright-line argument does not make sense even as a theoretical matter.

Congress has amassed substantial evidence of discrimination in voting; it therefore has a range

of options for remedial legislation that would be congruent and proportional to the problem. In

evaluating the 2006 reauthorization, the question before this Court is whether the legislative

response Congress chose is within that range, not where it falls in the range relative to past

legislation. See Boerne, 521 U.S. at 530-32. So long as current needs justify the current

legislation, see Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2512, it does not matter whether Congress is

legislating more or less assertively than it has in the past. This is particularly true because

Section 5 now responds primarily to "second generation" voting problems, rather than to the

"first generation" problem of outright denials of the vote. House Hearing, 109th Cong. 1134

(Oct. 18, 2005) (Chandler Davidson and Bernard Grofman, eds., Quiet Revolution in the South:

The Impact of the Voting Rights Act 1965-1990 14 (Princeton University Press 1994)).

Congress could reasonably decide that a different preclearance standard is necessary to respond

to a different set of problems, and that decision would be acceptable so long as the remedy is

congruent and proportional to the problem. Boerne, 521 U.S. at 530-32.

          Theoretical arguments aside, it is not at all clear that the 2006 amendments actually

represent an expansion to Section 5's preclearance standard. As this Court explained in the

Shelby County decision, "[i]n Bossier II . . . the Supreme Court -- for the first time -- held that

the 'purpose' prong of Section 5 only prohibits electoral changes that are enacted with a



                                                  34
discriminatory and retrogressive purpose." 2011 WL 4375001, at *10. Congress added

subsection (c) to Section 5 in order to "restore[] the pre-Bossier II 'purpose' standard." Id. at

*11. Similarly, "the Supreme Court's decision in Georgia v. Ashcroft, 539 U.S. 461 (2003) . . .

had altered the preexisting standard for determining whether a voting change had a prohibited

retrogressive effect under Section 5's 'effects' prong." Id. Congress therefore added subsections

(b) and (d) "in an attempt to restore the simpler, 'ability to elect' analysis articulated in" prior

caselaw. Id. This Court's understanding of the amendments as restorative was echoed by many

witnesses during the 2005 and 2006 hearings. See, e.g., Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 182 (May

9, 2006) (responses of Theodore M. Shaw to questions of Sens. Specter, Cornyn, Leahy,

Kennedy, and Schumer); Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 149 (May 9, 2006) (responses of Laughlin

McDonald to questions of Sens. Specter, Kennedy, Schumer and Cornyn); see also House

Hearing, 109th Cong. 59 (Nov. 1, 2005) (statement of Rep. John Conyers). While there was a

less universal consensus that the Ashcroft "fix" was a simple return to the status quo ante than

there was for the Bossier II "fix," see infra at 63-64, there was also no consensus that the

Ashcroft "fix" represented an expansion -- rather than a simple change -- to the preclearance

standard. Id.

        In response to this record evidence, plaintiffs argue that "'[a] judicial construction of a

statute is an authoritative statement of what the statute meant before as well as after the decision

of the case giving rise to that construction.'" Plfs.' Opp. at 33 (quoting Rivers v. Roadway

Express, Inc., 511 U.S. 298, 312-13 (1994)). Plaintiffs contend that the Supreme Court's

decisions in Bossier II and Ashcroft necessarily establish what section 5 always meant, and that

it is therefore impossible to read the 2006 amendments as anything other than an expansion to



                                                   35
Section 5's preclearance standard.

       The general rule is, of course, that "statutes operate only prospectively, while judicial

decisions operate retrospectively." United States v. Sec. Indus. Bank, 459 U.S. 70, 79 (1982).

Hence, a judicial decision establishes what a statute meant as well as what it means. But in this

context, the Court does not believe that this general rule determines the constitutionality of the

2006 amendments to Section 5. Rivers explained that Congress could legislatively overrule a

decision of the Supreme Court if Congress believed the decision to be in error. 511 U.S. at 313.

Further, the Supreme Court explained, Congress "may even, within broad constitutional bounds,

make such a change retroactive and thereby undo what it perceives to be the undesirable past

consequences of a misinterpretation of its work product." Id. That is, Congress has the power to

legislatively overrule the Supreme Court's determination of what the statute meant as well as the

Court's determination of what the statute means.

       Here, Congress made quite clear that it disagreed with the Supreme Court's determination

of what Section 5 meant, although it chose not to throw state and local election systems into

chaos by making the amendments apply retroactively. In the findings accompanying the

reauthorized Section 5, Congress found that "[t]he effectiveness of the Voting Rights Act of

1965 has been significantly weakened by the United States Supreme Court in Reno v. Bossier

Parish II and Georgia v. Ashcroft, which have misconstrued Congress' original intent in enacting

the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and narrowed the protections accorded by section 5 of such act."

Pub. L. 109-246, § 2(b)(6), 120 Stat. at 578; see also H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 2. The

amendments in subsections (b) through (d) were enacted "to (1) restore the original purpose to

Section 5 with respect to intentionally discriminatory voting changes; and (2) clarify the types of



                                                 36
conduct that Section 5 was intended to prevent." H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 65. The

authoritative determination of whether those amendments are constitutional is, of course,

reserved to the courts. See Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177 (1803). But as a

matter of statutory construction, Congress made clear that the amendments represented a

restoration of the proper Section 5 standard, not an expansion.

       Moreover, this Court would be hesitant to invalidate the amendments in the context of

the Boerne analysis solely on the basis of the rule cited in Rivers. Under Boerne, the Court not

only reviews the law Congress has enacted and whether Congress had rational reasons for doing

so, but also undertakes an in-depth analysis of how Congress arrived at its legislative

conclusions. Boerne, 521 U.S. at 530-32; see also Lane, 541 U.S. at 558-59 (2004) (Scalia, J.,

dissenting) ("Under [Boerne], the courts . . . must regularly check Congress's homework to make

sure that it has identified sufficient constitutional violations to make its remedy congruent and

proportional."). Such oversight of a co-equal branch is a delicate task. See id. at 558. Given

that virtually everyone who testified before Congress described Bossier II and Ashcroft as a

change from prior law -- at least as that law had been applied by courts and the Department of

Justice -- this Court is reluctant to play "gotcha" with Congress and invalidate the amendments

on the ground that they could technically represent an expansion of the statute.

               2. Subsection (c)

       As previously explained, the second step of the Boerne analysis is to determine whether

Congress identified "a history and pattern" of unconstitutional, state-sponsored voting

discrimination that justified the 2006 amendments to Section 5. See Garrett, 531 U.S. at 368.

The bulk of the opinion in Shelby County -- some seventy pages -- was devoted to reviewing

what direct and circumstantial evidence of purposeful discrimination Congress had amassed.

                                                37
2011 WL 4375001, at *36-64. The Court will incorporate that discussion by reference rather

than repeating it here.

       The specific issue raised by plaintiffs' challenge to subsection (c) is whether, given those

findings, the amendment is a congruent and proportional response to the pattern of identified

unconstitutional behavior. To answer that question, the Court will focus on the evidence

Congress amassed regarding why the amendment was necessary, i.e., why the Bossier II standard

could not respond to the problem of state-sponsored voting discrimination. Hence, keeping in

mind the findings of purposeful discrimination discussed in Shelby County, the Court will turn

to Congressional record evidence specific to the Bossier II amendment in subsection (c).

       Congress heard the testimony of numerous witnesses on the need to overrule Bossier II.

As Debo Adegbile of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund explained, "in a very complex area of

law[,] the problem with Bossier Parish II is very understandable to everybody, whether they be a

lawyer or not, a representative or not. The problem is that the Voting Rights Act was clearly

intended to stop discrimination in voting. It was most certainly intended to stop intentional

discrimination in voting, and it was a long history of intentional discrimination that gave rise to

the Voting Rights Act." House Hearing, 109th Cong. 38 (May 4, 2006) (statement of Debo P.

Adegbile). Yet, under Bossier II, voting changes that purposefully discriminated on the basis of

race had to be precleared. See Bossier II, 528 U.S. at 341 (holding that Section 5 "does not

prohibit preclearance of a redistricting plan with a discriminatory but nonretrogressive

purpose"). Drew Days, a law professor and voting rights practitioner, testified that the Bossier II

standard "permit[ted] absurd results" and was "basically at war with the spirit of Section 5 in that

it places a burden on those that the Act was designed to protect." Senate Hearing, 109th Cong.

57 (May 17, 2006) (responses of Drew S. Days III to questions of Sens. Cornyn, Coburn,

                                                 38
Kennedy, Leahy, and Schumer).

       Several witnesses explained that forcing minority voters to go to the time and expense of

Section 2 litigation in cases where there appeared to be intentional discrimination was highly

impractical for two reasons. First, neither the "small and underfinanced" voting rights bar nor

the minority communities were in a position to bear the expense of frequent litigation under

Section 2. Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 95 (May 16, 2006) (responses of Pamela S. Karlan to

questions of Sens. Leahy, Kennedy, Kohl, Cornyn, and Coburn). Second, in the time it took to

litigate a section 2 case, candidates who benefitted from the intentionally discriminatory voting

procedures would already be incumbents and would have all the crucial advantages of

incumbency in later elections. See, e.g., House Hearing, 109th Cong. 97 (Mar. 8, 2006)

(statement of Joe Rogers); House Hearing, 109th Cong. 60 (Nov. 9, 2005) (statement of Rep.

Tyrone L. Brooks of Georgia General Assembly). Hence, moving a large number of voting

rights issues from Section 5 to Section 2 ran counter to the goal of "shift[ing] the advantage of

time and inertia from the perpetrators of the evil to its victims." Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 328.

       Congress also heard evidence that Bossier II, left uncorrected, would indeed force

preclearance of a large number of questionable practices that could only be remedied by time-

consuming, burdensome Section 2 litigation. Richard Valelly, a co-author of Peyton McCrary,

Christopher Seaman & Richard Valelly, The End of Preclearance As We Knew It: How the

Supreme Court Transformed Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 11 MICH. J. RACE & L. 275

(2006) (hereinafter "End of Preclearance"), testified before the House about the study. House

Hearing, 109th Cong. 877-922 (Oct. 18, 2005) (statement of Richard M. Valelly). According to

the End of Preclearance study, 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

                                                39
discriminatory intent. See End of Preclearance 297 tbl. 2. Hence, "the intent prong was

involved in a remarkable 74 percent of all objections in that decade." Id. at 298. Purpose-based

objections were particularly prevalent in the redistricting context, where nearly 90% of the

Justice Department's objections to post-1990 redistricting plans were based at least in part on

discriminatory intent. Id. at 298 tbl. 3; see also House Hearing, 109th Cong. 13-16 (Nov. 1,

2005) (Posner prepared statement).

       According to the End of Preclearance study, these numbers changed remarkably after the

Supreme Court decided Bossier II. From the time of the Supreme Court's decision in January

2000 until the end of June 2004, the Department of Justice issued 43 total objections to voting

changes, compared to 250 objections in the equivalent period during the 1990s. End of

Preclearance 313-14 & n.198. Strikingly, only two of those objections were based solely on

intent; 13 were based on both intent and purpose. Id. Hence, from 1990-2000, 43% of

objections were based solely on purpose and 74% were based in part on purpose. In the four and

a half years after Bossier II, however, 4.7% of objections were based solely on purpose and

30.2% were based in part on purpose. As one of the study authors summarized, the effect of

Bossier II was "sort of like dropping off a cliff." House Hearing, 109th Cong. 879 (Oct. 18,

2005) (Valelly statement).

       There are, of course, at least two readings of this information. One reading is that the

Department of Justice had successfully blocked many voting changes that were intended to

discriminate against minorities in the 1990s, but that Bossier II prevented it from doing so in the

2000s, thus allowing those changes to go into practice. Alternatively, some of the Supreme

Court's opinions have made clear that some members of the Court believe that the Department of



                                                40
Justice inappropriately relied on the purpose prong to force redistricting jurisdictions to draw the

maximum possible number of majority-minority districts. See Miller v, Johnson, 515 U.S. 900,

924-25 (1995); see also Shaw v. Hunt, 517 U.S. 899, 911-13 (1996) ("Shaw II"). Hence, another

reading of the End of Preclearance data is that the Department of Justice was indeed relying too

heavily on the purpose prong and Bossier II had the salutary effect of forcing it to cease doing

so.

