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Full Opinion
(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2017 1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
GILL ET AL. v. WHITFORD ET AL.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
No. 16â1161. Argued October 3, 2017âDecided June 18, 2018
Members of the Wisconsin Legislature are elected from single-member
legislative districts. Under the Wisconsin Constitution, the legisla-
ture must redraw the boundaries of those districts following each
census. After the 2010 census, the legislature passed a new district-
ing plan known as Act 43. Twelve Democratic voters, the plaintiffs in
this case, alleged that Act 43 harms the Democratic Partyâs ability to
convert Democratic votes into Democratic seats in the legislature.
They asserted that Act 43 does this by âcrackingâ certain Democratic
voters among different districts in which those voters fail to achieve
electoral majorities and âpackingâ other Democratic voters in a few
districts in which Democratic candidates win by large margins. The
plaintiffs argued that the degree to which packing and cracking has
favored one political party over another can be measured by an âeffi-
ciency gapâ that compares each partyâs respective âwastedâ votesâ
i.e., votes cast for a losing candidate or for a winning candidate in ex-
cess of what that candidate needs to winâacross all legislative dis-
tricts. The plaintiffs claimed that the statewide enforcement of Act
43 generated an excess of wasted Democratic votes, thereby violating
the plaintiffsâ First Amendment right of association and their Four-
teenth Amendment right to equal protection. The defendants, sever-
al members of the state election commission, moved to dismiss the
plaintiffsâ claims. They argued that the plaintiffs lacked standing to
challenge the constitutionality of Act 43 as a whole because, as indi-
vidual voters, their legally protected interests extend only to the
makeup of the legislative district in which they vote. The three-judge
District Court denied the defendantsâ motion and, following a trial,
concluded that Act 43 was an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander.
Regarding standing, the court held that the plaintiffs had suffered a
2 GILL v. WHITFORD
Syllabus
particularized injury to their equal protection rights.
Held: The plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate Article III standing.
Pp. 8â22.
(a) Over the past five decades this Court has repeatedly been asked
to decide what judicially enforceable limits, if any, the Constitution
sets on partisan gerrymandering. Previous attempts at an answer
have left few clear landmarks for addressing the question and have
generated conflicting views both of how to conceive of the injury aris-
ing from partisan gerrymandering and of the appropriate role for the
Federal Judiciary in remedying that injury. See Gaffney v. Cum-
mings, 412 U. S. 735, Davis v. Bandemer, 478 U. S. 109, Vieth v. Ju-
belirer, 541 U. S. 267, and League of United Latin American Citizens
v. Perry, 548 U. S. 399. Pp. 8â12.
(b) A plaintiff may not invoke federal-court jurisdiction unless he
can show âa personal stake in the outcome of the controversy,â Baker
v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186, 204. That requirement ensures that federal
courts âexercise power that is judicial in nature,â Lance v. Coffman,
549 U. S. 437, 439, 441. To meet that requirement, a plaintiff must
show an injury in factâhis pleading and proof that he has suffered
the âinvasion of a legally protected interestâ that is âconcrete and
particularized,â i.e., which âaffect[s] the plaintiff in a personal and
individual way.â Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U. S. 555, 560,
and n. 1.
The right to vote is âindividual and personal in nature,â Reynolds v.
Sims, 377 U. S. 533, 561, and âvoters who allege facts showing disad-
vantage to themselves as individuals have standing to sueâ to remedy
that disadvantage, Baker, 369 U. S., at 206. The plaintiffs here al-
leged that they suffered such injury from partisan gerrymandering,
which works through the âcrackingâ and âpackingâ of voters. To the
extent that the plaintiffsâ alleged harm is the dilution of their votes,
that injury is district specific. An individual voter in Wisconsin is
placed in a single district. He votes for a single representative. The
boundaries of the district, and the composition of its voters, deter-
mine whether and to what extent a particular voter is packed or
cracked. A plaintiff who complains of gerrymandering, but who does
not live in a gerrymandered district, âassert[s] only a generalized
grievance against governmental conduct of which he or she does not
approve.â United States v. Hays, 515 U. S. 737, 745.
The plaintiffs argue that their claim, like the claims presented in
Baker and Reynolds, is statewide in nature. But the holdings in
those cases were expressly premised on the understanding that the
injuries giving rise to those claims were âindividual and personal in
nature,â Reynolds, 377 U. S., at 561, because the claims were brought
by voters who alleged âfacts showing disadvantage to themselves as
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 3
Syllabus
individuals,â Baker, 369 U. S., at 206. The plaintiffsâ mistaken in-
sistence that the claims in Baker and Reynolds were âstatewide in
natureâ rests on a failure to distinguish injury from remedy. In those
malapportionment cases, the only way to vindicate an individual
plaintiffâs right to an equally weighted vote was through a wholesale
ârestructuring of the geographical distribution of seats in a state leg-
islature.â Reynolds, 377 U. S., at 561. Here, the plaintiffsâ claims
turn on allegations that their votes have been diluted. Because that
harm arises from the particular composition of the voterâs own dis-
trict, remedying the harm does not necessarily require restructuring
all of the Stateâs legislative districts. It requires revising only such
districts as are necessary to reshape the voterâs district. This fits the
rule that a âremedy must of course be limited to the inadequacy that
produced the injury in fact that the plaintiff has established.â Lewis
v. Casey, 518 U. S. 343, 357.
The plaintiffs argue that their legal injury also extends to the
statewide harm to their interest âin their collective representation in
the legislature,â and in influencing the legislatureâs overall âcomposi-
tion and policymaking.â Brief for Appellees 31. To date, however,
the Court has not found that this presents an individual and personal
injury of the kind required for Article III standing. A citizenâs inter-
est in the overall composition of the legislature is embodied in his
right to vote for his representative. The harm asserted by the plain-
tiffs in this case is best understood as arising from a burden on their
own votes. Pp. 12â17.
(c) Four of the plaintiffs in this case pleaded such a particularized
burden. But as their case progressed to trial, they failed to pursue
their allegations of individual harm. They instead rested their case
on their theory of statewide injury to Wisconsin Democrats, in sup-
port of which they offered three kinds of evidence. First, they pre-
sented testimony pointing to the lead plaintiffâs hope of achieving a
Democratic majority in the legislature. Under the Courtâs cases to
date, that is a collective political interest, not an individual legal in-
terest. Second, they produced evidence regarding the mapmakersâ
deliberations as they drew district lines. The District Court relied on
this evidence in concluding that those mapmakers sought to under-
stand the partisan effect of the maps they were drawing. But the
plaintiffsâ establishment of injury in fact turns on effect, not intent,
and requires a showing of a burden on the plaintiffsâ votes that is âac-
tual or imminent, not âconjecturalâ or âhypothetical.â â Defenders of
Wildlife, 504 U. S., at 560. Third, the plaintiffs presented partisan-
asymmetry studies showing that Act 43 had skewed Wisconsinâs
statewide map in favor of Republicans. Those studies do not address
the effect that a gerrymander has on the votes of particular citizens.
4 GILL v. WHITFORD
Syllabus
They measure instead the effect that a gerrymander has on the for-
tunes of political parties. That shortcoming confirms the fundamen-
tal problem with the plaintiffsâ case as presented on this record. It is
a case about group political interests, not individual legal rights.
Pp. 17â21.
(d) Where a plaintiff has failed to demonstrate standing, this Court
usually directs dismissal. See, e.g., DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno,
547 U. S. 332, 354. Here, however, where the case concerns an un-
settled kind of claim that the Court has not agreed upon, the con-
tours and justiciability of which are unresolved, the case is remanded
to the District Court to give the plaintiffs an opportunity to prove
concrete and particularized injuries using evidence that would tend
to demonstrate a burden on their individual votes. Cf. Alabama Leg-
islative Black Caucus v. Alabama, 575 U. S. ___, ___. Pp. 21â22.
218 F. Supp. 3d 837, vacated and remanded.
ROBERTS, C. J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which KENNEDY,
GINSBURG, BREYER, ALITO, SOTOMAYOR, and KAGAN, JJ., joined, and in
which THOMAS and GORSUCH, JJ., joined except as to Part III. KAGAN,
J., filed a concurring opinion, in which GINSBURG, BREYER, and SO-
TOMAYOR, JJ., joined. THOMAS, J., filed an opinion concurring in part
and concurring in the judgment, in which GORSUCH, J., joined.
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, WashÂ
ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 16â1161
_________________
BEVERLY R. GILL, ET AL., APPELLANTS v.
WILLIAM WHITFORD, ET AL.
ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
[June 18, 2018]
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the
Court.
The State of Wisconsin, like most other States, entrusts
to its legislature the periodic task of redrawing the boundÂ
aries of the Stateâs legislative districts. A group of WisÂ
consin Democratic voters filed a complaint in the District
Court, alleging that the legislature carried out this task
with an eye to diminishing the ability of Wisconsin DemoÂ
crats to convert Democratic votes into Democratic seats in
the legislature. The plaintiffs asserted that, in so doing,
the legislature had infringed their rights under the First
and Fourteenth Amendments.
