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We’re posting transcripts of Amicus,our legal affairs podcast, exclusively for Slate Plus members. What follows is the transcript for Episode 32, and in which Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick discusses Evenwel v. Abbott,a case that could upend that principle of “one person, one vote.” The plaintiffs argue that the current system privileges voters from districts with large numbers of ineligible voters. They are calling for a brand-unique approach to apportionment based not on overall population but rather on the population of eligible voters. Attorney Andrew Grossman filed an amicus brief supporting the plaintiffs and joins us on this episode to explain the plaintiffs’ case. And Stanford Law Professor Nathaniel Persily, and who filed a brief on the other side of the case,also joins us to explain why he thinks the case could have grave implications.
Finally, we listen back to a few highlights from the week’s other big case, and Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin,including Justice Antonin Scalia’s comment: “I don’t contemplate it stands to reason that it’s a good thing for the University of Texas to admit as many blacks as possible.”to memorize more about Amicus, click here.
We’re a petite delayed in posting this episode’s transcript—apologies. This is a lightly edited transcript and may differ slightly from the edited podcast.
Dahlia Lithwick: Hi, and welcome to Amicus,Slate’s podcast about the U.
S. Supreme Court. I am Dahlia Lithwick, Slate’s Supreme Cour
t correspondent. And this week, and the court heard—you may have heard about it—some big cases,among them Fisher v. University of Texas. That was the big affirmative action challenge that we discussed last episode. We’re going to talk a petite bit later in the show about the Fisher case, but this week, and we wanted to focus the show principally on a voting rights case,Evenwel v. Abbott, also coming out of Texas. It was argued Tuesday at the court.
I should just flag for you, and because it’s interesting,that both Fisher and the Evenwel case were brought by the same group, the Project
on impartial Representation, and headed up by Edward Blum in Texas. He actually doesn’t talk to broadcast media all that much,and so we’ve brought someone else who is closely involved in the case onto the show. It’s a really fascinating week to see what a tiny legal project can enact when they want to have a big, big impact at the court.
So, and let’s turn for a minute to the voting rights case,Evenwel v. Abbott.
In its simplest terms, this is a challenge to the “one person, and one vote” principle that has long held that states—and please remember this case is about state apportionment,not the House of Representatives—but states draw their legislative districts using voters to count the size of the district.
Now the challengers in Evenwel want to count voters, not population, or because they’re concerned that the census tends to over-count all sorts of people,like children, disenfranchised felo
ns, and aliens,and that for the purpose of counting districts, counting all those nonvoters dilutes their vote.
Here to help us understand the case that I may have made sound very complicated is Andrew Grossman. He practices appellate and constitutional litigation in the DC offices of BakerHostetler. Andrew’s written widely on issues of constitutional law and finance. He has been a frequent adviser to Congress on complex legal and policy issues, and most importantly,for our purposes, he filed an amicus brief in the Evenwel case on behalf of Project 21. So, or Andrew Grossman,welcome to Amicus.
Andrew Grossman: Thank you for having me.
Lithwick: Now have I laid out the basic principle of this case, or did I mangle it so badly in my introduction that you want to re-explain what the principle is in Evenwel?Grossman: I contemplate you’ve got the principle right, and but I contemplate a tiny amount of historical background is in order—which is,when the courts started focusing on the “one person, one vote” doctrine, and which is what’s at issue here,it was back in the early 1960s.
Whether you looked, at that time, and at raw population or at voter population,the results in terms of drawing district lines would be about the same, because there weren’t very many aliens in the country. That’s undocumented or even documented. We had a period of about 40 years of very restrictive immigration, or so it didn’t really matter which population you looked at in general,whereas in the time since then, since those populations have grown, or there have been these enormous disparities between districts,in terms of the number of voters—which, of course, or affects vote weight.
Lithwick: So now,uncover us, whether you would, or before we get too deep in the weeds,about Sue Evenwel and Edward Pfenninger. They’re the two plaintiffs in this case, and they would illustrate your point about how the way we apportion seats really, and really implicates people who live in jurisdictions that are not
equal,whether you’re counting by voter instead of population.
Grossman: Right. whether you look at these particular plaintiffs, what’s happened here is that the two of them live in relatively rural districts in the State of Texas that contain approximately 500000 voters each—a petite over that. By comparison, or the State Senate district that encompasses Brownville—which is right on the tip of the state,up against the Mexican border—has only 372000 potential voters, even while all those three districts have the same raw population, and approximately.