       Congress heard considerable testimony on this question. One witness explained that he

would address it because "if the Department badly handled this authority in the past, one could

ask whether it is appropriate to again give the Department that authority in the future." House

Hearing, 109th Cong. 882 (Oct. 18, 2005) (Posner statement). After analysis of objections

interposed by the Department in the 1990s, he concluded that the Department of Justice had

generally followed the standard laid out in Village of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing

Development Corp., 429 U.S. 252 (1977), in interposing objections based on discriminatory

purpose. Id. at 883; see also House Hearing, 109 Cong. 17-18 (Nov. 1, 2005) (Posner prepared

statement). Another witness agreed that the Justice Department had properly used the "objective

and workable standard" of Arlington Heights in deciding whether to preclear voting changes

under the purpose prong. Senate Hearing, 109 Cong. 174-75, 182 (May 9, 2006) (Shaw

responses). This Court agrees with those assessments. Although reasonable people could differ

on the correctness of some of the objections interposed by the Department in the 1980s and

1990s, the Court finds that Congress amassed sufficient evidence in 2005 and 2006 to support

the conclusion that the Justice Department had largely used the purpose prong correctly before

Bossier II, and that Bossier II had forced preclearance of many intentionally discriminatory



                                                 41
voting procedures that could only be remedied by time-consuming, expensive Section 2

litigation. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 66-68.

       Congress also heard testimony about discriminatory voting changes that would have been

precleared had the Department of Justice followed the Bossier II standards since the inception of

Section 5. The End of Preclearance authors pointed out that under the Bossier II standard,

Section 5 would have been virtually useless when it was "'needed most,'" because in some places

"'historical discrimination had left the number of black voters at close to zero.'" House Hearing,

109th Cong. 149 (Nov. 1, 2005) (draft of End of Preclearance) (quoting Bossier II, 528 U.S. at

374 (Breyer, J., dissenting)); see also Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 94 (May 16, 2006) (Karlan

responses) (elaborating on the point). As one witness explained, "[t]he Bossier II rule actually

rewards the most intransigent perpetrators of discrimination, who after decades of exclusion of

minority voters and candidates, may now be able to keep the political process closed on the

ground that they have not abandoned their discriminatory ways. In these circumstances, under

the reasoning of Bossier II, would-be violators are not diminishing political power or access but

merely maintaining an exclusionary status quo. This scenario may aptly be characterized as

perversely paying dividends for past discrimination." House Hearing, 109th Cong. 43 (May 4,

2006) (Adegbile prepared statement).

       The record also contained evidence of specific discriminatory changes that would have

gone into effect under the Bossier II standard. For instance, several witnesses pointed out that

Bossier II would have required preclearance of the infamous proposed 1981 congressional

redistricting in Georgia. As described in Shelby County, 2011 WL 4375001, at *51, Georgia

began its congressional redistricting process after the 1980 census showed that the state's ten



                                                42
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

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 v. Smith, 549 F. Supp. 494, 498-99 (D.D.C. 1982). Because Georgia's plan

increased the percentage of blacks in the Fifth District, however, it was not retrogressive, and

therefore "technically . . . [did] not have a discriminatory effect, as that term has been construed

under the Voting Rights Act." Id. at 516.

        A three-judge court in this district nonetheless denied preclearance to the plan based on

its conclusion that the plan had been "the product of purposeful racial discrimination." See id. at

516-18. 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. at

515 (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



                                                     43
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 (quoting City of

Richmond v. United States, 422 U.S. 358, 378-79 (1975)). Representative John Lewis was

ultimately elected from the effective majority-minority district preserved by the litigation. See

House Hearing, 109th Cong. 20 (Nov. 1, 2005) (statement of Brenda Wright). Under Bossier II,

however, this discriminatory plan could only have been contested through Section 2 litigation.

       Similarly, without the proposed amendment, the Justice Department would have had to

preclear Bladen County, North 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." 2 House Hearing, Scope,

109th Cong. 1761 (Oct. 25, 2005) (appendix to statement of Bradley J. Schlozman, Copies of

Objection Letters, by State, from 1980 to October 17, 2006) (hereinafter, "Schlozman

Appendix"). 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



                                                 44
Justice Department explained, "it appears that the board undertook extraordinary measures to

adopt an election plan which minimizes minority voting strength." Id.

       Finally, Congress heard direct evidence that some jurisdictions were looking to capitalize

on Bossier II and other cases to the disadvantage of minority voters. The testimony of Kent

Willis, the director of the American Civil Liberties Union in Virginia, provided a particularly

striking confirmation of this point. See House Hearing, 109th Cong. 894 (Oct. 18, 2005)

(statement of Kent Willis). Willis explained that he had attended a 2002 redistricting meeting in

Fredricksburg, Virginia, where he lived. Id. The city had "long had one African-American

majority district in its system," and African-Americans had historically been elected from that

district. Id. Willis testified that the discussion at the 2002 meeting "was entirely about how do

we eliminate this district. And the instruction[] to the city attorney was, look at the recent

Supreme Court case, you know, look at the cases that are taking place in the mid-'90s and early

2000, and tell us if there is a way we can eliminate the African-American majority district." Id.

       To summarize, Congress collected extensive evidence of purposefully discriminatory

voting changes that could or clearly would go into effect in the absence of the amendment in

subsection (c). It also heard testimony that leaving Bossier II intact would shift a great deal of

voting rights litigation from Section 5 to Section 2, and that such a shift would be a practical

disaster for minority voting rights. To correct these several problems, Congress amended section

5 to specify that "[t]he term 'purpose' in subsections (a) and (b) of this section shall include any

discriminatory purpose." 42 U.S.C. § 1973c(c).

       In light of the record before Congress, as well as the Supreme Court's caselaw defining

and clarifying Congress's Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendment enforcement powers, the Court



                                                 45
concludes that Congress did not exceed its enforcement powers in enacting subsection (c). The

Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Georgia, 546 U.S. 151 (2006) illustrates why.

There, the plaintiff, a disabled inmate in a Georgia state jail, claimed that he was confined to a

cell so small that he could not move his wheelchair and that he had to sit in his own bodily waste

because prison officials refused to help him use the inaccessible toilets and showers. Id. at 156.

He argued that this treatment violated the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C.A. § 12131

et seq. ("ADA"), and that Title II of the ADA abrogated Georgia's sovereign immunity. Id. The

Eleventh Circuit concluded that the ADA's attempted abrogation of Georgia's sovereign

immunity was invalid. Id. The Supreme Court reversed. Id. at 160. It first noted that if the

plaintiff's allegations were true, his treatment likely constituted an independent Fourteenth

Amendment violation (i.e., an Eighth Amendment violation incorporated against the states

through the Fourteenth Amendment) as well as a violation of the ADA. Id. at 157. The Court

then explained that, "[w]hile the Members of this Court have disagreed regarding the scope of

Congress's 'prophylactic' enforcement powers under § 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, no one

doubts that § 5 grants Congress the power to 'enforce . . . the provisions' of the Amendment by

creating private remedies against the States for actual violations of those provisions." Id. at 158

(internal citations omitted). Because the plaintiff claimed actual violations of the Fourteenth

Amendment, Congress had broad remedial powers, including the usually disfavored power of

abrogating a state's sovereign immunity. Id. at 158-59.

       Here, subsection (c) forbids purposeful discrimination. By definition, purposeful

discrimination by state actors on the basis of race violates the Constitution. U.S. CONST., amend.

XIV; Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229, 239-41 (1976). Hence, the amendment to Section 5 in



                                                 46
subsection (c) forbids only conduct that constitutes an actual Fourteenth Amendment violation,

so Congress's enforcement powers are at their broadest. See Georgia, 546 U.S. at 158-59.

Subsection (c) differs in just one way from a straightforward ban on unconstitutional conduct:

instead of putting the onus on the alleged victim to prove discrimination, the burden is shifted to

the state actor to prove the absence of discrimination. The Supreme Court has previously

approved this burden-shifting procedure, see Katzenbach, 383 U.S. at 334-35, and such burden-

shifting seems far less intrusive than the abrogation of sovereign immunity approved in Georgia.

See 546 U.S. at 158-59. Given the substantial evidence that Congress amassed for the necessity

of an amendment to Section 5, and the narrowness of the amendment Congress chose, the Court

finds that subsection (c) lies comfortably within Congress's enforcement powers.

       In reality, the core of plaintiffs' challenge to subsection (c) is not about Congress's

enforcement powers, but about the fear that the Department of Justice will use the purpose prong

to extract its preferred results in the redistricting context. Plfs.' Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for

Summ. J. ("Plfs.' MSJ") at 28-30, 41-42; Plfs.' Opp. at 29-32. The witnesses who testified

against the Bossier II "fix" were motivated by the same concern. See Senate Hearing, 109th

Cong. 11 (July 13, 2006) (statement of Michael Carvin); id. at 14 (statement of Abigail

Thernstrom); House Hearing, 109th Cong. 29-31 (Nov. 1, 2005) (statement of Roger Clegg).

The government argues in response that the Supreme Court's opinions in Miller and Shaw II

made clear that it may not so employ the purpose prong, and points to its regulations that

underscore the point. See Miller, 515 U.S. at 924-25; Shaw II, 517 U.S. at 911-13; see also 28

C.F.R. § 51.54 (providing that Justice Department must use factors set forth in Village of

Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corp., 429 U.S. 252 (1977), in



                                                 47
determining whether a voting change was motivated by discriminatory purpose); 28 C.F.R. §

51.59(b) (providing that "[a] jurisdiction's failure to adopt the maximum possible number of

majority-minority districts may not be the sole basis for determining that a jurisdiction was

motivated by a discriminatory purpose"). Moreover, the government argues, neither plaintiffs

nor the Congressional witnesses identified any instance of the Department of Justice's improper

reliance on the purpose prong since Miller. Def.'s Opp. at 36-37. While it is true that the

Supreme Court implicitly criticized the Justice Department for such behavior in 2000 in Bossier

II, see 528 U.S. at 324, the objection that was the basis for that case was originally made in 1993,

two years before Miller.

       Whatever the merits of this concern, it is not the proper subject of a facial challenge to

subsection (c), and plaintiffs have made clear that they have disavowed their as-applied

challenge. "In determining whether a law is facially invalid, we must be careful not to go

beyond the statute's facial requirements and speculate about hypothetical or imaginary cases."

Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State Republican Party, 552 U.S. 442, 449-50 (2008) (internal

quotation marks omitted); see also United States v. Raines, 362 U.S. 17, 22 (1960) ("The delicate

power of pronouncing an Act of Congress unconstitutional is not to be exercised with reference

to hypothetical cases thus imagined."). Moreover, "facial challenges threaten to short circuit the

democratic process by preventing laws embodying the will of the people from being

implemented in a manner consistent with the Constitution. We must keep in mind that a ruling of

unconstitutionality frustrates the intent of the elected representatives of the people." Wash. State

Grange, 552 U.S. at 451 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). That is particularly so

where, as here, Congress has clearly undertaken its legislative task with great care. See Shelby



                                                48
County, 2011 WL 4375001, at *80.

       If the Department of Justice employs subsection (c) to block unobjectionable voting

procedures, the affected jurisdiction will be entitled to bring an as-applied challenge to the

statute in a de novo proceeding in this district. LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 783 (citing City of Rome

v. United States, 450 F. Supp. 378, 380-82 & n.3 (D.D.C. 1978)). But given the lack of any

current indication of such practices, this Court will not invalidate subsection (c) based on

speculation.

               3. Subsections (b) and (d)

       The challenge to subsections (b) and (d) revolves around the standard to be applied in

deciding whether to preclear districting and other changes that have the potential to dilute

minority votes. It is therefore appropriate to repeat some of Shelby County's findings about

intentionally discriminatory vote dilution.