But a plaintiff seeking relief in federal court must first
demonstrate that he has standing to do so, including that
he has âa personal stake in the outcome,â Baker v. Carr,
369 U. S. 186, 204 (1962), distinct from a âgenerally availÂ
able grievance about government,â Lance v. Coffman, 549
U. S. 437, 439 (2007) (per curiam). That threshold reÂ
quirement âensures that we act as judges, and do not
engage in policymaking properly left to elected representaÂ
tives.â Hollingsworth v. Perry, 570 U. S. 693, 700 (2013).
2 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
Certain of the plaintiffs before us alleged that they had
such a personal stake in this case, but never followed up
with the requisite proof. The District Court and this
Court therefore lack the power to resolve their claims. We
vacate the judgment and remand the case for further
proceedings, in the course of which those plaintiffs may
attempt to demonstrate standing in accord with the analyÂ
sis in this opinion.
I
Wisconsinâs Legislature consists of a State Assembly
and a State Senate. Wis. Const., Art. IV, §1. The 99
members of the Assembly are chosen from single districts
that must âconsist of contiguous territory and be in as
compact form as practicable.â §4. State senators are
likewise chosen from single-member districts, which are
laid on top of the State Assembly districts so that three
Assembly districts form one Senate district. See §5; Wis.
Stat. §4.001 (2011).
The Wisconsin Constitution gives the legislature the
responsibility to âapportion and district anew the memÂ
bers of the senate and assemblyâ at the first session folÂ
lowing each census. Art. IV, §3. In recent decades, howÂ
ever, that responsibility has just as often been taken up by
federal courts. Following the census in 1980, 1990, and
2000, federal courts drew the Stateâs legislative districts
when the Legislature and the Governorâsplit on party
linesâwere unable to agree on new districting plans. The
Legislature has broken the logjam just twice in the last 40
years. In 1983, a Democratic Legislature passed, and a
Democratic Governor signed, a new districting plan that
remained in effect until the 1990 census. See 1983 Wis.
Laws ch. 4. In 2011, a Republican Legislature passed, and
a Republican Governor signed, the districting plan at issue
here, known as Act 43. See Wis. Stat. §§ 4.009, 4.01â4.99;
2011 Wis. Laws ch. 4. Following the passage of Act 43,
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 3
Opinion of the Court
Republicans won majorities in the State Assembly in the
2012 and 2014 elections. In 2012, Republicans won 60
Assembly seats with 48.6% of the two-party statewide vote
for Assembly candidates. In 2014, Republicans won 63
Assembly seats with 52% of the statewide vote. 218
F. Supp. 3d 837, 853 (WD Wis. 2016).
In July 2015, twelve Wisconsin voters filed a complaint
in the Western District of Wisconsin challenging Act 43.
The plaintiffs identified themselves as âsupporters of the
public policies espoused by the Democratic Party and of
Democratic Party candidates.â 1 App. 32, Complaint ¶15.
They alleged that Act 43 is a partisan gerrymander that
âunfairly favor[s] Republican voters and candidates,â and
that it does so by âcrackingâ and âpackingâ Democratic
voters around Wisconsin. Id., at 28â30, ¶¶5â7. As they
explained:
âCracking means dividing a partyâs supporters among
multiple districts so that they fall short of a majority
in each one. Packing means concentrating one partyâs
backers in a few districts that they win by overwhelmÂ
ing margins.â Id., at 29, ¶5.
Four of the plaintiffsâMary Lynne Donohue, Wendy Sue
Johnson, Janet Mitchell, and Jerome Wallaceâalleged
that they lived in State Assembly districts where DemoÂ
crats have been cracked or packed. Id., at 34â36, ¶¶20,
23, 24, 26; see id., at 50â53, ¶¶60â70 (describing packing
and cracking in Assembly Districts 22, 26, 66, and 91). All
of the plaintiffs also alleged that, regardless of âwhether
they themselves reside in a district that has been packed
or cracked,â they have been âharmed by the manipulation
of district boundariesâ because Democrats statewide âdo
not have the same opportunity provided to Republicans to
elect representatives of their choice to the Assembly.â Id.,
at 33, ¶16.
The plaintiffs argued that, on a statewide level, the
4 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
degree to which packing and cracking has favored one
party over another can be measured by a single calculaÂ
tion: an âefficiency gapâ that compares each partyâs respecÂ
tive âwastedâ votes across all legislative districts. âWastedâ
votes are those cast for a losing candidate or for a win-
ning candidate in excess of what that candidate needs
to win. Id., at 28â29, ¶5. The plaintiffs alleged that Act
43 resulted in an unusually large efficiency gap that faÂ
vored Republicans. Id., at 30, ¶7. They also submitted a
âDemonstration Planâ that, they asserted, met all of the
legal criteria for apportionment, but was at the same time
âalmost perfectly balanced in its partisan consequences.â
Id., at 31, ¶10. They argued that because Act 43 gener-
ated a large and unnecessary efficiency gap in favor of Re-
publicans, it violated the First Amendment right of associÂ
ation of Wisconsin Democratic voters and their Fourteenth
Amendment right to equal protection. The plaintiffs
named several members of the state election commission
as defendants in the action. Id., at 36, ¶¶28â30.
The election officials moved to dismiss the complaint.
They argued, among other things, that the plaintiffs
lacked standing to challenge the constitutionality of Act 43
as a whole because, as individual voters, their legally
protected interests extend only to the makeup of the legisÂ
lative districts in which they vote. A three-judge panel of
the District Court, see 28 U. S. C. §2284(a), denied the
defendantsâ motion. In the District Courtâs view, the
plaintiffs âidentif[ied] their injury as not simply their
inability to elect a representative in their own districts,
but also their reduced opportunity to be represented by
Democratic legislators across the state.â Whitford v.
Nichol, 151 F. Supp. 3d 918, 924 (WD Wis. 2015). It thereÂ
fore followed, in the District Courtâs opinion, that
â[b]ecause plaintiffsâ alleged injury in this case relates to
their statewide representation, . . . they should be permitÂ
ted to bring a statewide claim.â Id., at 926.
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 5
Opinion of the Court
The case proceeded to trial, where the plaintiffs preÂ
sented testimony from four fact witnesses. The first was
lead plaintiff William Whitford, a retired law professor at
the University of Wisconsin in Madison. Whitford testiÂ
fied that he lives in Madison in the 76th Assembly DisÂ
trict, and acknowledged on cross-examination that this is,
under any plausible circumstances, a heavily Democratic
district. Under Act 43, the Democratic share of the AsÂ
sembly vote in Whitfordâs district is 81.9%; under the
plaintiffsâ ideal mapâtheir Demonstration Planâthe
projected Democratic share of the Assembly vote in WhitÂ
fordâs district would be 82%. 147 Record 35â36. Whitford
therefore conceded that Act 43 had not âaffected [his]
ability to vote for and elect a Democrat in [his] district.â
Id., at 37. Whitford testified that he had nevertheless
suffered a harm ârelate[d] to [his] ability to engage in
campaign activity to achieve a majority in the Assembly
and the Senate.â Ibid. As he explained, â[t]he only practiÂ
cal way to accomplish my policy objectives is to get a
majority of the Democrats in the Assembly and the Senate
ideally in order to get the legislative product I prefer.â Id.,
at 33.
The plaintiffs also presented the testimony of legislative
aides Adam Foltz and Tad Ottman, as well as that of
Professor Ronald Gaddie, a political scientist who helped
design the Act 43 districting map, regarding how that map
was designed and adopted. In particular, Professor Gad-
die testified about his creation of what he and the District
Court called âS curvesâ: color-coded tables of the estimated
partisan skew of different draft redistricting maps. See
218 F. Supp. 3d, at 850, 858. The colors corresponded
with assessments regarding whether different districts
tilted Republican or Democratic under various statewide
political scenarios. The S curve for the map that was
eventually adopted projected that âRepublicans would
maintain a majority under any likely voting scenario,â
6 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
with Democrats needing 54% of the statewide vote to
secure a majority in the legislature. Id., at 852.
Finally, the parties presented testimony from four exÂ
pert witnesses. The plaintiffsâ experts, Professor Kenneth
Mayer and Professor Simon Jackman, opined thatâ
according to their efficiency-gap analysesâthe Act 43 map
would systematically favor Republicans for the duration of
the decade. See id., at 859â861. The defendantsâ experts,
Professor Nicholas Goedert and Sean Trende, opined that
efficiency gaps alone are unreliable measures of durable
partisan advantage, and that the political geography of
Wisconsin currently favors Republicans because DemoÂ
cratsâwho tend to be clustered in large citiesâare ineffiÂ
ciently distributed in many parts of Wisconsin for purposes
of winning elections. See id., at 861â862.