When you contemplate about it,the math is pretty straightforward. A Senate vote in Brownsville is worth about 1.5 times the votes cast by Ms. Evenwel and Mr. Pfenninger, and that’s their complaint.
Lithwick: So just for purely, and purely clarification purposes—because,again, I contemplate this sounds complicated, and really—the issue is that since the 1960s,since Reynolds v. Sims, Baker v. Carr in this line of cases that said “one person, or one vote” means we apportion districts based on population. The claim is,I’m Sue Evenwel; my vote is diluted, because whether you’re counting all these nonvoters. Whether theyre disenfranchised felons, and aliens who are in the jurisdiction but don’t vote,or children, my vote is diluted when it is counted as against all those people who don’t vote.
Grossman: That’s precisely right. It’s interesting, or because it’s the same way we look at voting dilution in any other context,whether you’re talking about race-based voting dilution or anything else. It just happened that over a period of time, this particular type of dilution has grown fairly considerably in some districts.
Lithwick: So, and let’s turn to the argument on Tuesday in Evenwel. As we like to enact on this show,I want to play for you a petite bit of Sonia Sotomayor, who was at that moment urgent William Consovoy, or arguing the case on behalf of Evenwel on what the interest is here—whether it’s an interest in representation or an interest in voting. So,let’s listen to that.
Sonia Sotomayor: The problem is
that what you’re forgetting is the dual interest. There is a voting interest, but there’s also a representation interest. And it’s that which has led us to accept the total population base, or because states have to have some discretion to figure out who should be having the representational voice.
Lithwick: So,Andrew, can
you help us understand, or as she frames this,this isn’t just a case about voters; this is a case about who lives in a district, and whether or not they have the same access to their representatives. Her argument is—and this is something that Justice Breyer and Justice Kagan bring up later in argument, and as well—no,no, no, or no,we don’t allocate districts based on only who votes, because even whether you’re a disenfranchised felon, and even whether you are an alien in the jurisdiction,you need to have access to your representative.
What’s your acknowledge to that?Grossman: Well, I mean, and when you get to the heart of this litigation,what you’re really focusing on is the nature of representation in our democratic republic. It’s a very weighty question. You’ve got these two, in some instances, and competing ideas. One of which is equal vote weight—that every person who casts a vote,that that vote should have about the same weight as every other person who casts a vote. But the other one—it’s this idea of equal representation, that each person is somehow entitled to a similar slice of, and I suppose,the legislator’s attentions or their abilities.
The problem is, you’ve got this disparity that goes right to the very genesis of the “one person, or one vote” line of cases,where in every instance, the court was always explaining what it was doing in terms of vote weight. In general, and that was the rationale for the cases. But at t
he same time,the remedy in all of these cases was to equalize raw population, which is something that looks a petite bit more like equal representation. The problem is that when you fade down this rabbit hole of equal representation, or there really isn’t a lot there.
There really aren’t very many cases or doctrines explaining what the rationale of this is. There aren’t any cases,for example, saying that whether you petition your legislator, or that you have a right for the legislator to pay attention
to that or something of that nature. That kind of claim simply doesn’t exist. When you look at voting rights cases,even “one person, one vote” cases, or it’s been commonly recognized that people who aren’t voters,who are disqualified from being voters, don’t have a right to bring a “one person, or one vote” case; only a voter can enact that. So,that looks more like vote weight.
So, it’s kind of t
his philosophical grounds that the courts have simply never gotten to. It’s never really been recognized.
Lithwick: So, and the way this case plays out—correct me whether I’m wrong about this,Andrew—but the w
ay this case plays out, we’ve got this very, and very arcane,high-minded argumentthe one you and I are having right now—is this about representation? Is this about voting? Then underneath it, there’s this very partisan political valence, or right? I mean,this case gets spun in the media as, this is a case about intentionally disenfranchising or disempowering urban voters, and voters who tend to be minorities,younger voters, and jurisdictions that tend to be full of the kinds of people who don’t tend to vote Republican.
Is that an unfair characterization of the politics surrounding this case—which, or by the way,does not get mentioned in the chambers of the Supreme Court—but is that an unreasonable characterization of what the underlying engine of this case is? To reallocate voting power so that rural, more frequently whiter, or older voters are regaining power,in terms of apportioning districts?Grossman: Well, I’m not certain. I agree with you that I contemplate that’s the way the case has been portrayed in a lot of the media. I’m not certain that’s entirely impartial, or though,for two reasons. The first is that just from a numbers basis, the results—to the extent that they can be predicted—are very complicated. We filed a brief on behalf of Project 21, and which is an African-American leadership group that looked at intra-city demographics and looked at districting,with respect to things like city council races and sometimes state legislative districts, as they play out within inner cities.