       The Congressional record contained significant evidence of intentionally dilutive actions

in the districting context. For instance, Congress heard testimony about an episode 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.

Congress also heard that during one round of redistricting, 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, 549 F.

Supp. at 501; see also H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 67; House Hearing, 109th Cong. 54 (Nov. 9,



                                                 49
2005) (prepared statement of Laughlin McDonald).

        Congress was also provided information that, in 2002, the Justice Department objected to

a redistricting plan proposed by the city of Albany, Georgia, based on the determination that

Albany 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 House Hearing, Scope,

109th Cong. 846 (Oct. 25, 2005) (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

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



                                                 50
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 House Hearing, Scope, 109th Cong. 2082-84 (Oct. 25, 2005)

(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.

       The record revealed many more similar instances. See, e.g., 1 House Hearing, Scope,

109th Cong. 433 (Oct. 25, 2005) (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,



                                                 51
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").

       In addition to these examples, the legislative record included judicial decisions denying

preclearance that relied on evidence of intentional discrimination. The 1990 redistricting in

Georgia -- in which Joe Mack Wilson, Chair of the state's House Reapportionment Committee,

stated he did not want to draw "nigger districts" -- has already been discussed. In a more recent

declaratory judgment action, the Louisiana House of 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 Nw. Austin I, 573 F.

Supp. 2d at 256; Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 28 (May 16, 2006) (responses of Theodore S.

Arrington to questions of Sens. Cornyn, Coburn, Leahy, Kennedy, and Kohl); Senate Hearing,

109th Cong. 152 (May 9, 2006) (Shaw responses); Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 42-44 (June 21,

2006) (responses of Debo Adegbile to questions of Sens. Kennedy, Leahy, Cornyn, and Coburn).

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

Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 43 (June 21, 2006) (Adegbile responses). But in selectively



                                                 52
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

Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 28 (May 16, 2006) (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); Senate Hearing, 109th

Cong. 43 (June 21, 2006) (Adegbile responses); Nw. Austin I, 573 F. Supp. 2d at 256.

       The Congressional record also contained many examples of changes to voting procedures

outside the districting context that the Department of Justice found to be motivated by

unconstitutional discriminatory purpose. For instance, an 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." 2 House Hearing, Scope, 109th Cong. 1731 (Schlozman

Appendix). In the context of annexations, the Justice Department issued an objection in 1990 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 House Hearing, Scope, 109th Cong. 927 (Oct. 25, 2005)

(Schlozman Appendix). The Justice Department also expressed concern regarding the timing of

the annexations, noting that one of the annexed wards "had been eligible to be added to the City



                                                  53
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

id. 927-28; 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 House

Hearing, Scope, 109th Cong. 2492 (Oct. 25, 2005) (Schlozman Appendix).

       The Congressional record was thus replete with evidence of intentionally discriminatory

vote dilution, particularly in the districting context. Keeping that evidence in mind, the Court

will now turn to consideration of the evidence Congress gathered about the possible

consequences of the Supreme Court's opinion in Georgia v. Ashcroft. But to begin with, a brief

review of the caselaw interpreting the "effects" prong of Section 5 is useful.

       Section 5(a) provides that no change to voting procedures can be precleared if it "will

have the effect of denying or abridging the right to vote on account of race or color[.]" 42 U.S.C.

§ 1973c(a). The Supreme Court first addressed the meaning of "the effect of denying or

abridging the right to vote on account of race or color" in Beer v. United States, 425 U.S. 130

(1976). According to Beer, the purpose of Section 5 was 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." Id. at 141. The Beer Court

added that "an ameliorative new legislative apportionment cannot violate § 5 unless the new

apportionment itself so discriminates on the basis of race or color as to violate the Constitution."

Id. Under Beer, then, the effects prong of Section 5 was solely concerned with retrogression,



                                                  54
i.e., changes in voting practices or procedures that made the situation of minority voters worse.

       The Beer standard was not so pellucid that it eliminated any possible questions about the

interpretation and application of the effects prong, but nonetheless, the Supreme Court did not

address the meaning of that prong again until Georgia v. Ashcroft, 539 U.S. 461 (2003). There,

the Court considered in depth what it meant to make the situation of minority voters worse.

Ashcroft arose as a result of the 2000 redistricting in Georgia. Id. at 469. The Court explained

that "a substantial majority of black voters in Georgia vote Democratic, [and] all elected black

representatives in the General Assembly are Democrats." Id. In the 2000 round of redistricting,

"[t]he goal of the Democratic leadership -- black and white -- was to maintain the number of

majority-minority districts and also increase the number of Democratic Senate seats." Id. To do

so, the Democratic leadership agreed to a plan "unpacking" certain majority-minority districts

with very high concentrations of black voters. Id. at 469-71. Thus, the concentration of black

voters was reduced in some districts, and black voters -- a "substantial majority" of whom

reliably voted Democratic -- were spread to other districts to increase Democratic candidates'

chances of success. Id.

       Instead of seeking administrative preclearance from the Attorney General, Georgia

instituted an action seeking judicial preclearance. Id. at 471. A three-judge panel denied

preclearance on the grounds that the plan would "diminish African American voting strength in"

the unpacked districts, and that Georgia had "failed to present any . . . evidence" that the

retrogression in those districts "will be offset by gains in other districts." Georgia v. Ashcroft,

195 F. Supp. 2d 25, 88 (D.D.C. 2002). Georgia appealed directly to the Supreme Court.

See Ashcroft, 539 U.S. at 475.



                                                 55
       The Supreme Court's task was to divine whether the districting plan, based on a complex

mix of partisanship, incumbency protection, and compliance with the Voting Rights Act, "'would

lead to a retrogression in the position of racial minorities with respect to their effective exercise

of the electoral franchise.'" 539 U.S. at 462 (quoting Beer, 425 U.S. at 141). In answering that

question, the Supreme Court set out a lengthy "totality of the circumstances" test that courts

evaluating retrogression should consider. 539 U.S. at 480-84. The Court emphasized that "the

ability of a minority group to elect a candidate of its choice remains an integral feature in any § 5

analysis." Id. at 484. But, the Court said, it "cannot be dispositive." Id. at 480. Rather,

       [i]n order to maximize the electoral success of a minority group, a State may
       choose to create a certain number of "safe" districts, in which it is highly likely
       that minority voters will be able to elect the candidate of their choice.
       Alternatively, a State may choose to create a greater number of districts in which
       it is likely -- although perhaps not quite as likely as under the benchmark plan --
       that minority voters will be able to elect candidates of their choice.
           Section 5 does not dictate that a State must pick one of these methods of
       redistricting over another. Either option will present the minority group with its
       own array of electoral risks and benefits, and presents hard choices about what
       would truly maximize minority electoral success.

Id. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). In addition to the choice between fewer

completely "safe" districts and more less safe districts, the Court wrote that the analysis should

include whether a plan added or subtracted "influence districts" -- districts "where minority

voters may not be able to elect a candidate of choice but can play a substantial, if not decisive,

role in the electoral process." Id. at 482. Finally, the Court added two additional considerations

to its totality of the circumstances test: "the comparative position of legislative leadership,

influence, and power for representatives of the benchmark majority-minority districts" and

whether minority-preferred representatives supported the plan. Id. at 483-84 (internal quotation

marks and citations omitted).


                                                  56
       Congress reacted to Ashcroft in 2006 by adding subsections (b) and (d) to Section 5.

Those amendments provide that

       (b) Any voting qualification or prerequisite to voting, or standard, practice, or
       procedure with respect to voting that has the purpose of or will have the effect of
       diminishing the ability of any citizens of the United States on account of race or
       color, or in contravention of the guarantees set forth in section 1973b (f)(2) of this
       title, to elect their preferred candidates of choice denies or abridges the right to
       vote within the meaning of subsection (a) of this section.
       ...
       (d) The purpose of subsection (b) of this section is to protect the ability of such
       citizens to elect their preferred candidates of choice.

42 U.S.C. § 1973c(b), (d). Hence, instead of allowing courts and the Department of Justice to

take into account a wide variety of potential indicators of minority voting effectiveness in

conducting the preclearance analysis, Congress clarified that Section 5 is focused on minorities'

ability "to elect their preferred candidates of choice." In the House Report accompanying the

bill, Congress explained that the amendments were meant to return to the analysis articulated in

Beer. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 71.

       Unlike the debate over the Bossier II fix, which nearly all witnesses agreed was

necessary and appropriate, the Ashcroft fix was the subject of extended debate. A consistent

theme, however, was that the standard laid out in Ashcroft was impossibly challenging to

administer, particularly within the 60-day period in which the Department of Justice must make

preclearance decisions. Witnesses called it "an unworkable standard," Senate Hearing, 109th

Cong. 8 (May 16, 2006) (Arrington statement), "subjective, abstract, and impressionistic," House

Hearing, 109th Cong. 49 (Nov. 9, 2005) (McDonald statement), "amorphous [and] easily

manipulable . . . an open invitation to mischief . . . [and] poorly defined and virtually impossible

to meaningfully administer." Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 39 (May 17, 2006) (Days responses).



                                                 57
Robert Kengle, the former Deputy Chief of the Voting Section of the Justice Department's Civil

Rights Division, testified that Ashcroft had "introduced factors into the retrogression analysis

that make the Section 5 process more complicated and burdensome for everybody, not just for

the Department of Justice but for the jurisdictions that have to comply with it as well." House

Hearing, 109th Cong. 889 (Oct. 18, 2005) (statement of Robert A. Kengle). Kengle also worried

that Ashcroft would make preclearance decisions "less predictable and more open to subjective

judgments, individual preconceptions and even political biases." Id. A hearing in the House

opened with the question, "Georgia v. Ashcroft: can it be made workable?" House Hearing,

109th Cong. 2 (Nov. 9, 2005) (Rep. Conyers statement).

       Witnesses were particularly concerned about the introduction of "influence" districts into

the Section 5 calculus. "Influence" districts, as previously explained, are those where "minority

voters may not be able to elect a candidate of choice but can play a substantial, if not decisive,

role in the electoral process." Ashcroft, 539 U.S. at 482.5 Congressional witnesses testified that

a key problem with the Ashcroft opinion was the lack of a standard that would allow courts and

       5
           Influence districts contrast with majority-minority, crossover, and opportunity districts.
The meaning of those terms is subject to considerable debate. Persily, Promise and Pitfalls 235-
37, 241-42. As used in this opinion, majority-minority districts are those where a minority group
is able to elect its "preferred candidates of choice" without crossover voting from either white
voters or voters of a different minority group. See id. at 241-42 (discussing conceptual issues in
defining majority-minority districts). "Crossover" districts, sometimes called coalition districts,
are those where minority voters can elect their candidates of choice with certain "crossover"
votes from white or other voters who support the minority group's candidates of choice. See
Bartlett v. Strickland, 129 S. Ct. 1231, 1242-43 (2009) (discussing different types of districts).
"Crossover" districts are different than influence districts because the minority voters are
sufficiently numerous that they can choose the candidate, presumably because they form a
majority of voters in the primary elections, rather than choosing among white voters' candidates
of choice. See id. at 1242; see also Persily, Promise and Pitfalls 236, 242-43. Finally, this Court
will use "opportunity district" as an all-purpose term for those jurisdictions where minority
voters can elect their candidates of choice. Both majority-minority districts and crossover
districts are opportunity districts.

                                                 58
the Justice Department to determine which districts were "influence" districts. Theodore Shaw

explained that "[w]e don't know what 'influence districts' really mean[s]." He asked:

       How is influence effectively measured within DOJ’s sixty-day administrative
       window? Does one look to roll call votes? Do those votes need to be on issues
       that have a discernible race element or just a discernible position preferred by
       minority group members? Is it enough if candidates for office campaign in
       minority communities? Must influence be consistently in evidence or is
       occasional influence sufficient?