At the close of evidence, the District Court concludedâ
over the dissent of Judge Griesbachâthat the plaintiffs
had proved a violation of the First and Fourteenth
Amendments. The court set out a three-part test for
identifying unconstitutional gerrymanders: A redistricting
map violates the First Amendment and the Equal ProtecÂ
tion Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment if it â(1) is
intended to place a severe impediment on the effectiveness
of the votes of individual citizens on the basis of their
political affiliation, (2) has that effect, and (3) cannot be
justified on other, legitimate legislative grounds.â Id.,
at 884.
The court went on to find, based on evidence concerning
the manner in which Act 43 had been adopted, that âone of
the purposes of Act 43 was to secure Republican control of
the Assembly under any likely future electoral scenario for
the remainder of the decade.â Id., at 896. It also found
that the âmore efficient distribution of Republican voters
has allowed the Republican Party to translate its votes
into seats with significantly greater ease and to achieveâ
and preserveâcontrol of the Wisconsin legislature.â Id.,
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 7
Opinion of the Court
at 905. As to the third prong of its test, the District Court
concluded that the burdens the Act 43 map imposed on
Democrats could not be explained by âlegitimate state
prerogatives [or] neutral factors.â Id., at 911. The court
recognized that âWisconsinâs political geography, particuÂ
larly the high concentration of Democratic voters in urban
centers like Milwaukee and Madison, affords the RepubliÂ
can Party a natural, but modest, advantage in the districtÂ
ing process,â but found that this inherent geographic
disparity did not account for the magnitude of the RepubÂ
lican advantage. Id., at 921, 924.
Regarding standing, the court held that the plaintiffs
had a âcognizable equal protection right against state-
imposed barriers on [their] ability to vote effectively for
the party of [their] choice.â Id., at 928. It concluded that
Act 43 âprevent[ed] Wisconsin Democrats from being able
to translate their votes into seats as effectively as WisconÂ
sin Republicans,â and that âWisconsin Democrats, thereÂ
fore, have suffered a personal injury to their Equal ProtecÂ
tion rights.â Ibid. The court turned away the defendantsâ
argument that the plaintiffsâ injury was not sufficiently
particularized by finding that â[t]he harm that the plainÂ
tiffs have experienced . . . is one shared by Democratic
voters in the State of Wisconsin. The dilution of their
votes is both personal and acute.â Id., at 930.
Judge Griesbach dissented. He wrote that, under this
Courtâs existing precedents, âpartisan intentâ to benefit
one party rather than the other in districting âis not illeÂ
gal, but is simply the consequence of assigning the task of
redistricting to the political branches.â Id., at 939. He
observed that the plaintiffs had not attempted to prove
that âspecific districts . . . had been gerrymandered,â but
rather had ârelied on statewide data and calculations.â
Ibid. And he argued that the plaintiffsâ proof, resting as it
did on statewide data, had âno relevance to any gerrymanÂ
dering injury alleged by a voter in a single district.â Id., at
8 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
952. On that basis, Judge Griesbach would have entered
judgment for the defendants.
The District Court enjoined the defendants from using
the Act 43 map in future elections and ordered them to
have a remedial districting plan in place no later than
November 1, 2017. The defendants appealed directly to
this Court, as provided under 28 U. S. C. §1253. We
stayed the District Courtâs judgment and postponed conÂ
sideration of our jurisdiction. 582 U. S. ___ (2017).
II
A
Over the past five decades this Court has been repeatÂ
edly asked to decide what judicially enforceable limits, if
any, the Constitution sets on the gerrymandering of voters
along partisan lines. Our previous attempts at an answer
have left few clear landmarks for addressing the question.
What our precedents have to say on the topic is, however,
instructive as to the myriad competing considerations that
partisan gerrymandering claims involve. Our efforts to
sort through those considerations have generated conflictÂ
ing views both of how to conceive of the injury arising from
partisan gerrymandering and of the appropriate role for
the Federal Judiciary in remedying that injury.
Our first consideration of a partisan gerrymandering
claim came in Gaffney v. Cummings, 412 U. S. 735 (1973).
There a group of plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality
of a Connecticut redistricting plan that âconsciously and
overtly adopted and followed a policy of âpolitical fairness,â
which aimed at a rough scheme of proportional represenÂ
tation of the two major political parties.â Id., at 738. To
that end, the redistricting plan broke up numerous towns,
âwiggl[ing] and joggl[ing]â district boundary lines in order
to âferret out pockets of each partyâs strength.â Id., at 738,
and n. 3, 752, n. 18. The plaintiffs argued that, notwithÂ
standing the rough population equality of the districts, the
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 9
Opinion of the Court
plan was unconstitutional because its consciously political
design was ânothing less than a gigantic political gerryÂ
mander.â Id., at 752. This Court rejected that claim. We
reasoned that it would be âidleâ to hold that âany political
consideration taken into account in fashioning a reapporÂ
tionment plan is sufficient to invalidate it,â because disÂ
tricting âinevitably has and is intended to have substanÂ
tial political consequences.â Id., at 752â753.
Thirteen years later came Davis v. Bandemer, 478 U. S.
109 (1986). Unlike the bipartisan gerrymander at issue in
Gaffney, the allegation in Bandemer was that Indiana
Republicans had gerrymandered Indianaâs legislative
districts âto favor Republican incumbents and candidates
and to disadvantage Democratic votersâ through what the
plaintiffs called the âstackingâ (packing) and âsplittingâ
(cracking) of Democrats. 478 U. S., at 116â117 (plurality
opinion). A majority of the Court agreed that the case
before it was justiciable. Id., at 125, 127. The Court could
not, however, settle on a standard for what constitutes an
unconstitutional partisan gerrymander.
Four Justices would have required the Bandemer plainÂ
tiffs to âprove both intentional discrimination against an
identifiable political group and an actual discriminatory
effect on that group.â Id., at 127. In that pluralityâs view,
the plaintiffs had failed to make a sufficient showing on
the latter point because their evidence of unfavorable
election results for Democrats was limited to a single
election cycle. See id., at 135.
Three Justices, concurring in the judgment, would have
held that the âEqual Protection Clause does not supply
judicially manageable standards for resolving purely
political gerrymandering claims.â Id., at 147 (opinion of
OâConnor, J.). Justice OâConnor took issue, in particular,
with the pluralityâs focus on factual questions concerning
âstatewide electoral success.â Id., at 158. She warned
that allowing district courts to âstrike down apportionÂ
10 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
ment plans on the basis of their prognostications as to the
outcome of future elections or future apportionments
invites âfindingsâ on matters as to which neither judges nor
anyone else can have any confidence.â Id., at 160.
Justice Powell, joined by Justice Stevens, concurred in
part and dissented in part. In his view, the plaintiffsâ
claim was not simply that their âvoting strength was
diluted statewide,â but rather that âcertain key districts
were grotesquely gerrymandered to enhance the election
prospects of Republican candidates.â Id., at 162, 169.
Thus, he would have focused on the question âwhether the
boundaries of the voting districts have been distorted
deliberately and arbitrarily to achieve illegitimate ends.â
Id., at 165.
Eighteen years later, we revisited the issue in Vieth v.
Jubelirer, 541 U. S. 267 (2004). In that case the plaintiffs
argued that Pennsylvaniaâs Legislature had created âmeÂ
andering and irregularâ congressional districts that âigÂ
nored all traditional redistricting criteria, including the
preservation of local government boundaries,â in order to
provide an advantage to Republican candidates for ConÂ
gress. Id., at 272â273 (plurality opinion) (brackets
omitted).
The Vieth Court broke down on numerous lines. WritÂ
ing for a four-Justice plurality, Justice Scalia would have
held that the plaintiffsâ claims were nonjusticiable because
there was no âjudicially discernible and manageable
standardâ by which to decide them. Id., at 306. On those
grounds, the plurality affirmed the dismissal of the claims.
Ibid. JUSTICE KENNEDY concurred in the judgment. He
noted that âthere are yet no agreed upon substantive
principles of fairness in districting,â and that, consequently,
âwe have no basis on which to define clear, manageable,
and politically neutral standards for measuring the parÂ
ticular burdenâ on constitutional rights. Id., at 307â308.
He rejected the principle advanced by the plaintiffsâthat
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 11
Opinion of the Court
âa majority of voters in [Pennsylvania] should be able to
elect a majority of [Pennsylvaniaâs] congressional delegaÂ
tionââas a âpreceptâ for which there is âno authority.â Id.,
at 308. Yet JUSTICE KENNEDY recognized the possibility
that âin another case a standard might emerge that suit-
ably demonstrates how an apportionmentâs de facto incorÂ
poration of partisan classifications burdensâ representaÂ
tional rights. Id., at 312.
Four Justices dissented in three different opinions.
Justice Stevens would have permitted the plaintiffsâ
claims to proceed on a district-by-district basis, using a
legal standard similar to the standard for racial gerryÂ
mandering set forth in Shaw v. Hunt, 517 U. S. 899
(1996). See 541 U. S., at 335â336, 339. Under this standÂ
ard, any district with a âbizarre shapeâ for which the only
possible explanation was âa naked desire to increase partiÂ
san strengthâ would be found unconstitutional under the
Equal Protection Clause. Id., at 339. Justice Souter,
joined by JUSTICE GINSBURG, agreed that a plaintiff allegÂ
ing unconstitutional partisan gerrymandering should
proceed on a district-by-district basis, as âwe would be able
to call more readily on some existing law when we defined
what is suspect at the district level.â See id., at 346â347.