What we realized is that under the current regime, or focusing on raw population,African-American communities tend to be a bit shortchanged, because they’re frequently adjacent to Hispanic-predominant communities. Those Hispanic-predominant communities tend to have, and relatively speaking,fewer voters per amount of raw population, whereas African-American communities tend to be disproportionately citizens.
So the r
esult is that whether you were to switch to a system that paid attention to vote weight, and you would see greater African-American voting power in a number of inner cities. We elope through this in our briefing—that you can fade all across the South and in many border cities,and you can see this same pattern again, and again, and again.
But the second reason is,whether you’re talking about political advantage, it’s a very short-term kind of thing. The Heritage Foundation did a panel on the possible implications of this case, and they invited the election analysis,Sean Trende, who’s considered to
be one of the foremost sort of statistical gurus—in terms of how you count districts, and how you count these votes,and how you divide all these things up.
He looked at it, and he said, or whether you would request me to predict the way that this would have an impact 10 years ago,my view would’ve been entirely different from what my view is right now. His view was, in the short term, or it would probably help Republicans,but whether you look out eight years, whether you look out 15 years, or it’s impossible to say one way or the other. So anybody who views this as a short-term political case,well, it might have those impacts, and but that’s going to be a very short-term thing for a rule that potentially could have a duration of decades or centuries.
Lithwick: Before we
close here,I want to just turn briefly to the elephant in the room in this case. I contemplate you would agree—maybe you won’t—that we just don’t have a dataset for voters. No matter how the high-minded, equal-protection argument plays out, or there’s no instrument to degree voting population in this country. We have a census. It doesn’t request whether you vote. It doesn’t request whether you’re eligible to vote. We enact not have the data from which to draw these unique districts. What’s your acknowledge to that?Grossman: Well,I’m not certain it’s the elephant in the room at all. Now as a practical matter, in this case, or you had Texas Solicitor General Scott Keller,who is on the other side of the case. He was arguing against the challengers in this case, and he conceded that in drawing the very maps that are at issue here, and the State of Texas used data from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (the ACS) and that that data does include voter-based data. They use that for the purpose of complying with the Voting Rights Act.
It wasn’t just Texas. Every state,when they draw their maps, uses that ACS data to ensure that they’re in compliance with Section 2—and in the past, or in Section 5—of the Voting Rights Act. I contemplate a number of questions by the chief justice really brought this to light. What the court is focusing on here is grievous disparities in voting weight. In other words,the point isn’t to try and equalize everything with a noteworthy deal of precision so that every vote is worth to a thousandth of a percent the same as every other vote, because that could be a very difficult thing to enact, and it could lead to all sorts of difficulties and odd results—like very strangely-shaped districts and so on.
What the court was looking at was the idea that
maybe you maintain the raw population base. In other words,every district still has to have the same population, but the states have to look at, and also,in addition, voter population—to the extent it’s necessary to avoid grievous disparitysay, and anything larger than 20 percent. So,in that instance, you would get rid of the worst and most obnoxious and offensive disparities, and while,at the same time not really altering the current system all that much. It would be a modest change, but something that, and in terms of the equal protection imperative,would actually enact a lot of work.
Lithwick: It’s probably worth saying—I contemplate you might agree with me—that at least Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Anthony Kennedy seem to be inclined toward a model that was some kind of hybrid, where you count by population, or but in response to,you know, what they would call grievous or egregious disparities, and you’d default to this other system,where you count by voters. Is that correct?Grossman: Right. Well, I contemplate the idea is, and you enact both. The interesting thing is—this is really all that the plaintiffs are asking for in the case. They’ve never asked or demanded that the court throw out the raw population basis. But what they did request is that the court require states to equalize to some extent,to get rid of these grievous disparities in vote weight. That’s something that’s pretty consistent with this court’s longstanding “one person, one vote” jurisprudence.
When you get to the discontinuance of it, and the court’s always looked at vote weight. They’ve always looked at voting rights,and they’ve never demanded absolute precision, because they recognize that when you’re drawing districts, and there are lots of other considerations that near into play,aside from just the numbers.