House Hearing, 109th Cong. 13, 25 (Nov. 9, 2005) (statements of Theodore M. Shaw). Another

witness cited a study showing that a group's influence on a given legislator does not linearly

increase with the group's size, as one might expect, but rather has a "curvi-linear relationship" to

the group's size. House Hearing, 109th Cong. 57 (Nov. 9, 2005) (McDonald statement).

Moreover, as Representative Feeney pointed out, all of these problems were compounded by the

fact that what constituted an influence district would "change from candidate to candidate and

cycle to cycle and geographic area to geographic area." House Hearing, 109th Cong. 84 (Oct.

25, 2005) (statement of Rep. Tom Feeney).

       Several witnesses also testified that they were troubled by the fact that the Ashcroft

opinion gave no guidance as to when and whether majority-minority districts or other

opportunity districts could be traded for influence districts, and how many influence districts

would make up for the loss of an opportunity district. Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 168 (May 9,

2006) (Shaw responses); Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 116-17 (May 16, 2006) (responses of

Richard H. Pildes to questions of Sens. Specter, Cornyn, Coburn, and Kohl); Senate Hearing,

109th Cong. 58-59 (May 17, 2006) (Days responses); House Hearing, 109th Cong. 139-40 &

n.10 (Nov. 9, 2005) (Kengle prepared statement); House Hearing, 109th Cong. 49-50 (May 4,

2006) (Adegbile prepared statement). The lack of clarity about how to define influence districts,


                                                 59
along with the uncertainty about when influence districts could be traded for opportunity

districts, combined to create what several witnesses saw as the most significant problem with

Ashcroft: the opinion might allow jurisdictions to substantially dilute minority voting strength

under the guise of creating more influence districts. In the most extreme scenario, a jurisdiction

could carve up every opportunity district into a series of influence districts where minorities

might actually have no influence at all. Such a result would give official legal cover to the

blatant voting discrimination that Section 5 was designed to prevent, and would judicially

sanction a return to the days of districts designed to spread minority voters as widely as possible.

Cf. Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 84 (May 17, 2006) (responses of Armand Derfner to questions

of Sens. Cornyn, Coburn, Leahy, Kennedy, and Schumer) ("In this century, Mississippi’s

congressional district lines had been traditionally drawn from south to north, which meant that

the [largely black] Mississippi Delta was one congressional district. . . . [A]s soon as blacks

started voting, and especially with the Voting Rights Act, . . . [Mississippi changed] the historic

pattern so that the new congressional lines went from east to west, thus fragmenting the black

population in the Delta.").

       Even in less extreme scenarios, a jurisdiction could substantially dilute the voting power

of minorities through substitution of influence districts for opportunity districts. See Senate

Hearing, 109th Cong. 168-69 (May 9, 2006) (Shaw responses) (Ashcroft allows "jurisdictions to

cloak intentional discrimination under [its] intangible framework"); House Hearing, 109th Cong.

50 (Nov. 9, 2005) (McDonald statement) ("The minority influence theory, moreover, is

frequently nothing more than a guise for diluting minority voting strength."); Senate Hearing,

109th Cong. 12 (May 17, 2006) (statement of Nathaniel Persily) ("The risk of Georgia v.



                                                 60
Ashcroft is that . . . under the cloak of influence districts, a jurisdiction would then break up a

cohesive minority community into much smaller districts in which they really had no influence

at all."). Professor Richard Pildes, who "agree[d] with the Court on the Georgia facts" and did

not support the "fix," noted that even supporters of the Ashcroft decision were "sometimes

worried about the possible implications of the decision down the road," and thought that the

hearings should clarify that a jurisdiction could not trade every opportunity district for influence

districts. Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 116-17 (May 16, 2006) (Pildes responses).

       Congress also heard testimony about Ashcroft's holding that states are free to choose

among the various ways of ensuring that minorities have an equal opportunity to participate

politically -- in other words, that states may choose between majority-minority districts,

influence districts, crossover districts, and other types of participation. Robert Kengle, who

agreed with parts of the Ashcroft decision and the theoretical importance of influence districts,

testified that he was "quite uncomfortable with the notion that 'the State may choose . . . to risk

having fewer minority representatives,' which strikes me as letting the fox guard the henhouse."

House Hearing, 109th Cong. 135, 139 (Nov. 9, 2005) (Kengle prepared statement) (quoting

Ashcroft, 539 U.S. at 464). The House Report reflected a specific Congressional finding that,

given the record before Congress, covered jurisdictions should not be allowed unfettered

discretion to choose among theories of representation. H.R. Rep. 109-478, at 70.

       One final concern expressed by several witnesses was that consideration of influence

districts would inject undue partisanship into the Voting Rights Act. Ashcroft itself, of course,

grew out of an attempt to maximize Democratic strength while complying with the Act. As one

witness bluntly summarized:



                                                  61
       [T]o the extent that I can imagine what measures would be used to determine
       whether substantive representation or influence has been enhanced to prevent
       retrogression, these measures amount to simply helping Democratic Party
       candidates. In virtually every state legislature, in the Congress, and in many local
       jurisdictions, minority representatives -- especially African Americans -- are
       strongly allied with the Democratic Party. Helping Democratic Party candidates
       would be argued to be equivalent to increasing minority voter influence and
       helping minority substantive representation. In other words, influence districts, if
       seen as a replacement for opportunities for minority voters to elect representatives
       of their choice, would become simply a rationale for creating Democratic Party
       gerrymanders.

Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 33 (May 16, 2006) (Arrington responses). But this was

problematic, because, as Theodore Shaw pointed out, "a sustained identity between minority and

partisan interests" cannot always be assumed given that "partisan links [may] weaken and shift,

as they historically have done." House Hearing, 109th Cong. 26 (Nov. 9, 2005) (Shaw prepared

statement).

       More broadly, Congress heard testimony that the Ashcroft standard too often subsumed

the goals of minority voters in favor of the goals of individual legislators and their political

parties. For instance, the fact that minority legislators supported a given redistricting plan might

mean that it protected their own districts, not that it was the best plan for minority voters. House

Hearing, 109th Cong. 22 (Oct. 25, 2005) (prepared statement of Robert Hunter). Asking judges

or Justice Department attorneys to assess whether a given legislator had a sufficiently important

leadership position -- and was likely to retain that leadership position after an election -- was

seen as unrealistic. Id. at 25. Indeed, one of the Justice Department's rare attempts to apply the

Ashcroft standard before it was overturned was laid out in a 73-page memo that was later leaked,

and voting rights scholars were highly critical of the Justice Department's efforts. See, e.g.,

Abigail Thernstrom, Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act: By Now, a Murky Mess, 5 GEO. J.L. &



                                                  62
PUB. POL'Y 41, 59-61 (2007) ("Throughout the memo, the career attorneys attempted to read

political tealeaves, predicting the race or political sympathies of candidates who would be

elected from various districts under the new plan. It was a practice invited by the Ashcroft

Court, but . . . attorneys in Washington were (inevitably) not very good at it."). Summarizing the

problem, Robert Kengle testified:

       Finally, in my view the Ashcroft decision makes its greatest departure from the
       Supreme Court's other voting rights jurisprudence by introducing explicit partisan
       calculations into the Section 5 review process. Creating influence and coalition
       districts with partisan allies may in fact be the best way to maximize minority
       voting strength in particular cases, and I think minority citizens and legislators
       should be allowed considerable latitude to do so.
          But to embody partisan calculations and tradeoffs into the Voting Rights Act
       itself has not been well thought out and provides a means and motive not only to
       politicize enforcement of Section 5, but also to undermine confidence that the Act
       will be enforced in a way that transcends party politics.

House Hearing, 109th Cong. 143 (Nov. 9, 2005) (Kengle prepared statement). Condensing all of

these concerns, voting rights practitioner Debo Adegbile speculated that under the Ashcroft test,

the Section 5 analysis would become so complex that "the statute will start to collapse of its own

weight." House Hearing, 109th Cong. 58 (May 4, 2006) (Adegbile prepared statement).

       To summarize, Congress gathered extensive evidence that discriminatory and dilutive

techniques remained a significant problem, and that the Ashcroft standard did not remedy -- and

could easily worsen -- the problem. Congress therefore chose to overrule Ashcroft with the

amendments codified at 42 U.S.C. §§ 1973c(b) and (d). A striking feature of the Ashcroft "fix,"

however, was the widespread uncertainty about what it meant. As one law professor put it,

"Congress did not so much reverse Ashcroft as remand it to the courts with equivocal

instructions." J. Morgan Kousser, The Strange, Ironic Career of Section 5 of the Voting Rights

Act, 1965-2007, 86 TEX. L. REV. 667, 755 (2008). One of the effects of the amendments is


                                                63
undisputed: they made clear that influence districts could not be substituted for opportunity

districts. Persily, Promise and Pitfalls 235-37, 247. What the amendments did not resolve,

however, was whether crossover districts were protected from retrogression and what sort of

tradeoffs between majority-minority and crossover districts were appropriate. Some witnesses

concluded that the Ashcroft fix was a simple return to the status quo ante, i.e., the Beer test,

while others disagreed. Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 149 (May 9, 2006) (responses of Laughlin

McDonald to questions of Sens. Specter, Kennedy, Schumer and Cornyn); Senate Hearing, 109th

Cong. 168-69 (May 9, 2006) (Shaw responses). But as Nathaniel Persily has explained, "[t]he

problem is that there is disagreement about what the standard under Beer was." Persily, Promise

and Pitfalls 234.

       The text of Beer certainly does not answer questions about crossover districts and

tradeoffs, and the Supreme Court had never attempted to clarify the issue until Ashcroft. Nor

does the text of the amendments obviously answer that question. The House and Senate reports

vividly illustrate the amendments' ambiguity. The House report provides that "[v]oting changes

that leave a minority group less able to elect a preferred candidate of choice, either directly or

when coalesced with other voters, cannot be precleared under Section 5." H.R. Rep. No. 109-

478, at 71. Hence, according to the House report, crossover districts as well as majority-

minority districts are protected under the amendments. The Senate report presents a truly bizarre

situation. The Senate unanimously voted to renew Section 5 on July 20, 2006. S. Rep. 109-295,

at 54-55. A draft Senate report had been circulated, but instead of accepting it, the Republican

members of the Senate Judiciary Committee produced their own report six days after the passage

of the bill, over the vehement protests of the Democratic members of the Committee. Id.



                                                 64
According to that Report, subsections (b) and (d) were intended only "to protect naturally

occurring majority-minority districts," not crossover districts. Id. at 19. Moreover, the

Republican Senate Report specifically stated that "coalition or influence districts" could never be

substituted for naturally occurring majority-minority districts. Id. Although this Court will not

rely on a one-party, post hoc report as evidence of what the amendments actually mean, the

report does reflect disagreement among members of Congress as to their meaning.

        In the context of this facial challenge, then, the Court must construe the amendments,

bearing in mind that they should not be found unconstitutional unless there is no plausible

constitutional construction. See Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. v. Fla. Gulf Coast Bldg. & Constr.

Trades Council, 485 U.S. 568, 575 (1988); David L. Franklin, Facial Challenges, Legislative

Purpose, and the Commerce Clause, 92 IOWA L. REV. 41, 58 (2006) (a facial challenge asserts

that a statute is "invalid on its face as written and authoritatively construed, when measured

against the applicable substantive constitutional doctrine"). The key interpretive question, as

previously explained, is whether the amendments permit the Section 5 analysis to include

crossover districts and whether they permit any tradeoffs between crossover and majority-

minority districts. Looking solely to the text of the amendments, the Court believes that they

permit both. Subsection (b) provides that "Any [voting procedure] . . . that has the purpose of or

will have the effect of diminishing the ability of any citizens of the United States on account of

race or color . . . to elect their preferred candidates of choice denies or abridges the right to vote."

42 U.S.C. § 1973c(b). Subsection (d) further clarifies that "[t]he purpose of subsection (b) of

this section is to protect the ability of such citizens to elect their preferred candidates of choice."