JUSTICE BREYER dissented on still other grounds. In his
view, the drawing of single-member legislative districtsâ
even according to traditional criteriaâis ârarely . . . politiÂ
cally neutral.â Id., at 359. He therefore would have disÂ
tinguished between gerrymandering for passing political
advantage and gerrymandering leading to the âunjustified
entrenchmentâ of a political party. Id., at 360â361.
The Court last took up this question in League of United
Latin American Citizens v. Perry, 548 U. S. 399 (2006)
(LULAC). The plaintiffs there challenged a mid-decade
redistricting map passed by the Texas Legislature. As in
Vieth, a majority of the Court could find no justiciable
standard by which to resolve the plaintiffsâ partisan gerÂ
12 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
rymandering claims. Relevant to this case, an amicus
brief in support of the LULAC plaintiffs proposed a âsymÂ
metry standardâ to âmeasure partisan biasâ by comparing
how the two major political parties âwould fare hypothetiÂ
cally if they each . . . received a given percentage of the
vote.â 548 U. S., at 419 (opinion of KENNEDY, J.). JUSTICE
KENNEDY noted some wariness at the prospect of âadoptÂ
ing a constitutional standard that invalidates a map based
on unfair results that would occur in a hypothetical state
of affairs.â Id., at 420. Aside from that problem, he wrote,
the partisan bias standard shed no light on âhow much
partisan dominance is too much.â Ibid. JUSTICE
KENNEDY therefore concluded that âasymmetry alone is
not a reliable measure of unconstitutional partisanship.â
Ibid.
Justice Stevens would have found that the Texas map
was a partisan gerrymander based in part on the asymÂ
metric advantage it conferred on Republicans in convertÂ
ing votes to seats. Id., at 466â467, 471â473 (opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part). Justice Souter,
writing for himself and JUSTICE GINSBURG, noted that he
would not ârule out the utility of a criterion of symmetry,â
and that âfurther attention could be devoted to the adminÂ
istrability of such a criterion at all levels of redistricting
and its review.â Id., at 483â484 (opinion concurring in
part and dissenting in part).
B
At argument on appeal in this case, counsel for the
plaintiffs argued that this Court can address the problem
of partisan gerrymandering because it must: The Court
should exercise its power here because it is the âonly
institution in the United Statesâ capable of âsolv[ing] this
problem.â Tr. of Oral Arg. 62. Such invitations must be
answered with care. âFailure of political will does not
justify unconstitutional remedies.â Clinton v. City of New
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 13
Opinion of the Court
York, 524 U. S. 417, 449 (1998) (KENNEDY, J., concurring).
Our power as judges to âsay what the law is,â Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137, 177 (1803), rests not on the deÂ
fault of politically accountable officers, but is instead
grounded in and limited by the necessity of resolving,
according to legal principles, a plaintiff âs particular claim
of legal right.
Our considerable efforts in Gaffney, Bandemer, Vieth,
and LULAC leave unresolved whether such claims may be
brought in cases involving allegations of partisan gerryÂ
mandering. In particular, two threshold questions reÂ
main: what is necessary to show standing in a case of this
sort, and whether those claims are justiciable. Here we do
not decide the latter question because the plaintiffs in this
case have not shown standing under the theory upon
which they based their claims for relief.
To ensure that the Federal Judiciary respects âthe
properâand properly limitedârole of the courts in a
democratic society,â Allen v. Wright, 468 U. S. 737, 750
(1984), a plaintiff may not invoke federal-court jurisdiction
unless he can show âa personal stake in the outcome of the
controversy.â Baker, 369 U. S., at 204. A federal court is
not âa forum for generalized grievances,â and the requireÂ
ment of such a personal stake âensures that courts exerÂ
cise power that is judicial in nature.â Lance, 549 U. S., at
439, 441. We enforce that requirement by insisting that a
plaintiff satisfy the familiar three-part test for Article III
standing: that he â(1) suffered an injury in fact, (2) that is
fairly traceable to the challenged conduct of the defendant,
and (3) that is likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial
decision.â Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 578 U. S. ___, ___ (2016)
(slip op., at 6). Foremost among these requirements is
injury in factâa plaintiff âs pleading and proof that he has
suffered the âinvasion of a legally protected interestâ that
is âconcrete and particularized,â i.e., which âaffect[s] the
plaintiff in a personal and individual way.â Lujan v.
14 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U. S. 555, 560, and n. 1 (1992).
We have long recognized that a personâs right to vote is
âindividual and personal in nature.â Reynolds v. Sims,
377 U. S. 533, 561 (1964). Thus, âvoters who allege facts
showing disadvantage to themselves as individuals have
standing to sueâ to remedy that disadvantage. Baker, 369
U. S., at 206. The plaintiffs in this case alleged that they
suffered such injury from partisan gerrymandering, which
works through âpackingâ and âcrackingâ voters of one
party to disadvantage those voters. 1 App. 28â29, 32â33,
Complaint ¶¶5, 15. That is, the plaintiffs claim a constiÂ
tutional right not to be placed in legislative districts delibÂ
erately designed to âwasteâ their votes in elections where
their chosen candidates will win in landslides (packing) or
are destined to lose by closer margins (cracking). Id., at
32â33, ¶15.
To the extent the plaintiffsâ alleged harm is the dilution
of their votes, that injury is district specific. An individual
voter in Wisconsin is placed in a single district. He votes
for a single representative. The boundaries of the district,
and the composition of its voters, determine whether and
to what extent a particular voter is packed or cracked.
This âdisadvantage to [the voter] as [an] individual[ ],â
Baker, 369 U. S., at 206, therefore results from the boundÂ
aries of the particular district in which he resides. And a
plaintiff âs remedy must be âlimited to the inadequacy that
produced [his] injury in fact.â Lewis v. Casey, 518 U. S.
343, 357 (1996). In this case the remedy that is proper
and sufficient lies in the revision of the boundaries of the
individualâs own district.
For similar reasons, we have held that a plaintiff who
alleges that he is the object of a racial gerrymanderâa
drawing of district lines on the basis of raceâhas standing
to assert only that his own district has been so gerrymanÂ
dered. See United States v. Hays, 515 U. S. 737, 744â745
(1995). A plaintiff who complains of gerrymandering, but
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 15
Opinion of the Court
who does not live in a gerrymandered district, âassert[s]
only a generalized grievance against governmental conÂ
duct of which he or she does not approve.â Id., at 745.
Plaintiffs who complain of racial gerrymandering in their
State cannot sue to invalidate the whole Stateâs legislative
districting map; such complaints must proceed âdistrictÂ
by-district.â Alabama Legislative Black Caucus v. AlaÂ
bama, 575 U. S. ___, ___ (2015) (slip op., at 6).
The plaintiffs argue that their claim of statewide injury
is analogous to the claims presented in Baker and ReynÂ
olds, which they assert were âstatewide in natureâ because
they rested on allegations that âdistricts throughout a
state [had] been malapportioned.â Brief for Appellees 29.
But, as we have already noted, the holdings in Baker and
Reynolds were expressly premised on the understanding
that the injuries giving rise to those claims were âindividÂ
ual and personal in nature,â Reynolds, 377 U. S., at 561,
because the claims were brought by voters who alleged
âfacts showing disadvantage to themselves as individuals,â
Baker, 369 U. S., at 206.
The plaintiffsâ mistaken insistence that the claims in
Baker and Reynolds were âstatewide in natureâ rests on a
failure to distinguish injury from remedy. In those malÂ
apportionment cases, the only way to vindicate an indiÂ
vidual plaintiff âs right to an equally weighted vote was
through a wholesale ârestructuring of the geographical
distribution of seats in a state legislature.â Reynolds, 377
U. S., at 561; see, e.g., Moss v. Burkhart, 220 F. Supp. 149,
156â160 (WD Okla. 1963) (directing the county-by-county
reapportionment of the Oklahoma Legislature), aff âd
sub nom. Williams v. Moss, 378 U. S. 558 (1964) ( per
curiam).
Here, the plaintiffsâ partisan gerrymandering claims
turn on allegations that their votes have been diluted.
That harm arises from the particular composition of the
voterâs own district, which causes his voteâhaving been
16 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
packed or crackedâto carry less weight than it would
carry in another, hypothetical district. Remedying the
individual voterâs harm, therefore, does not necessarily
require restructuring all of the Stateâs legislative districts.
It requires revising only such districts as are necessary to
reshape the voterâs districtâso that the voter may be
unpacked or uncracked, as the case may be. Cf. Alabama
Legislative Black Caucus, 575 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at 7).
This fits the rule that a âremedy must of course be limited
to the inadequacy that produced the injury in fact that the
plaintiff has established.â Lewis, 518 U. S., at 357.