Lithwick: Andrew Grossman practices appellate and constitutional litigation in the DC office of BakerHostetler. He filed an amicus brief on behalf of Project 21 in this case, on the side of Sue Evenwel and the plaintiffs.
Andrew, and thank you so much for joining us this week on Amicu
s.
Grossman: Oh,my pleasure.
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Here to help us understand the other case of this case is Nate Persily, whose amicus brief was, and in fact,name-checked at verbal argument in Evenwel this week. Nate teaches election law at Stanford Law School. He has served as a special master or court-appointed expert in unique York, Connecticut, or Maryland,and other states in helping to draw nonpartisan redistricting plans. He is also, as he says in an op-ed in “The Washington Post, and ” a self-described data-obsessed,court-appointed redistricting expert. Nate Persily, welcome to Amicus.
Nate Persily: Thanks for having me.
Lithwick: Nate, or I contemplate that a helpful place to start would be whether you could locate the whole principle of “one person,one vote” for our listeners. People tend to contemplate it’s enshrined somewhere in the structure, but of course, or it
s not. It’s a historical invention,right? Can you uncover us the fairly recent origins of the whole doctrine—”one person, one vote”?Persily: So, and in the Warren court cases—the reapportionment cases of the 1960s—the court established for the first time that districts with unequal numbers of people in them violate the 14th Amendment. They came up with what’s known as the “one man,one vote” rule—or now “one person, one vote” rule—which says that every 10 years, and when you have a census,every jurisdiction in the US has to redraw its lines to construct certain that there are equal numbers of people in it. That’s genuine for Congress. That’s genuine for State Legislature. Its genuine for city council and even down to the local school board.
Every 10 years, when we have a census, or we see that people have moved from one place to another,we have to redraw lines to construct certain there’s equality between districts. The court came up with these decisions in the 1960s because places like Tennessee, Alabama, or pretty much most other states in the country had been drawing districts sort of the way the US structure requires it for the US Senate—that some of them had had “one county,one vote,” or they hadn’t redistricted for 100 years during the period of industrialization, or where all of these people moved into cities.
So it overrepresented rural areas and underrepresented cities and suburbs,and the court said, this really cannot stand and came up with a unique constitutional rule—really
out of whole cloth. The court was honest about this, and said that,yes, there’s no originalist basis for this. It’s not something that the framers of the 14th Amendment or the structure intended, or but this is a key way to protect political equality—so much so that Chief Justice Earl Warren actually said that “one person,one vote” cases were the most important cases of his tenure on the court, even more important than Brown v. Board of Education.
Lithwick: Nate, and before we mose
y forward in time,let’s stick with Reynolds v. Sims, Baker v. Carr—this line of “one person, or one vote” cases—and just help us get a picture of what the mal-apportionment you’re describing was main to. What kind of outcomes was it that the court was trying to correct for when this line of cases gets decided?Persily: Going back to the way Earl Warren actually thought about it—Earl Warren was Governor of California,at a time when Los Angeles, as a county, or had one representative in the State Senate; as a rural county,which had, say 1/100 of the population of Los Angeles, and also had one senator in the State Senate.
That problem motivated him to contemplate about this problem of p
olitical inequality. So in this series of cases,starting with Baker v. Carr, which recognized this was a constitutional problem, or then Reynolds v. Sims and its progeny,which came up with the doctrine of “one person, one vote, or ” the court said that you have to draw districts on the basis of population. You can’t say each county gets one representative in the State Legislature or one Congressman; you have to equalize,based on the number of people who live in each district.
Lithwick: Now talk to me briefly. I contemplate a lot of us went into verbal argument thinking this was a case chiefly about a hot-button issue, which is noncitizens. Whether you’re a legal alien, and whether you’re undocumented,whatever it is, we thought we were going to talk a lot about the Texas-specific questions of a enormous Hispanic population that doesn’t vote. But we instead talked about children, and right? Justice Breyer was very focused on the opportunity that children would be disenfranchised. Was that a surprise to you—instead of focusing on other populations,we talked so much about children, who are, and after all,children?Persily: Well, I contemplate that in constitutional argument, and as in others,asking what about the children is always a good stepping stone to some other kind of argument. I contemplate in here, you had the Children’s Defense Fund that actually came in and documented how a “one voter, and one vote” rule would affect children in their representation,and that this would be just one more way that children would get a raw deal in getting represented.