42 U.S.C. § 1973c(d). Nothing in the phrase "elect their preferred candidates of choice"



                                                  65
specifies that voters must do so only from majority-minority districts.6

        Influence districts do not fit within the terms of the amendments because voters who only

"influence" an election are not able to choose, and then elect, the candidates who best represent

them. Instead, they can only choose between candidates preferred by other groups. In any

event, the legislative history makes overwhelmingly clear that influence districts are no longer a

factor in the Section 5 analysis under the amendments. See H.R. Rep. No. 109-478, at 70. In

crossover districts, however, minority voters form a sufficiently large percentage of the

registered voter population to select a "preferred candidate of choice" in the primary, and to elect

that preferred candidate -- with crossover voting from those who are not part of the minority

group -- in the general election. See Persily, Promise and Pitfalls 236 (citing Bernard Grofman,

Lisa Handley & David Lubin, Drawing Effective Minority Districts: A Conceptual Framework

and Some Empirical Evidence, 79 N.C. L. REV. 1383, 1407-09 (2001)). Hence, the Court finds

that crossover districts fit within the statutory scheme. Moreover, the Court sees nothing in the

text of the amendments that would prevent a certain amount of tradeoff between majority-

minority districts and crossover districts, assuming that minority voters indeed have the ability to

elect preferred candidates of their choice in the crossover districts.

        But the amendments did more than just remove influence districts from the preclearance

analysis: they also affirmed that minorities' "ability to elect," not the "totality of the



        6
          This Court recognizes that this interpretation conflicts with the three-justice plurality's
reading of a similar phrase in the Section 2 context in Bartlett, 129 S. Ct. at 1243-45, although
the four justices in dissent agreed with this Court's reading. Id. at 1250. The plurality's opinion,
however, was based on administrative and constitutional concerns rather than the text of the
statute. Id. at 1244-45, 1247-48. Moreover, the plurality explicitly held that its conclusion did
not apply in the Section 5 context. Id. at 1249; see also id. at 1258 (Souter, J., dissenting)
(discussing Section 2 and Section 5).

                                                   66
circumstances," is the critical issue in the preclearance of any proposed voting change. Hence,

courts and the Justice Department can no longer consider many of the factors that the Ashcroft

Court identified as relevant to the totality of the circumstances test. Specifically, the

preclearance analysis can no longer consider minority-preferred politicians' views of the

proposed change, nor can it consider whether the position or power of a particular minority-

preferred politician could substitute in some way for the ability to elect. More generally, any

factor that is not related to minorities' "ability to elect" is off the table. This principle is not

limitless, of course: courts and the Justice Department are required to consider certain

constitutional mandates, including compliance with the one person one vote principle and equal

protection principles, and caselaw and history have established that the preclearance analysis

includes consideration of population growth and decline. Infra at 89-90. But the universe of

rationales that can justify a change to voting procedures is now considerably smaller than it was

under Ashcroft.

        The third and final question under Boerne is whether the amendments, so construed, are a

congruent and proportional response to the pattern of unconstitutional behavior that Congress

identified and the problems that Congress found infected the Ashcroft standard. It is important

to keep in mind that plaintiffs' challenge here is only to the amendments; the Court has already

found that the general preclearance procedure is a congruent and proportional remedy to the

unconstitutional behavior Congress identified. Shelby County, 2011 WL 4375001, at *80.

        In this step of the Boerne analysis, the critical issue is whether Congress is enforcing the

guarantees of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, rather than attempting substantively to

redefine those Amendments. Boerne, 521 U.S. at 519-20. That is, the question is whether the



                                                   67
law can "be understood as responsive to, or designed to prevent, unconstitutional behavior." Id.

at 532. Courts must afford Congress "wide latitude" in deciding what legislation will enforce,

rather than define, a constitutional guarantee. Id. at 519-20. In conducting the third step of the

Boerne analysis, the Supreme Court has been particularly cognizant of the federalism costs of

the challenged law. In Boerne itself, for instance, the Court found that RFRA exceeded

Congress's enforcement power in part because it was "a considerable congressional intrusion into

the States' traditional prerogatives and general authority to regulate for the health and welfare of

their citizens," and imposed "a heavy litigation burden on the states." Id. at 534.

       To discern whether subsections (b) and (d) can "be understood as responsive to, or

designed to prevent" intentional voting discrimination, it is important to keep in mind two

foundational points about voting, and about districting in particular. First, "voting is more than

an atomistic exercise." Bush v. Vera, 517 U.S. 952, 1048-49 (Souter, J., dissenting). Voting

districts are explicitly designed to protect certain communities of interest, whether partisan,

issue-oriented, or any of a number of other characteristics. See Miller, 515 U.S. at 916

("traditional districting principles" include "respect for political subdivisions [and] communities

defined by actual shared interests"); see also Pamela S. Karlan & Daryl J. Levinson, Why Voting

is Different, 84 CAL. L. REV. 1201, 1204-08, 1271-19 (1996) (hereinafter Karlan & Levinson,

Why Voting is Different). If voting and representation were perceived as a purely "atomistic

exercise," districting could be reduced to no more than drawing districts of equal size. But, as

the thousands of pages of opinions addressing redistricting issues show, "traditional districting

principles" are aimed at much more than numerical equivalence. See Shaw v. Reno, 509 U.S.

630, 647 (1993) ("Shaw I").



                                                 68
       The second foundational point is why racial groups are sometimes considered

"communities of interest" that can be gathered into districts. Groups defined in part by race are

considered communities of interests if, and only if, empirical evidence demonstrates that group

members' voting behavior is similar. In other words, saying that members of a given racial

group in a certain area currently vote alike is not a stereotype when it is a descriptive fact.

Karlan & Levinson, Why Voting is Different 1204-08, 1217-18. The government may never, of

course, engage in "the offensive and demeaning assumption that voters of a particular race,

because of their race, think alike, share the same political interests, and will prefer the same

candidates at the polls." Miller, 515 U.S. at 911-12 (internal quotation marks and citation

omitted). Nor may the government assume that minority groups that have voted alike in one

election will do so for all time. But when evidence demonstrates members of a racial minority in

a given place have found an "efficacious political identity," League of United Latin American

Citizens v. Perry, 548 U.S. 399, 435 (2006) ("LULAC"), an absolute mandate of federal

government colorblindness is perverse: it allows less colorblind State officials to intentionally

fragment the minority group into several districts (or pack them into one district) to avoid the

election of candidates who represent the group's political identity. Cf. Parents Involved in Cmty.

Schs. v. Seattle Sch. Dist. No. 1, 551 U.S. 701, 788 (2007) (hereinafter "Parents Involved")

(Kennedy, J., concurring) ("And, as an aspiration, Justice Harlan's axiom [that our Constitution

is color-blind] must command our assent. In the real world, it is regrettable to say, it cannot be a

universal constitutional principle.").

       The record before Congress demonstrated, first, that certain racial groups in covered

jurisdictions had found "efficacious political identit[ies]." LULAC, 548 U.S. at 435. Second, it



                                                  69
demonstrated extensive intentional attempts to fragment or pack potentially cohesive racial

minorities to ensure that they could not elect representatives attuned to those political interests.

Without evidence of both of those points, Congress would not have been entitled to create a

remedy as sweeping and race-conscious as the preclearance procedure. But given that record

evidence, Congress had the ability under its Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendment enforcement

authority to design legislation to "respon[d] to . . . or . . . prevent [that] unconstitutional

behavior." Boerne, 521 U.S. at 532.

        The unconstitutional behavior Congress was trying to prevent was intentional vote

dilution aimed at making minority votes less effective. The legislation Congress designed

directly responds to that problem by refusing preclearance to any voting change that

"diminish[es] the ability" of such groups "to elect their preferred candidates of choice." 42

U.S.C. § 1973c(b). The legislation is thus precisely congruent to the problem, because it forbids

the entire category of behavior Congress found to be problematic. But because it also forbids

some constitutional behavior -- voting changes that reduce minority voting effectiveness, but not

for intentionally discriminatory reasons -- the Court must consider whether it is proportional to

the problem.

        In judging whether subsections (b) and (d) are a proportional response to the problem, the

Court emphasizes again that proportionality of the Ashcroft standard is not at issue. But, as this

Court has construed the statute, the differences between the standards in subsections (b) and (d)

and in Ashcroft are relatively limited. In the districting context, the key difference is that

influence districts are no longer part of the Section 5 calculus. But Congress heard considerable

testimony that including consideration of influence districts in the Section 5 analysis would have



                                                  70
had deeply problematic results. Allowing tradeoffs between opportunity districts and influence

districts would have created a means to cloak intentional discrimination -- that is, intentional

fragmentation of politically cohesive groups -- under the guise of creating influence districts.

Moreover, as discussed below, Congress had reason to be concerned that keeping influence

districts as part of the Section 5 analysis would leave Section 5 vulnerable to an equal protection

challenge.

       The amendments also eliminated consideration of the amorphous "totality of the

circumstances" factors, including consideration of minority-preferred legislators' views of the

proposed voting changes and consideration of the position of particular minority-preferred

politicians. But Congress heard testimony that integrating such factors into Section 5 would

result in a statute that was impossible for the Department of Justice to administer effectively

within its sixty-day window. Moreover, Congress heard testimony that the results of the

preclearance process would be increasingly partisan, subjective, and unpredictable, driving up

costs for both the federal government and the affected jurisdictions. This subjectivity and

unpredictability was compounded by the fact that a "totality of the circumstances" test could

include unspecified factors even beyond those mentioned in Ashcroft. Given the record

evidence, it is quite understandable that Congress concluded that a totality of the circumstances

test could "undermine confidence that the Act will be enforced in a way that transcends party

politics," House Hearing, 109th Cong. 143 (Nov. 9, 2005) (Kengle prepared statement), and

could cause Section 5 to "collapse of its own weight." House Hearing, 109th Cong. 58 (May 4,

2006) (Adegbile statement).




                                                 71
        The standard laid out in subsections (b) and (d) also has several important limitations.

See Boerne, 521 U.S. at 533 ("limitations" including "termination dates, geographic restrictions,

or egregious predicates . . . tend to ensure Congress' means are proportionate to ends legitimate

under § 5"). First, like the rest of Section 5, the amendments are temporally and geographically

limited: they will expire after twenty-five years (that is, two redistricting cycles), and they apply

only in certain jurisdictions. Shelby County, 2011 WL 4375001, at *72-74. In the vote dilution

context, they also have an elegant, self-executing limitation. As this Court has previously

explained, a group defined by race can be considered a community of interest for voting

purposes only when empirical evidence, rather than stereotypes, demonstrates that members of

the minority group vote alike. This critical fact is built in to the "ability to elect" test because, as

racially polarized voting decreases, the number of districts affected by Section 5 decreases as

well. As racially polarized voting decreases, majority-minority districts can frequently be

replaced with crossover districts. See Bartlett, 129 S. Ct. at 1254-55 (Souter, J., dissenting). If

racially polarized voting disappeared entirely -- such that there is no correlation between race

and voting -- it would be virtually impossible for a districting plan to be retrogressive under

Section 5. Persily, Promise and Pitfalls 243. Hence, should racially polarized voting

substantially diminish before twenty-five years have passed -- and with it, the ability (and

motivation) for legislators to draw dilutive districts -- Section 5 will play a dramatically smaller

role in state voting procedures even before it officially expires.

        The final consideration under Boerne is the federalism costs the amendments in

subsections (b) and (d) exact, both in terms of "congressional intrusion into the States' traditional

prerogatives" and pragmatic costs, such as litigation costs. 521 U.S. at 534. This Court



                                                  72
recognizes, of course, that the Voting Rights Act as a whole represents a considerable "intrusion

into the States' traditional prerogatives." But, as explained in Shelby County, that intrusion is

justified by the persistent, purposeful discrimination aimed at minorities attempting to exercise

their core constitutional voting rights. 2011 WL 4375001, at *80. Hence, the only question

here is whether the amendments represent an intrusion beyond that imposed by the general

preclearance regime.