The plaintiffs argue that their legal injury is not limited
to the injury that they have suffered as individual voters,
but extends also to the statewide harm to their interest âin
their collective representation in the legislature,â and in
influencing the legislatureâs overall âcomposition and
policymaking.â Brief for Appellees 31. But our cases to
date have not found that this presents an individual and
personal injury of the kind required for Article III standÂ
ing. On the facts of this case, the plaintiffs may not rely
on âthe kind of undifferentiated, generalized grievance
about the conduct of government that we have refused to
countenance in the past.â Lance, 549 U. S., at 442. A
citizenâs interest in the overall composition of the legislaÂ
ture is embodied in his right to vote for his representative.
And the citizenâs abstract interest in policies adopted by
the legislature on the facts here is a nonjusticiable âgenÂ
eral interest common to all members of the public.â
Ex parte Lévitt, 302 U. S. 633, 634 (1937) (per curiam).
We leave for another day consideration of other possible
theories of harm not presented here and whether those
theories might present justiciable claims giving rise to
statewide remedies. JUSTICE KAGANâS concurring opinion
endeavors to address âother kinds of constitutional harm,â
see post, at 8, perhaps involving different kinds of plainÂ
tiffs, see post, at 9, and differently alleged burdens, see
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 17
Opinion of the Court
ibid. But the opinion of the Court rests on the underÂ
standing that we lack jurisdiction to decide this case,
much less to draw speculative and advisory conclusions
regarding others. See Public Workers v. Mitchell, 330
U. S. 75, 90 (1947) (noting that courts must ârespect the
limits of [their] unique authorityâ and engage in â[j]udicial
exposition . . . only when necessary to decide definite
issues between litigantsâ). The reasoning of this Court
with respect to the disposition of this case is set forth in
this opinion and none other. And the sum of the standing
principles articulated here, as applied to this case, is that
the harm asserted by the plaintiffs is best understood as
arising from a burden on those plaintiffsâ own votes. In
this gerrymandering context that burden arises through a
voterâs placement in a âcrackedâ or âpackedâ district.
C
Four of the plaintiffs in this caseâMary Lynne
Donohue, Wendy Sue Johnson, Janet Mitchell, and JeÂ
rome Wallaceâpleaded a particularized burden along
such lines. They alleged that Act 43 had âdilut[ed] the
influenceâ of their votes as a result of packing or cracking
in their legislative districts. See 1 App. 34â36, Complaint
¶¶20, 23, 24, 26. The facts necessary to establish standÂ
ing, however, must not only be alleged at the pleading
stage, but also proved at trial. See Defenders of Wildlife,
504 U. S., at 561. As the proceedings in the District Court
progressed to trial, the plaintiffs failed to meaningfully
pursue their allegations of individual harm. The plaintiffs
did not seek to show such requisite harm since, on this
record, it appears that not a single plaintiff sought to
prove that he or she lives in a cracked or packed district.
They instead rested their case at trialâand their arguÂ
ments before this Courtâon their theory of statewide
injury to Wisconsin Democrats, in support of which they
offered three kinds of evidence.
18 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
First, the plaintiffs presented the testimony of the lead
plaintiff, Professor Whitford. But Whitfordâs testimony
does not support any claim of packing or cracking of himÂ
self as a voter. Indeed, Whitford expressly acknowledged
that Act 43 did not affect the weight of his vote. 147 RecÂ
ord 37. His testimony points merely to his hope of achievÂ
ing a Democratic majority in the legislatureâwhat the
plaintiffs describe here as their shared interest in the
composition of âthe legislature as a whole.â Brief for ApÂ
pellees 32. Under our cases to date, that is a collective
political interest, not an individual legal interest, and the
Court must be cautious that it does not become âa forum
for generalized grievances.â Lance, 549 U. S., at 439, 441.
Second, the plaintiffs provided evidence regarding the
mapmakersâ deliberations as they drew district lines. As
the District Court recounted, the plaintiffsâ evidence
showed that the mapmakers âtest[ed] the partisan
makeup and performance of districts as they might be
configured in different ways.â 218 F. Supp. 3d, at 891.
Each of the mapmakersâ alternative configurations came
with a table that listed the number of âSafeâ and âLeanâ
seats for each party, as well as âSwingâ seats. Ibid. The
mapmakers also labeled certain districts as ones in which
âGOP seats [would be] strengthened a lot,â id., at 893; 2
App. 344, or which would result in âStatistical Pick Upsâ
for Republicans. 218 F. Supp. 3d, at 893 (alterations
omitted). And they identified still other districts in which
âGOP seats [would be] strengthened a little,â âweakened a
little,â or were âlikely lost.â Ibid.
The District Court relied upon this evidence in concludÂ
ing that, âfrom the outset of the redistricting process, the
drafters sought to understand the partisan effect of the
maps they were drawing.â Id., at 895. That evidence may
well be pertinent with respect to any ultimate determinaÂ
tion whether the plaintiffs may prevail in their claims
against the defendants, assuming such claims present a
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 19
Opinion of the Court
justiciable controversy. But the question at this point is
whether the plaintiffs have established injury in fact.
That turns on effect, not intent, and requires a showing of
a burden on the plaintiffsâ votes that is âactual or immiÂ
nent, not âconjecturalâ or âhypothetical.â â Defenders of
Wildlife, 504 U. S., at 560.
Third, the plaintiffs offered evidence concerning the
impact that Act 43 had in skewing Wisconsinâs statewide
political map in favor of Republicans. This evidence,
which made up the heart of the plaintiffsâ case, was deÂ
rived from partisan-asymmetry studies similar to those
discussed in LULAC. The plaintiffs contend that these
studies measure deviations from âpartisan symmetry,â
which they describe as the âsocial scientific tenet that
[districting] maps should treat parties symmetrically.â
Brief for Appellees 37. In the District Court, the plaintiffsâ
case rested largely on a particular measure of partisan
asymmetryâthe âefficiency gapâ of wasted votes. See
supra, at 3â4. That measure was first developed in two
academic articles published shortly before the initiation of
this lawsuit. See Stephanopoulos & McGhee, Partisan
Gerrymandering and the Efficiency Gap, 82 U. Chi.
L. Rev. 831 (2015); McGhee, Measuring Partisan Bias in
Single-Member District Electoral Systems, 39 Leg. Studies
Q. 55 (2014).
The plaintiffs asserted in their complaint that the âeffiÂ
ciency gap captures in a single number all of a district
planâs cracking and packing.â 1 App. 28â29, Complaint ¶5
(emphasis deleted). That number is calculated by subÂ
tracting the statewide sum of one partyâs wasted votes
from the statewide sum of the other partyâs wasted votes
and dividing the result by the statewide sum of all votes
cast, where âwasted votesâ are defined as all votes cast for
a losing candidate and all votes cast for a winning candiÂ
date beyond the 50% plus one that ensures victory. See
Brief for Eric McGhee as Amicus Curiae 6, and n. 3. The
20 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
larger the number produced by that calculation, the greater
the asymmetry between the parties in their efficiency in
converting votes into legislative seats. Though they take
no firm position on the matter, the plaintiffs have suggested
that an efficiency gap in the range of 7% to 10% should
trigger constitutional scrutiny. See Brief for Appellees
52â53, and n. 17.
The plaintiffs and their amici curiae promise us that the
efficiency gap and similar measures of partisan asymÂ
metry will allow the federal courtsâarmed with just âa
pencil and paper or a hand calculatorââto finally solve the
problem of partisan gerrymandering that has confounded
the Court for decades. Brief for Heather K. Gerken et al.
as Amici Curiae 27 (citing Wang, Let Math Save Our
Democracy, N. Y. Times, Dec. 5, 2015). We need not doubt
the plaintiffsâ math. The difficulty for standing purposes
is that these calculations are an average measure. They
do not address the effect that a gerrymander has on the
votes of particular citizens. Partisan-asymmetry metrics
such as the efficiency gap measure something else en-
tirely: the effect that a gerrymander has on the fortunes of
political parties.
Consider the situation of Professor Whitford, who lives
in District 76, where, defendants contend, Democrats are
ânaturallyâ packed due to their geographic concentration,
with that of plaintiff Mary Lynne Donohue, who lives in
Assembly District 26 in Sheboygan, where Democrats like
her have allegedly been deliberately cracked. By all acÂ
counts, Act 43 has not affected Whitfordâs individual vote
for his Assembly representativeâeven plaintiffsâ own
demonstration map resulted in a virtually identical disÂ
trict for him. Donohue, on the other hand, alleges that Act
43 burdened her individual vote. Yet neither the effi-
ciency gap nor the other measures of partisan asymmetry
offered by the plaintiffs are capable of telling the differÂ
ence between what Act 43 did to Whitford and what it did
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 21
Opinion of the Court
to Donohue. The single statewide measure of partisan
advantage delivered by the efficiency gap treats Whitford
and Donohue as indistinguishable, even though their
individual situations are quite different.