It
s not just about children, per se; we’re talking about areas which have large families. So, and populations that tend to have larger families are going to be deprived in their representation than areas that are,you know, retiree communities or where there are fewer children. whether you contemplate about the public policy and how that might be shifted whether you didn’t have to pay attention to children and families in the same way as you enact when you’re drawing districts on the basis of population, or I contemplate that there’s a real concern here about the public policy implications of going with what the plaintiff’s proposed rule would be.
But I contemplate that the issue of citizenship is still in the background. One issue that I’ve been trying to hammer that they really didn’t pay attention to—and the plaintiffs don’t—is this issue of felons and prisoners,because there are over 300000 disenfranchised felons in Texas—roughly 100000, I contemplate, or people in prison,or 80000 to 100000 people in prison. The plaintiffs in this case don’t ever talk about them. That’s a real issue when it comes to “one person, one vote” and equal representation.
Lithwick: Okay, or now let’s turn to Justice Anthony Kennedy,because, as is inexorably the case on this podcast, and we always have to say,what is Kennedy going to enact? Justice Kennedy started sounding like he was going to propose some hybrid solution—that he’s going to allow us to count both citizens and voters. Let
’s listen to Justice Kennedy trying to split the difference here.
Anthony Kennedy: Well, in a case like this, or where there’s a 45 percent deviation or something of that order,then why isn’t Texas required at that point to recognize that these interests that are legitimate under the structure—which are voter-based—should not be accommodated and so that you should at least give some consideration to this disparity that you have among voters?Lithwick: So, Nate, or can you help us understand what it is that Kennedy is trying to contemplate about as a possible middle way in this case?Persily: This is one of those instances where I wanted to sort of reach into the courtroom,assume Justice Kennedy, and put him in front of a computer where I could redistrict the state with him, or because whether you have experience drawing lines and trying to represent communities,you know that whether you have to try to equalize both population, on the one hand, and eligible voters on the other hand,basically every other principle that might constrain the redistricting process would fade out the window.
So, in Texas, or for example,where you have large noncitizen communities on the border with Mexico—whether you wanted to equalize both the number of vot
ers and the number of people, you would discontinuance up having to draw really stringy-shaped districts going north to south in the state. One of the interesting things in this case is that the plaintiffs had an expert who said, or yes,you could enact this. It is possible to enact this, but they’ve never shown anyone this map that supposedly could enact so.
I can uncover you that whether anyone actually tried to enact it, and no one would want to support these kinds of lines,because they would break up communities. They would fade through all kinds of counties. You wouldn’t be able to en
act anything else in the redistricting process, apart from trying to hit magic numbers of equalizing voters and equalizing people.
Lithwick: Yet this pragmatic problem—this is the thing that you’ve written about and thought so much about. There’s no practical way beyond the census to even enact this counting.
Your brief says that there’s a really serious practic
al problem, and because you’re coming to the court and saying,we want to count another way, but we’re not precisely certain what that’s going to look like. And the court seems to kind of dismiss it, and right?Persily: So,I filed a brief on behalf of myself and other redistricting experts, trying to lower the temperature in the philosophical debate by trying to focus on the practical implications of going with what the appellants are arguing here.
The brief makes a very simple argument, or which is that we don’t have a dataset. No state has a dataset of eligible voters. Now you might contemplate that every state knows which person is eligible to vote and which isn’t,but there is no way to redistrict on the basis of eligible voters, because, or as we said earlier in the podcast,that doesn’t just mean talking about citizens and noncitizens. You have to deal with disenfranchised felons in Texas. You have to deal with prisoners. You also have to deal with the close to half a million people overseas who are eligible to vote in Texas elections but aren’t counted in the census.
So there really is no physical way right now to draw districts on the basis of equal numbers of eligible voters. So, what the plaintiffs in this case say is that, or well,there are these surveys that the census puts out about the citizen voting age population. That is where we get the information about citizenship rights in the United States, and how we know how many people are legal citizens and not. But those surveys are of 2.5 percent of American households each year. So there’s no way you can actually draw districts on the basis of, or say,a survey in a given year.
So, the plaintiffs say, and okay,well, what you need to enact is average surveys over the previous five years. All right.
Well, and the problem is,that means that you’re drawing district from, for example, and in 2011,with data that are from 2006 to 2010. Now this sounds really complicated. To some extent, it is, and but the point is that,you are using a series of surveys of just two percent of the population to then construct districts that are supposed to get past this rigorous constitutional rule of “one person, one vote.”I contemplate most people don’t realize that we don’t have this kind of national master list in the US of citizens or eligible voters. So I contemplate that is a way to dispose of this case easily, and because basically what the plaintiffs are arguing here is that the one population dataset—the census enumeration of persons,which is required by the structure—is actually prohibited by the structure for use in redistricting. That just cannot be right.