       In one sense, the federalism costs are greater under subsections (b) and (d) than they were

under Ashcroft because states have less latitude to choose among theories of representation and

political participation. But, as this Court has construed the statute, Congress narrowed the states'

latitude only as much as necessary to accomplish its goal. States may still draw either crossover

or majority-minority districts, and some tradeoff between them is appropriate. See Bartlett, 129

S. Ct. at 1254-55 (Souter, J., dissenting) (recognizing in Section 2 context that "crossover

districts ha[ve] the value of giving States greater flexibility to draw districting plans with a fair

number of minority-opportunity districts"). Moreover, because influence districts are no longer

protected from retrogression, states have substantially more freedom to redraw district lines in

districts that do not qualify as opportunity districts. In terms of pragmatic costs, subsections (b)

and (d) almost certainly work in the states' favor. The complexity of the test outlined in Ashcroft

would likely have led to very difficult preclearance decisions and extraordinarily complex

litigation. By returning to a test that is substantially closer to the familiar Beer test, Congress

reduced the complexity and costs of the preclearance process.

       The amendments in subsections (b) and (d) sweep broadly, and they admittedly capture a

certain amount of behavior that is constitutional. But, as the Court has previously found, the



                                                  73
retrogression principle itself is justified by the evidence of persistent, intentional discrimination

that Congress amassed. The amendments' modification to the Beer and Ashcroft tests was

necessary to avoid giving cover to intentional discrimination and to prevent an administrability

nightmare that would itself harm covered jurisdictions. Accordingly, the Court concludes that

subsections (b) and (d)'s modifications to the Beer and Ashcroft tests represent a congruent and

proportional response to the problem of intentionally discriminatory dilutive techniques. Hence,

they survive plaintiffs' constitutional challenge.

                                          III. COUNT II

                                            A. Standing

       The Court now turns to Count II of plaintiffs' complaint, which is similar to Count I's

challenge to the amendments in several ways. Both counts assert that the amendments are

unconstitutional, but they rest on different theories: Count I claims that the amendments exceed

Congress's enforcement powers, while Count II claims that they violate equal protection

principles.7 Accordingly, the standing analysis for the two claims is in some respects similar.

For the same reasons discussed in part II.A, the Court finds that plaintiffs have standing to bring

their challenge to subsections (b) and (d). Nix was injured because a referendum from which he

would have benefitted was suspended due to the operation of an allegedly unconstitutional law.

Under Akins, he has shown causation and redressability as to subsections (b) and (d). However,




       7
         Specifically, plaintiffs claim that the amendments violate the equal protection
component of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, which is substantively identical
to the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Adarand Constructors, Inc. v.
Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 227 (1995). The Fifth Amendment applies against the federal government,
while the Fourteenth Amendment applies against the states.

                                                  74
for the reasons given in part II.A, Nix does not have standing to bring an equal protection

challenge to subsection (c).

       The D.C. Circuit directed this Court to consider several questions about plaintiffs' Count

II standing on remand. See LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 794-96. The Court has addressed most of

those issues in the discussion of Count I, but one additional point must be addressed here. The

D.C. Circuit asked whether, given that plaintiffs' equal protection challenge is only facial,

plaintiffs have "met the requirement that litigants claiming injury from a racial classification

establish that they 'personally [have been] denied equal treatment by the challenged

discriminatory conduct.'" Id. at 795 (quoting United States v. Hays, 515 U.S. 737, 743-44

(1995)). This Court does not believe that Hays presents an obstacle for plaintiffs here.

Explaining why requires reviewing one branch of the Supreme Court's equal protection

jurisprudence.

       The Hays plaintiffs brought a claim under Shaw I, 509 U.S. at 652, which allows voters

who live in districts allegedly drawn with excessive attention to race to bring an equal protection

challenge. A Shaw claim is not a vote dilution claim, but rather the "analytically distinct claim"

that a voter experiences a stigmatic harm when she is placed into a district because of her race.

Id.; see also Miller, 515 U.S. at 911-913. The plaintiffs in Hays attempted to bring a Shaw

challenge to the creation of a district in which they did not live. 515 U.S. at 739. The Supreme

Court found that they did not have standing. The Court explained that the Shaw I plaintiffs had

standing because they had suffered a particularized stigmatic injury, but that the Hays plaintiffs

had not suffered any such stigmatic injury because they did not allege that they themselves had

been placed into a particular district because of their race. Id. at 744-45.



                                                 75
       Like the plaintiffs in Hays, the plaintiffs here have not been personally subjected to a

racial classification; hence, they cannot claim a stigmatic equal protection injury under Shaw.

But that does not defeat standing, because this Court's conclusion that plaintiffs have standing to

bring this challenge rests on an entirely different conception of their injury. Plaintiffs' injury is

not that they are subjected to a racial classification that creates either concrete or stigmatic

harms, but that a law that allegedly violates equal protection principles denied them the benefit

of the nonpartisan voting referendum. While this is not a "personal[] deni[al] [of] equal

treatment," Hays, 515 U.S. at 744 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted), as would be

required for a plaintiff bringing a Shaw claim, it is a concrete, particularized injury, and that is

what is required under the Supreme Court's standing jurisprudence. See Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560.

       Plaintiffs have also offered another, wholly different standing analysis for Count II.

Because plaintiffs' alternative argument would establish standing to bring their subsection (c)

claim, which they do not otherwise have, the Court must consider that argument as well. Citing

Northeastern Florida Chapter of the Associated General Contractors of America v. City of

Jacksonville, 508 U.S. 656 (1993), plaintiffs argue that their injury-in-fact is "the denial of equal

treatment that exists because election changes supported by Plaintiffs and other non-minorities in

Kinston cannot become law without satisfying those amendments' minority-preferences." Plfs.'

Opp. at 35. Or, as they phrase it elsewhere in their briefs, "wholly apart from the referendum,

Plaintiffs have standing as non-minority voters in Kinston who seek to ensure that beneficial

local laws need not run the gauntlet of unconstitutional minority-preferences contained in the

2006 amendments to Section 5." Plfs.' Opp. at 37.




                                                  76
       In Jacksonville, the plaintiff brought a Fourteenth Amendment challenge to a city

ordinance that required that 5% of the amount spent on city contracts be set aside for businesses

with at least 51% female or minority ownership. 508 U.S. at 658, 661. The plaintiff was an

organization of business owners, most of whose businesses did not qualify for the 5% set-aside.

Id. at 658. The Eleventh Circuit concluded that the organization lacked standing because it

could not point to specific contracts its members would have been awarded in the absence of the

set-aside program. Id. at 660. The Supreme Court disagreed:

       When the government erects a barrier that makes it more difficult for members of
       one group to obtain a benefit than it is for members of another group, a member
       of the former group seeking to challenge the barrier need not allege that he would
       have obtained the benefit but for the barrier in order to establish standing. The
       "injury in fact" in an equal protection case of this variety is the denial of equal
       treatment resulting from the imposition of the barrier, not the ultimate inability to
       obtain the benefit.

Id. at 666. The Supreme Court identified the core equal protection injury as "the inability to

compete on an equal footing in the bidding process, not the loss of a contract." Id. Here,

plaintiffs allege that the 2006 amendments to Section 5 function as a "discriminatory barrier"

that prevents them from competing equally with minorities in the advancement of "beneficial

local laws" like the referendum. Plfs.' Opp. at 37. They contend that it is therefore irrelevant

whether they would have obtained the benefit -- enactment of the referendum -- but for the

discriminatory barrier.

       But one difference between this case and Jacksonville is immediately apparent. In

Jacksonville, it was "more difficult for members of one group to obtain a benefit than it [wa]s for

members of another group." Id. at 666. That is, a white business owner in Jacksonville could

compete for only 95% of the city contract dollars, while a minority business owner could



                                                77
compete for 100% of those dollars. Id. at 658-61. Therefore, white business owners were

treated differently than were black business owners in Jacksonville solely because of the color of

their skin. That is not at all true here, because white supporters of the nonpartisan referendum

are in exactly the same position as black supporters of the referendum. The Justice Department's

preclearance letter focused solely on the referendum's ultimate effects, not on whether white or

black citizens proposed and supported it.8 Plaintiffs do not claim that the Justice Department

relied on their race at any point in the decision whether to preclear the referendum; indeed, all

indications are that the Attorney General would have made the same decision if plaintiffs were

minorities. A black Republican or nonpartisan candidate who stood to benefit from the

referendum would be precisely as frustrated as Nix is.

       Plaintiffs' argument that white voters have standing to challenge the amendments because

the Voting Rights Act was meant to benefit minorities is unpersuasive. See Mot. Hr'g Tr.

[Docket Entry 66] 22:18-23, 23:3-11, Oct. 26, 2011. The Supreme Court made clear in Shaw I

that both white voters and minority voters could bring a claim of a racial classification injury

caused by the operation of the Voting Rights Act. Shaw I, 509 U.S. at 652 (holding that "white

voters . . . or voters of any other race" could bring claim of stigmatic equal protection injury).

Whether the Voting Rights Act and Section 5 were intended to benefit white or minority voters

was irrelevant. That question is similarly irrelevant here.




       8
          Ironically, that statement might not be true if the Ashcroft standard were still in place.
When the Justice Department applied Ashcroft to evaluate the switch from nonpartisan to
partisan elections in the Charleston County School Board, the Department did consider how
black representatives and other community members viewed the proposed change. See Letter
from R. Alexander Acosta, Assistant Attorney General, to C. Havird Jones, Jr., Senior Assistant
Attorney General (Feb. 26, 2004).

                                                 78
        Unlike the Jacksonville plaintiff, the plaintiffs here have not shown that the government

classified them based on the color of their skin. Jacksonville, 508 U.S. at 666; see also Townes,

577 F.3d at 546, 548, 550-51 (allowing black habeas petitioner to rely on Jacksonville for

standing because he alleged that white inmate had been treated differently). And unlike the

Shaw I plaintiffs, they do not claim any stigmatic injury. Shaw I, 509 U.S. at 652. The only

concrete way in which the amendments injured plaintiffs was in suspending the referendum, and,

as explained, only subsections (b) and (d) caused that injury. The Court therefore concludes

again that plaintiffs lack standing to bring their challenge to subsection (c). Nonetheless, for the

reasons explained earlier, the Court will proceed to set forth how it would analyze plaintiffs'

Count II claim as to subsection (c) if plaintiffs had standing to pursue that claim.

                                      B. Standard of Review

        The baseline standard of review in racial classification cases is well established: racial

classifications, whether employed by the federal government or a state or local government, are

reviewed under strict scrutiny. Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 227 (1995).

Although there are two reasons that principle might not apply here, the Court concludes that it

should apply strict scrutiny to plaintiffs' claims.

        The first reason that strict scrutiny might not apply is that the amendments to Section 5

are, on their face, race-neutral. They provide only that no voting changes that "ha[ve] the

purpose of or will have the effect of diminishing the ability of any citizens of the United States

on account of race or color . . . to elect their preferred candidates of choice" can be precleared.

42 U.S.C. § 1973c(b). Unlike, say, a set-aside for businesses owned by minorities, the

amendments make no textual distinction between white and minority voters. Still, it is clear



                                                  79
beyond peradventure that the purpose of Section 5 and the 2006 amendments is to protect

minority voting rights, and that they are applied to do so. See Def.'s Opp. at 12 ("In any event, it

has been clear since at least 1976 . . . that Section 5 is not race-neutral."). Laws "neutral on their

face but 'unexplainable on grounds other than race'" are analyzed under strict scrutiny. Miller,

515 U.S. at 905 (quoting Arlington Heights, 429 U.S. at 266). That principle governs here.

       The second reason strict scrutiny might not apply is that, as the Supreme Court has

recognized, voting regulations -- particularly in the context of districting -- are different than

other government actions. While most government actions should be wholly colorblind, a

legislature "always is aware of race when it draws district lines, just as it is aware of age,

economic status, religious and political persuasion, and a variety of other demographic factors."