That shortcoming confirms the fundamental problem
with the plaintiffsâ case as presented on this record. It is a
case about group political interests, not individual legal
rights. But this Court is not responsible for vindicating
generalized partisan preferences. The Courtâs constituÂ
tionally prescribed role is to vindicate the individual rights
of the people appearing before it.
III
In cases where a plaintiff fails to demonstrate Article III
standing, we usually direct the dismissal of the plaintiff âs
claims. See, e.g., DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 547 U. S.
332, 354 (2006). This is not the usual case. It concerns an
unsettled kind of claim this Court has not agreed upon,
the contours and justiciability of which are unresolved.
Under the circumstances, and in light of the plaintiffsâ
allegations that Donohue, Johnson, Mitchell, and Wallace
live in districts where Democrats like them have been
packed or cracked, we decline to direct dismissal.
We therefore remand the case to the District Court so
that the plaintiffs may have an opportunity to prove conÂ
crete and particularized injuries using evidenceâunlike
the bulk of the evidence presented thus farâthat would
tend to demonstrate a burden on their individual votes.
Cf. Alabama Legislative Black Caucus, 575 U. S., at ___
(slip op., at 8) (remanding for further consideration of the
plaintiffsâ gerrymandering claims on a district-by-district
basis). We express no view on the merits of the plaintiffsâ
case. We caution, however, that âstanding is not disÂ
pensed in grossâ: A plaintiff âs remedy must be tailored to
redress the plaintiff âs particular injury. Cuno, 547 U. S.,
at 353.
22 GILL v. WHITFORD
Opinion of the Court
The judgment of the District Court is vacated, and the
case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 1
KAGAN, J., concurring
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 16â1161
_________________
BEVERLY R. GILL, ET AL., APPELLANTS v.
WILLIAM WHITFORD, ET AL.
ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
[June 18, 2018]
JUSTICE KAGAN, with whom JUSTICE GINSBURG,
JUSTICE BREYER, and JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR join,
concurring.
The Court holds today that a plaintiff asserting a partiÂ
san gerrymandering claim based on a theory of vote diluÂ
tion must prove that she lives in a packed or cracked
district in order to establish standing. See ante, at 14â17.
The Court also holds that none of the plaintiffs here have
yet made that required showing. See ante, at 17.
I agree with both conclusions, and with the Courtâs
decision to remand this case to allow the plaintiffs to prove
that they live in packed or cracked districts, see ante, at
21. I write to address in more detail what kind of evidence
the present plaintiffs (or any additional ones) must offer to
support that allegation. And I write to make some obserÂ
vations about what would happen if they succeed in provÂ
ing standingâthat is, about how their vote dilution case
could then proceed on the merits. The key point is that
the case could go forward in much the same way it did
below: Given the charges of statewide packing and crackÂ
ing, affecting a slew of districts and residents, the chalÂ
lengers could make use of statewide evidence and seek a
statewide remedy.
I also write separately because I think the plaintiffs
may have wanted to do more than present a vote dilution
2 GILL v. WHITFORD
KAGAN, J., concurring
theory. Partisan gerrymandering no doubt burdens indiÂ
vidual votes, but it also causes other harms. And at some
points in this litigation, the plaintiffs complained of a
different injuryâan infringement of their First AmendÂ
ment right of association. The Court rightly does not
address that alternative argument: The plaintiffs did not
advance it with sufficient clarity or concreteness to make
it a real part of the case. But because on remand they
may well develop the associational theory, I address the
standing requirement that would then apply. As Iâll exÂ
plain, a plaintiff presenting such a theory would not need
to show that her particular voting district was packed or
cracked for standing purposes because that fact would
bear no connection to her substantive claim. Indeed,
everything about the litigation of that claimâfrom standÂ
ing on down to remedyâwould be statewide in nature.
Partisan gerrymandering, as this Court has recognized,
is âincompatible with democratic principles.â Arizona
State Legislature v. Arizona Independent Redistricting
Commân, 576 U. S. ___, ___ (2015) (slip op., at 1) (quoting
Vieth v. Jubelirer, 541 U. S. 267, 292 (2004) (plurality
opinion); alterations omitted). More effectively every day,
that practice enables politicians to entrench themselves in
power against the peopleâs will. And only the courts can
do anything to remedy the problem, because gerrymanders
benefit those who control the political branches. None of
those facts gives judges any excuse to disregard Article
IIIâs demands. The Court is right to say they were not met
here. But partisan gerrymandering injures enough indiÂ
viduals and organizations in enough concrete ways
to ensure that standing requirements, properly applied,
will not often or long prevent courts from reaching the
merits of cases like this one. Or from insisting, when
they do, that partisan officials stop degrading the nationâs
democracy.
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 3
KAGAN, J., concurring
I
As the Court explains, the plaintiffsâ theory in this case
focuses on vote dilution. See ante, at 15 (âHere, the plainÂ
tiffsâ partisan gerrymandering claims turn on allegations
that their votes have been dilutedâ); see also ante, at 14,
16â17. That is, the plaintiffs assert that Wisconsinâs State
Assembly Map has caused their votes âto carry less weight
than [they] would carry in another, hypothetical district.â
Ante, at 16. And the mechanism used to wreak that harm
is âpackingâ and âcracking.â Ante, at 14. In a relatively
few districts, the mapmakers packed supermajorities of
Democratic votersâwell beyond the number needed for a
Democratic candidate to prevail. And in many more disÂ
tricts, dispersed throughout the State, the mapmakers
cracked Democratic votersâspreading them sufficiently
thin to prevent them from electing their preferred candiÂ
dates. The result of both practices is to âwasteâ DemoÂ
cratsâ votes. Ibid.
The harm of vote dilution, as this Court has long stated,
is âindividual and personal in nature.â Reynolds v. Sims,
377 U. S. 533, 561 (1964); see ante, at 15. It arises when
an election practiceâmost commonly, the drawing of
district linesâdevalues one citizenâs vote as compared to
others. Of course, such practices invariably affect more
than one citizen at a time. For example, our original one-
person, one-vote cases considered how malapportioned
maps âcontract[ed] the valueâ of urban citizensâ votes
while âexpand[ing]â the value of rural citizensâ votes.
Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U. S. 1, 7 (1964). But we underÂ
stood the injury as giving diminished weight to each parÂ
ticular vote, even if millions were so touched. In such
cases, a voter living in an overpopulated district suffered
âdisadvantage to [herself] as [an] individual[ ]â: Her vote
counted for less than the votes of other citizens in her
State. Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186, 206 (1962); see ante,
at 15. And that kind of disadvantage is what a plaintiff
4 GILL v. WHITFORD
KAGAN, J., concurring
asserting a vote dilution claimâin the one-person, one-
vote context or any otherâalways alleges.
To have standing to bring a partisan gerrymandering
claim based on vote dilution, then, a plaintiff must prove
that the value of her own vote has been âcontract[ed].â
Wesberry, 376 U. S., at 7. And that entails showing, as the
Court holds, that she lives in a district that has been
either packed or cracked. See ante, at 17. For packing
and cracking are the ways in which a partisan gerrymanÂ
der dilutes votes. Cf. Voinovich v. Quilter, 507 U. S. 146,
153â154 (1993) (explaining that packing or cracking can
also support racial vote dilution claims). Consider the
perfect form of each variety. When a voter resides in a
packed district, her preferred candidate will win no matter
what; when a voter lives in a cracked district, her chosen
candidate stands no chance of prevailing. But either way,
such a citizenâs vote carries less weightâhas less conseÂ
quenceâthan it would under a neutrally drawn map. See
ante, at 14, 16. So when she shows that her district has
been packed or cracked, she proves, as she must to estabÂ
lish standing, that she is âamong the injured.â Lujan v.
Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U. S. 555, 563 (1992) (quoting
Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U. S. 727, 735 (1972)); see ante,
at 17.
In many partisan gerrymandering cases, that threshold
showing will not be hard to make. Among other ways of
proving packing or cracking, a plaintiff could produce an
alternative map (or set of alternative maps)âcomparably
consistent with traditional districting principlesâunder
which her vote would carry more weight. Cf. Ante, at 20
(suggesting how an alternative map may shed light on
vote dilution or its absence); Easley v. Cromartie, 532 U. S.
234, 258 (2001) (discussing the use of alternative maps as
evidence in a racial gerrymandering case); Cooper v. Har-
ris, 581 U. S. ___, ___â___ (2017) (slip op., at 28â34)
(same); Brief for Political Geography Scholars as Amici
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 5
KAGAN, J., concurring
Curiae 12â14 (describing computer simulation techniques
for devising alternative maps). For example, a Democratic
plaintiff living in a 75%-Democratic district could prove
she was packed by presenting a different map, drawn
without a focus on partisan advantage, that would place
her in a 60%-Democratic district. Or conversely, a DemoÂ
cratic plaintiff residing in a 35%-Democratic district could
prove she was cracked by offering an alternative, neutrally
drawn map putting her in a 50â50 district. The precise
numbers are of no import. The point is that the plaintiff
can show, through drawing alternative district lines, that
partisan-based packing or cracking diluted her vote.