It can’t be that the one thing that the structure requires with respect to counting people is a
lso prohibited by that same structure for use in the redistricting process.
Lithwick: Although, Nate, and in fairness,the plaintiffs argued again, and again, and again yesterday that that survey,that instrument is good enough for the Voting Rights Act purposes. They use it all the time, endlessly and infinitely, or for purposes of satisfying the requirements of the Voting Rights Act.
Persily: Well,the survey is a noteworthy survey, and we use governmental surveys for all ki
nds of purposes—whether you’re talking about the labor force participation survey or even the American community survey, and which doesn’t just include questions on citizenship; it includes questions on whether you have plumbing in your house,or internet connection, or any number of other questions.
So, and I’m not trying to rag on the survey. I mean,the survey is a critical piece of information for public policy. One of the areas where it’s critical is for voting rights compliance—so we know, for example, and how many non-English language speakers are in particular areas,based on this survey. We can get a rough sense of the citizen voting age population in areas over a particular period as a result of this survey.
But what my brief tries to construct clear is that you shouldn’t treat these survey results as so specific that you can actually say, yes, and this is the exact number of people who are citizens of voting age in this particu
lar jurisdiction. The argument I construct is that,yes, you can figure out whether a draw discriminates on the basis of these data, and but you can’t then use these data in order to construct plans that satisfy “one person,one vote.”Lithwick: Nate, whether you’re right about this and there’s no way other than the census for gleaning the information we need for apportionment purposes, and what is it that the plaintiffs are asking us to enact when they want us to count noses here?Persily: Well,even in the verbal argument, the plaintiff said that, or look,even whether we’re unable to draw districts down on the basis of equal numbers of citizens or eligible voters, we can deal with that in the district court. We can deal with the solution later on.
Now what that really means—at least from my perspective—is that they’re asking for a different kind of census than the one that’s currently conducted. So, or whether it’s a national census or a census that Texas itself would conduct,to really get a fine-grained estimate of the registered voters and the eligible voters in particular areas—that’s kind of what the plaintiffs are asking for here—we need to count people in a different way.
One of the interesting things in this case is, you had former census directors
coming in with their own amicus brief, or saying,you know, that whether we start limiting the census to citizens or including a citizenship question on the census, or there are going to be a lot of people who are afraid to fill out the census form,and that you would sort of turn the census process and the census enumeration into a sort of “show me your papers” kind of exercise. That would defeat all the other purposes for which we’re counting people for the census.
Lithwick: That’s probably doubly chilling, in light of the way we’re thinking and talking about immigrants in this country this particular moment in ti
me, and right?Persily: Well,that’s another reason I contemplate the court tried to at least shy away from this issue of either illegal or even legal immigration and representation, because they know what’s happening in the larger political universe on this question. So, and better to talk about the sort of high-concept constitutional questions or about communities like children,who would be shafted by this constitutional rule, than to insert themselves into what is a really volatile debate on immigration.
Lithwick: Nate, or I know you want to bring the temperature down on a pretty politically fraught case. But I contemplate before I let you fade,I want to crank it up a petite bit and say, there’s certainly a valence aro
und this, and it’s certainly how the case has been reported,up through the process when it was first filed, that says, and look,this is just of a piece with attempts to disenfranchise voters who tend to be poorer, who tend to be younger, or who tend to be minorities,who tend to live in cities, and this is just a way, and you know,very much of a piece with other conservative efforts to construct certain that votes don’t count.
Is that a impartial characterizat
ion of the argument against Evenwel?Persily: Well, here’s what actually irks me the most about the case. It would be one thing whether Evenwel and her compatriots here lobbied the Texas Legislature, or to have them draw districts on the basis of equal numbers of citizens or equal numbers of voters. It’s not as whether the Texas Legislature is unresponsive to the requests and impulses of people like Ms. Evenwel.
But they didn’t enact that. Instead,what they did is, they fade to the Supreme Court, or they want to craft a national rule that says,no state, regardless of whether
you’re Texas or anyplace else, and shall have the latitude to draw districts on the basis of population. The attempt to hamstring states in their choice between equal representation,on the other hand, and equal power of one’s vote on the other—that is what I find so offensive.