Shaw I, 509 U.S. at 646. Hence, districting based in part on governmental "aware[ness] of race"

is not always reviewed under strict scrutiny. See id. The Supreme Court's caselaw on how far

this principle extends is extremely fractured. Some members of the Court have endorsed the

proposition that intentional creation of majority-minority districts is a form of mere racial

awareness, not racial classification, while others have disagreed or refused to take a position on

that question. See Vera, 517 U.S. at 958 (plurality opinion) (intentional creation of majority-

minority districts can be mere racial awareness that does not require strict scrutiny); id. at 996

(Kennedy, J., concurring) (declining to take a position); id. at 999 (Thomas and Scalia, JJ.,

concurring in judgment) (finding that strict scrutiny applies to all intentional creation of

majority-minority districts); id. at 1003-04 (Stevens, Ginsburg, and Breyer, JJ., dissenting)

(finding that strict scrutiny did not apply to majority-minority districts before the Court); id. at




                                                  80
1045-46 (Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer, JJ., dissenting) (rejecting Shaw I's strict scrutiny

framework).

        It might be possible to describe Section 5 and the 2006 amendments as mere federal

"awareness" of how race functions in the context of voting laws. If intentional creation of

majority-minority districts is sometimes a function of racial awareness rather than racial

classification, then Section 5 -- a law that creates certain rules and limitations for districting and

other voting regulations -- may be as well. As explained, the Supreme Court's caselaw on when

strict scrutiny applies to state action in drawing districts is severely splintered, and it is unclear

whether it would apply at all in the context of the federal government's enactment of Section 5.

Because translating the Shaw/Vera caselaw into this context is so unwieldy, the Court will

presume that the usual equal protection principles apply rather than the unique exception in the

districting context. Accordingly, the Court will apply strict scrutiny to plaintiffs' equal

protection challenge. Hence, the government must show that the use of race in the 2006

amendments is "narrowly tailored" to achieve a "compelling" government interest. Parents

Involved, 551 U.S. at 720 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

                                              C. Merits

        1. Subsection (c)

        The constitutionality of subsection (c) is largely resolved by the Court's discussion of

subsection (c) with respect to Count I. As explained there, all that Congress has forbidden in

subsection (c) is purposefully discriminatory actions that dilute the voting power of minorities.

As this simply repeats the prohibition of the Fourteenth Amendment, it cannot also violate the

Equal Protection component of the Fifth Amendment. Washington v. Davis, 426 U.S. 229, 239-



                                                   81
41 (1976) (explaining that intentional discrimination by government actors violates the Equal

Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment); Adarand, 515 U.S. at 224 (explaining that

"[e]qual protection analysis in the Fifth Amendment area is the same as that under the Fourteenth

Amendment") (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

       Here, as in Count I, plaintiffs' real concern is that the Department of Justice will use

subsection (c) as a sword rather than a shield. But the Supreme Court made clear in Miller and

Shaw II that doing so would be unlawful. Miller, 515 U.S. at 924-25; Shaw II, 517 U.S. at 911-

13. Plaintiffs have pointed to no evidence that the Department of Justice has employed the

"purpose" prong inappropriately after the 1990s round of districting, and the Court will not

presume that the Department will violate the law. See Tilton v. Richardson, 403 U.S. 672, 679

(1971). If that presumption proves wrong, an as-applied challenge may be brought in the

appropriate case.

       2. Subsections (b) and (d)

       There are two reasons that the amendments in subsections (b) and (d) could raise equal

protection concerns. First, there is the possibility that the amendments function as a "facial

quota-preference for minorities," as plaintiffs put it. Plfs.' Opp. at 24. As the Supreme Court has

explained in other contexts, quotas and rigid minority-preference schemes violate the Equal

Protection Clause. See, e.g., Gratz v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 244, 258, 269 n.18, 271-72 (2003)

(citing Regents of Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265 (1978)).

       More abstractly, there is the possibility that subsections (b) and (d) mandate excessive

governmental race consciousness in violation of equal protection principles. A plurality of the

Supreme Court raised this possibility in a discussion of the necessary prerequisites for bringing a



                                                82
Section 2 claim in LULAC, where plaintiffs brought a Section 2 claim in response to a

redistricting plan that, among other things, redrew what had been an African-American influence

district. 548 U.S. at 445-46. Writing for three members of the Court, Justice Kennedy explained

that the fact "[t]hat African-Americans had influence in the district does not suffice to state a § 2

claim in these cases. . . . If § 2 were interpreted to protect this kind of influence, it would

unnecessarily infuse race into virtually every redistricting, raising serious constitutional

questions." Id. (citing Ashcroft, 539 U.S. at 491 (Kennedy, J., concurring)). Justice Kennedy

had expressed similar concerns in his separate concurrence in Ashcroft:

        As is evident from the Court's accurate description of the facts in this case, race
        was a predominant factor in drawing the lines of Georgia's State Senate
        redistricting map. If the Court's statement of facts had been written as the preface
        to consideration of a challenge brought under the Equal Protection Clause or
        under § 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, a reader of the opinion would have
        had sound reason to conclude that the challenge would succeed. Race cannot be
        the predominant factor in redistricting under our decision in Miller v. Johnson,
        515 U.S. 900 (1995). Yet considerations of race that would doom a redistricting
        plan under the Fourteenth Amendment or § 2 seem to be what save it under § 5.

Ashcroft, 539 U.S. at 491 (Kennedy, J., concurring). Although neither Justice Kennedy's

concurrence nor the plurality decision in LULAC spelled out the details of the equal protection

issue, the concern appears to be that excessive consideration of race by the federal government

may cause the sort of stigmatic harms discussed in Shaw I and Miller.

        In evaluating whether subsections (b) and (d) violate equal protection principles, a key

point to keep in mind is the narrowness of plaintiffs' challenge. Count II challenges only the

2006 amendments to Section 5. It does not argue that the entire non-retrogression principle is

invalid, only that Ashcroft's refinement of that principle is constitutionally indispensable. See

LaRoque II, 650 F.3d at 794 ("Significantly, plaintiffs do not contest the constitutionality of the



                                                  83
pre-2006 preclearance standards articulated in Georgia v. Ashcroft and Bossier Parish."). That

is, plaintiffs contend that the retrogression principle complies with the equal protection

component of the Fifth Amendment only if, as Ashcroft decreed, (1) states may trade influence

districts for opportunity districts and (2) courts and the Justice Department can take into account

other jurisdiction-specific factors, such as minority-preferred legislators' views of proposed

voting changes, in making preclearance decisions. While plaintiffs' briefing on this argument is

cursory, see Plfs.' MSJ at 44-45, their argument is presumably that the Ashcroft standard is a

narrowly tailored response to the government's compelling interest, but that subsections (b) and

(d) are not.

        Given that plaintiffs do not challenge the general retrogression principle, they may have

conceded that the government indeed has a compelling interest in remedying discrimination in

voting. But even if plaintiffs do not concede that point, the Court would conclude that Congress

does in fact have such a compelling interest. Congress has identified historical and ongoing

intentional discrimination that strikes at the heart of two of the most important rights protected

by the Constitution -- the right to vote and the right to be free from governmental discrimination

based on race. Congress heard testimony in 2005 and 2006 that intentionally dilutive techniques

have been used as long as minorities have been able to vote. Witness testimony and other record

evidence indicated that discriminatory, dilutive efforts are ongoing in covered jurisdictions.

Moreover, Congress received evidence that such efforts would increase in the absence of Section

5's deterrent effect.

        The Supreme Court has recognized that "remedying the effects of past intentional

discrimination" can be a compelling interest. Parents Involved, 551 U.S. at 720 (citing Freeman



                                                 84
v. Pitts, 503 U.S. 467, 494 (1992)). This recognition has been particularly clear in the school

desegregation cases that followed in the wake of Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U.S. 483

(1954), and the Court finds that those cases provide important guidance here. In Swann v.

Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education, 402 U.S. 1, 25 (1971), the Supreme Court approved

the use of "mathematical ratios" for student body racial composition "as a starting point in the

process of shaping a remedy, rather than an inflexible requirement." In explaining why limited

use of such ratios was appropriate under the Equal Protection Clause, the Court said:

       Absent a constitutional violation there would be no basis for judicially ordering
       assignment on a racial basis. All things being equal, with no history of
       discrimination, it might well be desirable to assign pupils to schools nearest their
       homes. But all things are not equal in a system that has been deliberately
       constructed and maintained to enforce racial segregation. The remedy for such
       segregation may be administratively awkward, inconvenient, and even bizarre in
       some situations and may impose burdens on some; but all awkwardness and
       inconvenience cannot be avoided in the interim period when remedial adjustments
       are being made to eliminate the dual school systems.

Id. at 28. The Court also noted that facially "'racially neutral' assignment plans proposed by

school authorities . . . may be inadequate" to remedy the problems caused by past segregation.

Id. These observations assist the analysis in the voting rights context.

       The Supreme Court has also held that racial classifications can be used to remedy past

discrimination outside the school desegregation context. In United States v. Paradise, 480 U.S.

149, 163, 166 (1987), for example, every member of the Court agreed that racial classifications

could sometimes be used to remedy past discrimination, and a majority of the Court approved a

rule that a state agency that had systematically excluded blacks from promotion had to award

50% of promotions to qualified black candidates until the agency developed an acceptable

alternative plan. In Adarand v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 237, 243, 269 (1995), seven members of the



                                                85
Court concluded that racial classifications could be used to remedy past discrimination, and the

Court remanded to the lower court to decide whether a particular federal preference program for

minority subcontractors was appropriate.

       The Supreme Court has, however, limited in several ways the government's ability to use

racial classifications even as a remedy. Mere invocation of the word "remedial" cannot justify

any use of racial classifications that the government desires. See Parents Involved, 551 U.S. at

720-21. For instance, a school district that has never imposed de jure segregation, or that has

achieved unitary status, cannot invoke remedial justifications for classifying students by race.

Id. Moreover, as Swann recognized, "there are limits" to the use of racial classifications even to

remedy de jure segregation. 402 U.S. at 28. The Swann Court explained that if "we were to read

the holding of the District Court [mandating certain actions to desegregate schools] to require, as

a matter of substantive constitutional right, any particular degree of racial balance or mixing, that

approach would be disapproved and we would be obliged to reverse." Id. Justice Kennedy,

concurring in Parents Involved, repeated the same points: "The Court has allowed school

districts to remedy their prior de jure segregation by classifying individual students based on

their race. . . . The remedy, though, was limited in time and limited to the wrong." 551 U.S. at

796 (Kennedy, J., concurring).

       The Supreme Court has also ensured that remedial race-conscious measures are closely

tied to the harms caused by discrimination by requiring express findings of official

discrimination before allowing state and local governments to use race-conscious remedies. See,

e.g., City of Richmond v. J.A. Croson Co., 488 U.S. 469, 489 (1989). In the case of such use of

race-conscious remedies by the federal government, the Court has "recognized the special



                                                 86
competence of Congress to make findings with respect to the effects of identified past

discrimination and its discretionary authority to take appropriate remedial measures." Regents of

the Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265, 302 n.41 (1978); see also Adarand, 515 U.S. at 230-31

(noting that application of strict scrutiny to Congress's use of racial classifications does not

preclude some deference to Congress's exercise of its enforcement authority). The Supreme

Court has also suggested, however, that Congress is not obliged to make such findings, as state

and local governments are, because the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments enlarge its power

rather than restricting it. See J.A. Croson Co., 488 U.S. at 490; but see Adarand, 515 U.S. at

224, 226-31; see also id. at 264-65 (Souter, J., dissenting). Justice Scalia, concurring in J.A.

Croson Co., elaborated on that point: "[I]t is one thing to permit racially based conduct by the

Federal Government -- whose legislative powers on their face were explicitly enhanced by the

Fourteenth Amendment -- and quite another to permit it by the precise entities against whose

conduct in matters of race that Amendment was specifically directed." Id. at 521-22 (internal

citations omitted). Justice Scalia also pointed out that "a sound distinction between federal and

state (or local) action based upon race rests not only upon the substance of the Civil War

Amendments, but upon social reality and governmental theory," because "[t]he struggle for

racial justice has historically been a struggle by the national society against oppression in the

individual States . . . . And the struggle retains that character in modern times." Id. at 522.