Here, the Court is right that the plaintiffs have so far
failed to make such a showing. See ante, at 17â20. WilÂ
liam Whitford was the only plaintiff to testify at trial
about the alleged gerrymanderâs effects. He expressly
acknowledged that his district would be materially identiÂ
cal under any conceivable map, whether or not drawn to
achieve partisan advantage. See ante, at 18, 20. That
means Wisconsinâs plan could not have diluted Whitfordâs
own vote. So whatever other claims he might have, see
infra, at 8â9, Whitford is not âamong the injuredâ in a vote
dilution challenge. Lujan, 504 U. S., at 563 (quoting
Sierra Club, 405 U. S., at 735). Four other plaintiffs
differed from Whitford by alleging in the complaint that
they lived in packed or cracked districts. But for whatever
reason, they failed to back up those allegations with eviÂ
dence as the suit proceeded. See ante, at 17. So they too
did not show the injuryâa less valuable voteâcentral to
their vote dilution theory.
That problem, however, may be readily fixable. The
Court properly remands this case to the District Court âso
that the plaintiffs may have an opportunityâ to âdemonÂ
strate a burden on their individual votes.â Ante, at 21.
That means the plaintiffsâboth the four who initially
made those assertions and any others (current or newly
6 GILL v. WHITFORD
KAGAN, J., concurring
joined)ânow can introduce evidence that their individual
districts were packed or cracked. And if the plaintiffsâ
more general charges have a basis in fact, that evidence
may well be at hand. Recall that the plaintiffs here alÂ
legedâand the District Court found, see 218 F. Supp. 3d
837, 896 (WD Wis. 2016)âthat a unified Republican govÂ
ernment set out to ensure that Republicans would control
as many State Assembly seats as possible over a decade
(five consecutive election cycles). To that end, the govÂ
ernment allegedly packed and cracked Democrats
throughout the State, not just in a particular district (see,
e.g., Benisek v. Lamone, No. 17â333) or region. Assuming
that is true, the plaintiffs should have a mass of packing
and cracking proof, which they can now also present in
district-by-district form to support their standing. In
other words, a plaintiff residing in each affected district
can show, through an alternative map or other evidence,
that packing or cracking indeed occurred there. And if (or
to the extent) that test is met, the court can proceed to
decide all distinctive merits issues and award appropriate
remedies.
When the court addresses those merits questions, it can
consider statewide (as well as local) evidence. Of course,
the court below and others like it are currently debating,
without guidance from this Court, what elements make up
a vote dilution claim in the partisan gerrymandering
context. But assume that the plaintiffs must prove illicit
partisan intentâa purpose to dilute Democratsâ votes in
drawing district lines. The plaintiffs could then offer
evidence about the mapmakersâ goals in formulating the
entire statewide map (which would predictably carry down
to individual districting decisions). So, for example, the
plaintiffs here introduced proof that the mapmakers
looked to partisan voting data when drawing districts
throughout the Stateâand that they graded draft maps
according to the amount of advantage those maps conÂ
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 7
KAGAN, J., concurring
ferred on Republicans. See 218 F. Supp. 3d, at 890â896.
This Court has explicitly recognized the relevance of such
statewide evidence in addressing racial gerrymandering
claims of a district-specific nature. âVoters,â we held, âof
course[ ] can present statewide evidence in order to prove
racial gerrymandering in a particular district.â Alabama
Legislative Black Caucus v. Alabama, 575 U. S. ___, ___
(2015) (slip op., at 7). And in particular, â[s]uch evidence
is perfectly relevantâ to showing that mapmakers had an
invidious âmotiveâ in drawing the lines of âmultiple disÂ
tricts in the State.â Id., at ___ (slip op., at 10). The same
should be true for partisan gerrymandering.
Similarly, cases like this one might warrant a statewide
remedy. Suppose that mapmakers pack or crack a critical
mass of State Assembly districts all across the State to
elect as many Republican politicians as possible. And
suppose plaintiffs residing in those districts prevail in a
suit challenging that gerrymander on a vote dilution
theory. The plaintiffs might then receive exactly the relief
sought in this case. To be sure, remedying each plaintiff âs
vote dilution injury ârequires revising only such districts
as are necessary to reshape [that plaintiff âs] districtâso
that the [plaintiff] may be unpacked or uncracked, as the
case may be.â Ante, at 16. But with enough plaintiffs
joined togetherâattacking all the packed and cracked
districts in a statewide gerrymanderâthose obligatory
revisions could amount to a wholesale restructuring of the
Stateâs districting plan. The Court recognizes as much. It
states that a proper remedy in a vote dilution case âdoes
not necessarily require restructuring all of the Stateâs
legislative districts.â Ibid. (emphasis added). Not necesÂ
sarilyâbut possibly. It all depends on how much redisÂ
tricting is needed to cure all the packing and cracking that
the mapmakers have done.
8 GILL v. WHITFORD
KAGAN, J., concurring
II
Everything said so far relates only to suits alleging that
a partisan gerrymander dilutes individual votes. That is
the way the Court sees this litigation. See ante, at 14â17.
And as Iâll discuss, that is the most reasonable view. See
infra, at 10â11. But partisan gerrymanders inflict other
kinds of constitutional harm as well. Among those injuÂ
ries, partisan gerrymanders may infringe the First
Amendment rights of association held by parties, other
political organizations, and their members. The plaintiffs
here have sometimes pointed to that kind of harm. To the
extent they meant to do so, and choose to do so on remand,
their associational claim would occasion a different standÂ
ing inquiry than the one in the Courtâs opinion.
JUSTICE KENNEDY explained the First Amendment
associational injury deriving from a partisan gerrymander
in his concurring opinion in Vieth, 541 U. S. 267. âRepreÂ
sentative democracy,â JUSTICE KENNEDY pointed out, is
today âunimaginable without the ability of citizens to band
togetherâ to advance their political beliefs. Id., at 314
(opinion concurring in judgment) (quoting California
Democratic Party v. Jones, 530 U. S. 567, 574 (2000)).
That means significant âFirst Amendment concerns ariseâ
when a State purposely âsubject[s] a group of voters or
their party to disfavored treatment.â 541 U. S., at 314.
Such action âburden[s] a group of votersâ representational
rights.â Ibid.; see id., at 315 (similarly describing the
âburden[] on a disfavored party and its votersâ and the
âburden [on] a groupâs representational rightsâ). And it
does so because of their âpolitical association,â âparticipaÂ
tion in the electoral process,â âvoting history,â or âexpresÂ
sion of political views.â Id., at 314â315.
As so formulated, the associational harm of a partisan
gerrymander is distinct from vote dilution. Consider an
active member of the Democratic Party in Wisconsin who
resides in a district that a partisan gerrymander has left
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 9
KAGAN, J., concurring
untouched (neither packed nor cracked). His individual
vote carries no less weight than it did before. But if the
gerrymander ravaged the party he works to support, then
he indeed suffers harm, as do all other involved members
of that party. This is the kind of âburdenâ to âa group of
votersâ representational rightsâ JUSTICE KENNEDY spoke
of. Id., at 314. Members of the âdisfavored partyâ in the
State, id., at 315, deprived of their natural political
strength by a partisan gerrymander, may face difficulties
fundraising, registering voters, attracting volunteers,
generating support from independents, and recruiting
candidates to run for office (not to mention eventually
accomplishing their policy objectives). See Anderson v.
Celebrezze, 460 U. S. 780, 791â792, and n. 12 (1983) (conÂ
cluding that similar harms inflicted by a state election law
amounted to a âburden imposed on . . . associational
rightsâ). And what is true for party members may be
doubly true for party officials and triply true for the party
itself (or for related organizations). Cf. California Demo-
cratic Party, 530 U. S., at 586 (holding that a state law
violated state political partiesâ First Amendment rights of
association). By placing a state party at an enduring
electoral disadvantage, the gerrymander weakens its
capacity to perform all its functions.
And if that is the essence of the harm alleged, then the
standing analysis should differ from the one the Court
applies. Standing, we have long held, âturns on the nature
and source of the claim asserted.â Warth v. Seldin, 422
U. S. 490, 500 (1975). Indeed, that idea lies at the root of
todayâs opinion. It is because the Court views the harm
alleged as vote dilution that it (rightly) insists that each
plaintiff show packing or cracking in her own district to
establish her standing. See ante, at 14â17; supra, at 3â4.
But when the harm alleged is not district specific, the
proof needed for standing should not be district specific
either. And the associational injury flowing from a
10 GILL v. WHITFORD
KAGAN, J., concurring
statewide partisan gerrymander, whether alleged by a
party member or the party itself, has nothing to do with
the packing or cracking of any single districtâs lines. The
complaint in such a case is instead that the gerrymander
has burdened the ability of like-minded people across the
State to affiliate in a political party and carry out that
organizationâs activities and objects. See supra, at 8â9.
Because a plaintiff can have that complaint without living
in a packed or cracked district, she need not show what
the Court demands today for a vote dilution claim. Or
said otherwise: Because on this alternative theory, the
valued association and the injury to it are statewide, so too
is the relevant standing requirement.