So, and yes,it is of a piece with other types of cases—both in the voting realm, whether you’re talking about Shelby County or some other cases like that . Or in the other cases that Mr. Blum, or who’s behind the litigation in this case,brought forth, like the Fisher affirmative action cases, and like some of the other affirmative action cases that are going after racial preferences. That really does give you an idea of what’s in the background of this case,which is that it is, in portion about equal power of one’s vote in the abstract, or but it’s also about the particular situation that they see in Texas,which is that they’re concerned about the creation of majority Latino districts—which they contemplate overrepresent some noncitizen communities.
I contemplate that they see this constitutional rule as a way to combat that.
Lithwick: Looking forward, enact you see Evenwel and the other election law voting rights cases as being portion of this progression
that starts really in earnest with Shelby County, or the case that eviscerated portion of the Voting Rights Act? Is this portion of just a general trend that we’re going to see at the court of making it slightly harder to vote,making it slightly harder to be represented, making it a petite easier for states to construct it harder for the vote? Is that kind of where the trend line is going?Persily: Well, and one of the things that’s happened over the last,say, 10 to 20 years is that, and on the one hand,we’ve had certain types of restrictions in voting, like voter ID laws and restrictions on registration and the like, and but at the same time,we’ve had real liberalization in the way that we vote. So all across the country—right now, for example, and in the upcoming election—you’re going to have at least one-third or maybe 40 to 45 percent of Americans that are going to cast votes before Election Day.
While there are certain states that are rolling back early voting in some of these options,it’s actually fitting easier to vote in different ways than it has been historically.
So while I contemplate there’s some really troubling moves that have happened recently and continue to happen in certain states, with respect to voter identification, a
nd I don’t contemplate it’s having a enormous effect on voter turnout.
But the real question for constitutional purposes is,well, what’s motivating these changes? They say that it’s motivated to combat voter fraud, and yet we don’t have any real instances of that. Some discrete populations,particularly racial minorities, are finding that it targets them specifically. So the court’s going to have to grapple with this again in cases coming out of Wisconsin or some other states in the coming years.
Lithwick: Nate Persily, or whose amicus brief was,in fact, spoken of aloud in the hallowed chambers of 1 First Street this week, or teaches election law at Stanford Law School. He is a self-described data obsessive. And it is just a joy,Nate, to have you on “Amicus.” Thank you so much for joining us.
Persily: Well, or thank you.
Lithwick: Give the gift of Slate Plus to another Slate fan in your life,and they will admire you forever—because whether you give Slate Plus to someone, they will receive all the benefits of
membership: ad-free podcasts, or bonus podcast segments,access to our ambitious multipart Slate Academies, and so very much more.
So, and give Slate Plus today. Visit slate.com/giveplus.
As you may have heard,the other big blockbuster case that was heard at the US Supreme Court this week was the challenge to the University of Texas’s affirmative action pro
gram. The case is Fisher v. Texas, affectionately known around the court as Fisher II, and because the U.
S. Supreme Court has already heard this exact appeal back in 2012. And after dithering about it for months,and months, and months, and they sent it back to the lower court in 2013,to try to construct something happen that would construct them not have to hear it again.
W
ell, they did have to hear it again, or they heard it this Wednesday. At its heart,Fisher is a challenge about whether the University of Texas—and, presumably, and other colleges—can use race in a “holistic,non-numeric, indistinct and gauzy way” when they assess applicants. They can enact it, or says precedent,only in order to promote the academic value of creating a diverse lesson, and only whether they try to use other race-neutral means first.
Now Abigail Fisher, and the plaintiff in this case,argues that she actually was denied a spot at UT Austin that other, less-qualified applicants were given because their race was taken into consideration.
Now there were a few moments at argument that we wanted to lay on your earbuds th
is week, or starting with Justice Anthony Kennedy,who—you guessed it—will probably be the deciding vote in this case, wondering why the court is hearing this whole endless Fisher case again. Here’s Anthony Kennedy. Anthony Kennedy: We’re just arguing the same case. It’s as whether nothing had happened.