       Even under the limitations the Supreme Court has imposed on the remedial use of race,

the Court concludes that Congress has a compelling interest here in remedying prior state- and

local government-sponsored racial discrimination -- and, even more importantly, in preventing

the ongoing discriminatory efforts Congress identified. Intentional vote dilution, like school



                                                  87
segregation, is one of the most pernicious forms of de jure discrimination against minorities, and

Congress is entitled to remedy any "harm that is traceable to" that intentional discrimination.

Parents Involved, 551 U.S. at 721. Identifying the harm "traceable to" discrimination is, of

course, more complicated in the voting context than in the de jure school segregation context, as

jurisdictions do not generally openly announce voting discrimination in the same way that school

segregation was announced. But Congress compiled an extensive legislative record that tied the

remedies to areas of de jure discrimination in voting; it also relied on past legislative records

finding intentional discrimination in covered jurisdictions. In doing so, Congress exercised its

"special competence . . . to make findings with respect to the effects of identified past

discrimination" and its latitude "to take appropriate remedial measures." Bakke, 438 U.S. at 302

n.41.

        "All things being equal, with no history of discrimination," Swann, 402 U.S. at 28,

Congress would have no interest in such supervision of state voting procedures. "But all things

are not equal in a system that has been deliberately constructed and maintained to enforce racial

segregation." Id. In light of the extensive record compiled by Congress in 2005 and 2006, the

Court finds that Congress has a compelling interest in crafting a remedy to address past and

ongoing discrimination in voting.

        The remaining question is whether the amendments contained in subsections (b) and (d)

are sufficiently narrowly tailored to achieving Congress's interests without unnecessary reliance

on racial classifications. It bears repeating that plaintiffs have not challenged Ashcroft's

interpretation of the retrogression standard, so the question before the Court is whether the

modification of the Ashcroft standard in subsections (b) and (d) -- eliminating consideration of



                                                 88
influence districts and other factors unrelated to minorities' "ability to elect" -- dooms the

amendments on narrow tailoring grounds. The Court finds that it does not. Plaintiffs' primary

complaint is that the amendments create an inflexible quota, but the Court is not persuaded that

subsections (b) and (d) make the Section 5 analysis less flexible. It is true that states can no

longer substitute influence districts for opportunity districts, but there is no longer any concern

that influence districts will be protected from retrogression and frozen in place. See LULAC,

548 U.S. at 446; see also, e.g., Senate Hearing, 109th Cong. 56, 101(May 16, 2006) (witnesses

agreeing that influence districts need not be protected from retrogression under the new

standard); Thernstrom, Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 5 GEO. J.L. & PUB. POL'Y at 71.

       Even if the amendments do make Section 5 less flexible, they still do not create the facial

quota of which plaintiffs complain. As defendant points out, subsections (b) and (d) did not

overturn the prior Section 5 caselaw that provided that there could not be an "utterly inflexible

prohibition on retrogression." Def.'s Opp. at 39 (citing City of Richmond v. United States, 422

U.S. 358, 370-72 (1975)). Even before Ashcroft, the Department had stated that it did not

"require the reflexive imposition of objections in total disregard of the circumstances involved or

the legitimate justifications in support of changes that incidentally may be less favorable to

minority voters." Revision of Procedures for the Administration of Section 5 of the Voting

Rights Act of 1965, 52 Fed. Reg. 486, 488 (Jan. 6, 1987)). In its current regulations, the Justice

Department has similarly acknowledged that it must consider "the extent to which a reasonable

and legitimate justification for the change exists." 28 C.F.R. § 51.57(a). Recent guidelines

issued by the Department state that retrogression may be "unavoidable" due to "shifts in

population or other significant changes since the last redistricting (e.g., residential segregation



                                                 89
and demographic distribution of the population within the jurisdiction, the physical geography of

the jurisdiction, the jurisdiction's historical redistricting practices, political boundaries, such as

cities or counties, and/or state redistricting requirements)." Guidance Concerning Redistricting

Under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, 76 Fed. Reg. 7470, at 7472 (Feb. 9, 2011). In such

situations, retrogressive plans may be precleared when the jurisdiction demonstrates that "a

less-retrogressive plan cannot reasonably be drawn." Id. Finally, retrogressive plans must be

precleared when avoiding retrogression would require a district to violate Shaw I and Miller. Id.

Hence, whatever race-consciousness is mandated by subsections (b) and (d) resembles the

flexible mathematical ratios approved in Swann more than it resembles an inflexible quota. See

Swann, 402 U.S. at 25. Certainly, the standard laid out in subsections (b) and (d) is more

flexible than the 50% promotion rule approved in Paradise. See 480 U.S. at 163-64.

        Statutes may be invalidated on tailoring grounds when the challengers can suggest a

narrower alternative that would be successful in curing the identified problem. See United States

v. Playboy Entm't Group, Inc., 529 U.S. 803, 813 (2000). Other than pointing to the Ashcroft

standard, plaintiffs here have not attempted to do so. But Congress justifiably decided that

Ashcroft's interpretation of the effects prong would not remedy the problems of intentional vote

dilution that it identified. As the record before Congress confirmed, Ashcroft gave jurisdictions

greater leeway to disguise intentional discrimination and it created significant administrability,

subjectivity, and partisanship problems. Hence, Ashcroft -- whether it was more or less narrow

than subsections (b) and (d) -- was not "tailored" to achieve Congress's ends. Plaintiffs' failure to

offer hypothetical alternative amendments that would cure the Ashcroft problems but be

narrower than (b) and (d) may reflect the difficulty of imagining what such amendments would



                                                   90
be. As previously explained, the 2006 amendments respond to specific problems in the Ashcroft

holding in a relatively discrete way, so there is not much ground between the Ashcroft standard

that is acceptable to plaintiffs and the amendments that they challenge. The Court therefore

finds that the 2006 amendments in subsections (b) and (d) are narrowly tailored to respond to the

historical and ongoing problems of voting discrimination identified by Congress.

       As to the second basis for an equal protection challenge -- that race is "infuse[d] . . . into

virtually every redistricting," LULAC, 548 U.S. at 446 -- the amendments are actually an

improvement over the Ashcroft standard. Under Ashcroft, states might have had to protect

influence districts from retrogression in the same way that opportunity districts were protected.

Section 5's non-retrogression principle would thus have come into play in every influence district

as well as every opportunity district. Given how many districts could conceivably be defined as

influence districts, race could truly have been infused into "virtually every redistricting."

Moreover, under the Ashcroft standard, the Justice Department would have had to obtain the

views of minority voters and minority-preferred candidates on any proposed election change -- a

considerably broader and more unwieldy undertaking than the purpose or effects test, and one

that would have required an even more racially-inflected view of elections. See supra note 8

(citing Letter from R. Alexander Acosta, Assistant Attorney General, to C. Havird Jones, Jr.,

Senior Assistant Attorney General (Feb. 26, 2004)).

       For the reasons previously explained, the Court does not believe that an explicitly racial

problem can be resolved with no reference to race. To that extent, then, race must be infused

into at least some redistricting processes for the duration of the amended Section 5. Cf. Swann,

402 U.S. at 28 (remedying de jure segregation may be "administratively awkward, inconvenient,



                                                 91
and even bizarre in some situations and may impose burdens on some; but all awkwardness and

inconvenience cannot be avoided in the interim period when remedial adjustments are being

made to eliminate" the vestiges of segregation). But Congress restricted the scope of the racial

inquiry when it enacted the 2006 amendments contained in subsection (b) and (d), while at the

same time tailoring the amendments to respond as effectively as possible to the problems of

racial discrimination in voting. The Court finds that doing so was not a violation of equal

protection.

                                         CONCLUSION

       This Court explained in Shelby County that Congress, the "coequal and representative

branch of our Government," has the preeminent constitutional role under the Fourteenth and

Fifteenth Amendments in determining the legislation needed to enforce those Amendments'

guarantees. See Shelby County, 2011 WL 4375001, at *80; Walters v. National Ass'n of

Radiation Survivors, 473 U.S. 305, 319 (1985); see also Nw. Austin II, 129 S. Ct. at 2513.

Congress emphatically determined that the amendments were indeed necessary to enforce the

Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments' guarantees: the amended Section 5 passed by a vote of

390 to 33 in the House and 98 to 0 in the Senate. See 152 Cong. Rec. S8012 (daily ed. July 20,

2006); 152 Cong. Rec. H5143-5207 (daily ed. July 13, 2006). And, as the Court found with

respect to the challenge to the reauthorization of the preclearance regime as a whole, Congress

carefully and extensively justified its decisions to amend the statute to overturn or modify two

Supreme Court decisions interpreting Section 5. This Court declines to overturn that careful,

well-supported judgment.




                                                92
       For the foregoing reasons, the Court will deny plaintiffs' motion for summary 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: December 22, 2011




                                                93
                                            Appendix
This Appendix lays out the full citations for the House and Senate hearings cited in the opinion,
as well as where text versions can be found on the internet. PDFs of most hearings are available
at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/browse/collection.action?collectionCode=CHRG.

House Hearing (October 18, 2005):
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. 1 (Oct. 18, 2005),
available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109hhrg24033/html/CHRG-109hhrg24033.htm

1 House Hearing, Scope (Oct. 25, 2005):
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. 1 (Oct. 25, 2005)
("1 History, Scope, & Purpose")

2 House Hearing, Scope (Oct. 25, 2005):
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. 1685 (Oct. 25,
2005)

House Hearing (October 25, 2005):
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 1 (Oct. 25, 2005), available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109hhrg24121/html/CHRG-109hhrg24121.htm

House Hearing (November 1, 2005):
Voting Rights Act: Section 5 – Preclearance Standards, Hearing before the Subcomm. on the
Constitution of the House Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 1 (Nov. 1, 2005), available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109hhrg24283/html/CHRG-109hhrg24283.htm

House Hearing (Nov. 9, 2005):
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. 1 (Nov. 9, 2005),
available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109hhrg24504/html/CHRG-109hhrg24504.htm

House Hearing (Mar. 8, 2006):
1 Voting Rights Act: Evidence of Continued Need, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the
Constitution of the H. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 1 (Mar. 8, 2006)




                                               94
House Hearing (May 4, 2006):
Fannie Lou Hamer, Rose Parks, and Coretta Scott King Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and
Amendments Act of 2006 (Part I), Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the Constitution of the H.
Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 1 (May 4, 2006), available at:
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109hhrg27334/html/CHRG-109hhrg27334.htm

Senate Hearing (May 9, 2006):
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. 1 (May 9, 2006),
available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109shrg28213/html/CHRG-109shrg28213.htm

Senate Hearing (May 10, 2006):
Modern Enforcement of the Voting Rights Act, Hearing Before the S. Comm. on the Judiciary,
109th Cong. 1 (May 10, 2006), available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109shrg28342/html/CHRG-109shrg28342.htm

Senate Hearing (May 16, 2006):
The Continuing Need for Section 5 Pre-Clearance, Hearing before the S. Comm. on the
Judiciary, 109th Cong. 1 (May 16, 2006), available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109shrg28753/html/CHRG-109shrg28753.htm

Senate Hearing (May 17, 2006):
Understanding the Benefits and Costs of Section 5 Pre-Clearance, Hearing Before the S. Comm.
on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 1 (May 17, 2006), available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109shrg29625/html/CHRG-109shrg29625.htm

Senate Hearing (June 21, 2006):
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. 1 (June 21, 2006), available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109shrg31269/html/CHRG-109shrg31269.htm

Senate Hearing (July 13, 2006):
Renewing the Temporary Provisions of the Voting Rights Act: Legislative Options After
LULAC v. Perry, Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Property
Rights of the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. 1 (July 13, 2006), available at
http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-109shrg33836/html/CHRG-109shrg33836.htm




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