On occasion, the plaintiffs here have indicated that they
have an associational claim in mind. In addition to reÂ
peatedly alleging vote dilution, their complaint asserted in
general terms that Wisconsinâs districting plan infringes
their âFirst Amendment right to freely associate with each
other without discrimination by the State based on that
association.â 1 App. 61, Complaint ¶91. Similarly, the
plaintiffs noted before this Court that â[b]eyond diluting
votes, partisan gerrymandering offends First Amendment
values by penalizing citizens because of . . . their associaÂ
tion with a political party.â Brief for Appellees 36 (interÂ
nal quotation marks omitted). And finally, the plaintiffsâ
evidence of partisan asymmetry well fits a suit alleging
associational injury (although, as noted below, that was
not how it was used, see infra, at 11). As the Court points
out, what those statistical metrics best measure is a gerÂ
rymanderâs effect âon the fortunes of political partiesâ and
those associated with them. Ante, at 20.
In the end, though, I think the plaintiffs did not suffiÂ
ciently advance a First Amendment associational theory to
avoid the Courtâs holding on standing. Despite referring
to that theory in their complaint, the plaintiffs tried this
case as though it were about vote dilution alone. Their
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 11
KAGAN, J., concurring
testimony and other evidence went toward establishing
the effects of rampant packing and cracking on the value
of individual citizensâ votes. Even their proof of partisan
asymmetry was used for that purposeâalthough as noted
above, it could easily have supported the alternative the-
ory of associational harm, see supra, at 10. The plaintiffs
joining in this suit do not include the State Democratic
Party (or any related statewide organization). They did
not emphasize their membership in that party, or their
activities supporting it. And they did not speak to any
tangible associational burdensâways the gerrymander
had debilitated their party or weakened its ability to carry
out its core functions and purposes, see supra, at 8â9.
Even in this Court, when disputing the Stateâs argument
that they lacked standing, the plaintiffs reiterated their
suitâs core theory: that the gerrymander âintentionally,
severely, durably, and unjustifiably dilutes Democratic
votes.â Brief for Appellees 29â30. Given that theory, the
plaintiffs needed to show that their own votes were indeed
diluted in order to establish standing.
But nothing in the Courtâs opinion prevents the plainÂ
tiffs on remand from pursuing an associational claim, or
from satisfying the different standing requirement that
theory would entail. The Courtâs opinion is about a suit
challenging a partisan gerrymander on a particular
groundâthat it dilutes the votes of individual citizens.
That opinion âleave[s] for another day consideration of
other possible theories of harm not presented here and
whether those theories might present justiciable claims
giving rise to statewide remedies.â Ante, at 16. And in
particular, it leaves for another day the theory of harm
advanced by JUSTICE KENNEDY in Vieth: that a partisan
gerrymander interferes with the vital âability of citizens to
band togetherâ to further their political beliefs. 541 U. S.,
at 314 (quoting California Democratic Party, 530 U. S., at
574). Nothing about that injury is âgeneralizedâ or âabÂ
12 GILL v. WHITFORD
KAGAN, J., concurring
stract,â as the Court says is true of the plaintiffsâ dissatisÂ
faction with the âoverall composition of the legislature.â
Ante, at 16. A suit raising an associational theory comÂ
plains of concrete âburdens on a disfavored partyâ and its
members as they pursue their political interests and goals.
Vieth, 541 U. S., at 315 (opinion of KENNEDY, J.); see
supra, at 8â9. And when the suit alleges that a gerryÂ
mander has imposed those burdens on a statewide basis,
then its litigation should be statewide tooâas to standing,
liability, and remedy alike.
III
Partisan gerrymandering jeopardizes â[t]he ordered
working of our Republic, and of the democratic process.â
Vieth, 541 U. S., at 316 (opinion of KENNEDY, J.). It en-
ables a party that happens to be in power at the right time
to entrench itself there for a decade or more, no matter
what the voters would prefer. At its most extreme, the
practice amounts to ârigging elections.â Id., at 317 (interÂ
nal quotation marks omitted). It thus violates the most
fundamental of all democratic principlesâthat âthe voters
should choose their representatives, not the other way
around.â Arizona State Legislature, 576 U. S., at ___ (slip
op., at 35) (quoting Berman, Managing Gerrymandering,
83 Texas L. Rev. 781 (2005)).
And the evils of gerrymandering seep into the legislaÂ
tive process itself. Among the amicus briefs in this case
are two from bipartisan groups of congressional members
and state legislators. They know that both parties gerryÂ
mander. And they know the consequences. The congresÂ
sional brief describes a âcascade of negative resultsâ from
excessive partisan gerrymandering: indifference to swing
voters and their views; extreme political positioning deÂ
signed to placate the partyâs base and fend off primary
challenges; the devaluing of negotiation and compromise;
and the impossibility of reaching pragmatic, bipartisan
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 13
KAGAN, J., concurring
solutions to the nationâs problems. Brief for Bipartisan
Group of Current and Former Members of Congress as
Amici Curiae 4; see id., at 10â23. The state legislators tell
a similar story. In their view, partisan gerrymandering
has âsounded the death-knell of bipartisanship,â creating a
legislative environment that is âtoxicâ and âtribal[ ].â Brief
for Bipartisan Group of 65 Current and Former State
Legislators as Amici Curiae 6, 25.
I doubt James Madison would have been surprised.
What, he asked when championing the Constitution,
would make the House of Representatives work? The
House must be structured, he answered, to instill in its
members âan habitual recollection of their dependence on
the people.â The Federalist No. 57, p. 352 (C. Rossiter ed.
1961). Legislators must be âcompelled to anticipate the
momentâ when their âexercise of [power] is to be reÂ
viewed.â Ibid. When that moment does not comeâwhen
legislators can entrench themselves in office despite the
peopleâs willâthe foundation of effective democratic govÂ
ernance dissolves.
And our history offers little comfort. Yes, partisan
gerrymandering goes back to the Republicâs earliest days;
and yes, American democracy has survived. But technolÂ
ogy makes todayâs gerrymandering altogether different
from the crude linedrawing of the past. New redistricting
software enables pinpoint precision in designing districts.
With such tools, mapmakers can capture every last bit of
partisan advantage, while still meeting traditional disÂ
tricting requirements (compactness, contiguity, and the
like). See Brief for Political Science Professors as Amici
Curiae 28. Gerrymanders have thus become ever more
extreme and durable, insulating officeholders against all
but the most titanic shifts in the political tides. The 2010
redistricting cycle produced some of the worst partisan
gerrymanders on record. Id., at 3. The technology will
only get better, so the 2020 cycle will only get worse.
14 GILL v. WHITFORD
KAGAN, J., concurring
Courts have a critical role to play in curbing partisan
gerrymandering. Over fifty years ago, we committed to
providing judicial review in the redistricting arena, beÂ
cause we understood that âa denial of constitutionally
protected rights demands judicial protection.â Reynolds,
377 U. S., at 566. Indeed, the need for judicial review is at
its most urgent in these cases. For here, politiciansâ incenÂ
tives conflict with votersâ interests, leaving citizens withÂ
out any political remedy for their constitutional harms. Of
course, their dire need provides no warrant for courts to
disregard Article III. Because of the way this suit was
litigated, I agree that the plaintiffs have so far failed to
establish their standing to sue, and I fully concur in the
Courtâs opinion. But of one thing we may unfortunately be
sure. Courtsâand in particular this Courtâwill again be
called on to redress extreme partisan gerrymanders. I am
hopeful we will then step up to our responsibility to vindiÂ
cate the Constitution against a contrary law.
Cite as: 585 U. S. ____ (2018) 1
Opinion of THOMAS, J.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 16â1161
_________________
BEVERLY R. GILL, ET AL., APPELLANTS v.
WILLIAM WHITFORD, ET AL.
ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
[June 18, 2018]
JUSTICE THOMAS, with whom JUSTICE GORSUCH joins,
concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
I join Parts I and II of the Courtâs opinion because I
agree that the plaintiffs have failed to prove Article III
standing. I do not join Part III, which gives the plaintiffs
another chance to prove their standing on remand. When
a plaintiff lacks standing, our ordinary practice is to re-
mand the case with instructions to dismiss for lack of
jurisdiction. E.g., Lance v. Coffman, 549 U. S. 437, 442
(2007) (per curiam); DaimlerChrysler Corp. v. Cuno, 547
U. S. 332, 354 (2006); United States v. Hays, 515 U. S. 737,
747 (1995). The Court departs from our usual practice
because this is supposedly ânot the usual case.â Ante, at
21. But there is nothing unusual about it. As the Court
explains, the plaintiffsâ lack of standing follows from long-
established principles of law. See ante, at 13â17. After a
year and a half of litigation in the District Court, includ-
ing a 4-day trial, the plaintiffs had a more-than-ample
opportunity to prove their standing under these principles.
They failed to do so. Accordingly, I would have remanded
this case with instructions to dismiss.