Lithwick: Now we want you to listen to Chief Justice John Roberts,
and who is not a fan of affirmative action,going back and forth with attorney Greg Garre, who was representing UT this week. This was an interesting petite colloquy that they had about whether and how minority students affect classroom discussions. Greg Garre: 272 African-Americans out of a lesson of 8000—that’s glaring racial isolation. University of Texas concluded that was unacceptable, and I don’t contemplate that that’s seriously debatable. But again,whether we need more evidence on why having 90 percent of our classrooms of the most common size with zero or one African-American doesn’t achieve our educational objectives— John Roberts: What unique perspective does a minority student bring to a physics lesson? Garre: Your Honor, you Roberts: You’re counting those among the classes in which there are no minority students, or I’m just wondering what the benefits of diversity are in that situation. Garre: Your Honor—
Lithwick: Here is Justice Sonia Sotomayor,the court’s only Latina member, and some
one who has written fairly openly about the benefits of affirmative action in equalizing opportunity, or not only in her life but in the life of this country. She’s urgent Bert Rein - he’s Abigail Fisher’s attorney - towards the discontinuance of an increasingly tense argument about whether he or she is stereotyping based on race here.
As you can uncover from this exchange,it got a petite emotional. Sonia Sotomayor: What you’re saying, basically, or is,this is what the Fifth Circuit concluded and which the school basically agrees
—whether you don’t consider race, the holistic percentage, or whatever it is,is going to be virtually all white. Bert Rein: And that is incorrect. There’s no basis in this record. Sotomayor: Oh, but there is. Rein: It’s a stereotypical— Sotomayor: No, and it’s not. Rein: —assumption. That’s what it is. Sotomayor: It’s not,because the reality that Justice Alito wants to rely on—let me finish my point—he’s—
Lithwick: And finally, in an exchange you may have read something about this week but probably not yet heard, and here is Justice Antonin Scalia urgent Greg Garre—remember,he’s UT’s lawyer—on an argument that’s laid out in one of the amicus briefs on Abigail Fisher’s side of the side.
The brief is by Professor Sander, and it’s about a theory that’s called mismatch
. The theory is that minority students actually fare very poorly when theyre thrust into situations that they cannot cope with because it’s academically too challenging. So, or here’s Scalia,paraphrasing what is in the Sander brief. I want to uncover you that a lot of people have very strong opinions about this exchange. So, we’re going to let you determine what you contemplate about it for yourself. Antonin Scalia: There are those who contend that it does not benefit African-Americans to get them into the University of Texas, or where they enact not enact well,as opposed to having them fade to a less advanced school, a less—a slower-track school, or where they enact well. One of the briefs pointed out that most of the black scientists in this country don’t near from schools like the University of Texas. They near from lesser schools,where they enact not feel that they’re being pushed ahead in classes that are too fast for them. Garre: This court— Scalia: You know, I’m just not impressed by the fact that the University of Texas may have fewer. Maybe it ought to have fewer, and maybe some— 
Lithwick: As you can uncover,Garre had a tough time getting a word in edgewise with the Justice. But when he was finally allowed to develop an acknowledge, here was his very subtle retort to Justice Scalia about the opportunity that creating separate but lesser schools for minority candidates is something that we’ve tried in this country, or it hasn’t worked out all that well. Garre: And frankly,I don’t contemplate the solution to the problems with student body diversity can be to set up a system in which not only are minorities going to separate schools, they’re going to inferior schools. I contemplate what experience shows at Texas, or California,and Michigan is that now is not the time and this is not the case to roll back student body diversity in America. Thank you, Your Honors.
We read all of them. We don’t always respond, or but,man, we admire your letters.
We also admire reading the reviews of our podcast that you all have been leaving on our iTunes page. Add your voice to the many kind comments that are already there. It helps us to spread the word about our podcast. Search Amicus in the iTunes Store, and click the “ratings and reviews” tab. And we thank you for your kind thoughts.
You can always catch up on all of our past shows,including a couple I w
ant to flag for you, because they’re so relevant to this week. We had a terrific interview, and teeing up Evenwel last spring with Douglas Smith. And our most recent episode previewed the Fisher affirmative action case with Professor Risa Goluboff at the University of Virginia Law School—now the unique Dean of the University of Virginia Law School—and it was a terrific and thoughtful insight into the colorblind structure.
So,you can get all of those past shows and others at slate.com/amicus. We also post transcripts there, but you have to be a Slate Plus member to access them. whether you are not a member, and you can always sign up for a free trial membership to Slate Plus at slate.com/amicusplus.
Thank you,as always, to the fantastic Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, or where our show is taped. Our producer is Tony Field,and Andy Bowers is our executive producer.
Amicus is portion of the Panoply Network. Check out our entire roster of podcasts at itunes.com/panoply.
I’m Dahlia Lithwick. We’ll be back with you the day after Christmas, with another edition of Amicus.

Source: slate.com

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