Vecinos de Barrio v. City of Holyoke ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    _________________________

    No. 95-1581

    VECINOS DE BARRIO UNO, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellees,

    v.

    CITY OF HOLYOKE,

    Defendant, Appellant.

    _________________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Michael A. Ponsor, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    _________________________

    Before

    Selya, Cyr and Stahl,

    Circuit Judges. ______________

    _________________________

    Steven P. Perlmutter, with whom Michael D. Lurie, Robinson & ____________________ ________________ __________
    Cole, and Edward R. Mitnick, Acting City Solicitor, were on ____ __________________
    brief, for appellant.
    Daniel J. Gleason, with whom Nelson G. Apjohn, Nutter, ___________________ _________________ _______
    McClennen & Fish, Alan J. Rom, Law Office of Sherwin Kantrovitz, _________________ ___________ _________________________________
    P.C., David P. Hoose, and Katz, Sasson, Hoose & Turnbull were on ____ _______________ ______________________________
    brief, for appellees.

    _________________________

    December 29, 1995

    _________________________


















    SELYA, Circuit Judge. In 1965, Congress enacted the SELYA, Circuit Judge. ______________

    Voting Rights Act (the VRA), Pub. L. No. 89-110, 79 Stat. 437

    (codified at 42 U.S.C. 1973-1973o). Three decades later, the

    legislation remains a Serbonian bog in which plaintiffs and

    defendants, pundits and policymakers, judges and justices find

    themselves bemired.

    The case before us opens yet another window on the

    conceptual complexity that has engulfed the VRA. It arises

    against the backdrop of the biennial elections that are held for

    city council in Holyoke, Massachusetts. The plaintiffs, two

    nonprofit organizations with ties to the Hispanic community and

    eight voters of Hispanic descent, complain that the electoral

    structure violates section 2 of the VRA by denying Hispanics

    equal opportunity to "participate in the political process and to

    elect representatives of their choice." 42 U.S.C. 1973(b).

    The district court found merit in the plaintiffs' complaint with

    regard to councilmanic elections and granted relief. See Vecinos ___ _______

    de Barrio Uno v. City of Holyoke, 880 F. Supp. 911 (D. Mass. ______________ ________________

    1995).1 After careful consideration of a bulky record, we are

    unable to square the lower court's factual findings with its

    ultimate conclusion of vote dilution. Consequently, we vacate

    the judgment and remand for further proceedings.



    ____________________

    1The plaintiffs also challenged the way in which members of
    the school committee were elected. The district court repulsed
    that challenge, see Holyoke, 880 F. Supp. at 928, and the ___ _______
    plaintiffs do not press the point on appeal.

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    I. BACKGROUND I. BACKGROUND

    We sketch the background, reserving a more exegetic

    treatment of the facts pending our discussion of specific issues.

    We refer those readers who yearn for an immediate rush of details

    to the district court's informative opinion. See id. at 917-25. ___ ___

    Since 1963, the Holyoke city council has been composed

    of fifteen members, eight elected at large and seven elected by

    ward. Candidates run without party labels for two-year terms.

    Each voter is entitled to cast a ballot for a candidate in his or

    her ward, and to vote for up to eight at-large candidates.

    The Hispanic community in Holyoke has grown

    dramatically over the past two decades. By 1990, persons of

    Hispanic origin accounted for 31.06% of the total population

    (compared to 13.8% in 1980). Under the current districting

    scheme the ward lines were last redrawn in 1992 Hispanic

    voters comprise a clear majority in two wards and account for

    nearly one-third of the population in a third ward. Yet, while

    Hispanic-preferred city council candidates have prevailed in the

    two "Hispanic majority" wards, no person of Hispanic descent ever

    has been elected to an at-large seat. This discrepancy

    crystallizes into the nub of the plaintiffs' case: their vote

    dilution claim is that, while Hispanics now constitute 21.89% of

    Holyoke's voting age population, the electoral structure limits

    the Hispanic community's ability to elect the candidates its

    members prefer to only 14% of the available city council seats

    (two of fifteen).


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    The district court agreed with the plaintiffs that the

    Hispanic vote had been impermissibly diluted. See id. at 925-27. ___ ___

    To remedy the perceived inequity, the court by separate order

    left the ward lines and representation intact, but cut back the

    number of at-large seats from eight to two (thus shrinking the

    council from fifteen to nine members, and making its electoral

    structure congruent with that of the school committee). See ___

    Vecinos de Barrio Uno v. City of Holyoke, 882 F. Supp. 9, 10 (D. _____________________ _______________

    Mass. 1995) (Holyoke II). The court reasoned that, under the ___________

    revised format, Hispanics probably would continue to control two

    of the ward seats, and that decreasing the size of the council

    would boost Hispanics' percentage representation to a level that

    would compare favorably with their percentage of the voting age

    population as a whole. See id. at 12. ___ ___

    The district court, striving to put its remedial order

    in place in time for the November 1995 municipal election cycle,

    see id. at 13, entered the order under pressure of time. The ___ ___

    city appealed and simultaneously moved for a stay. By an

    unpublished order, we expedited the appeal and granted the stay.

    Hence, the November 1995 elections were held under the

    preexisting scheme.

    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

    The bedrock on which the district court's opinion rests

    is its conclusion that the at-large component of the electoral

    structure unlawfully dilutes the Hispanic community's voting

    power. As a general matter, a finding of vote dilution made


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    after a bench trial is a finding of fact subject to review under

    the "clearly erroneous" rubric. See Thornburg v. Gingles, 478 ___ _________ _______

    U.S 30, 78-79 (1986); Houston v. Lafayette County, 56 F.3d 606, _______ ________________

    610 (5th Cir. 1995); Jenkins v. Red Clay Consol. Sch. Dist. Bd. _______ ________________________________

    of Educ., 4 F.3d 1103, 1116 (3d Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 114 S. ________ _____ ______

    Ct. 2779 (1994); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a). This means that ___ ____

    a reviewing court ought not to disturb such a finding "unless, on

    the whole of the record, [the court] form[s] a strong, unyielding

    belief that a mistake has been made." Cumpiano v. Banco ________ _____

    Santander P.R., 902 F.2d 148, 152 (1st Cir. 1990). ______________

    Though the clear error standard is formidable, it is

    not a juggernaut that crushes everything in its path. One

    important qualification is that the jurisprudence of clear error

    "does not inhibit an appellate court's power to correct errors of

    law, including those that may infect a so-called mixed finding of

    law and fact, or a finding of fact that is predicated on a

    misunderstanding of the governing rule of law." Gingles, 478 _______

    U.S. at 106 (quoting Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union, 466 U.S. 485, __________ _______________

    501 (1984)); accord LoVuolo v. Gunning, 925 F.2d 22, 25 (1st Cir. ______ _______ _______

    1991). Considering asserted errors of law entails nondeferential

    review. See In re Extradition of Howard, 996 F.2d 1320, 1327 ___ _____________________________

    (1st Cir. 1993).

    III. PROVING VOTE DILUTION III. PROVING VOTE DILUTION

    In order to sharpen the focus of our inquiry, we first

    limn the statutory framework and elucidate the requirements that

    attend a proper showing of vote dilution.


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    Section 2 of the VRA, as amended in 1982, prohibits any

    standard, practice, or procedure "which results in a denial or

    abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to

    vote on account of race or color." 42 U.S.C. 1973(a). A

    denial or abridgement of the right to vote is established when,

    based on the totality of circumstances, it is
    shown that the political processes leading to
    nomination or election . . . are not equally
    open to participation by all members of a
    [protected] class of citizens . . . in that
    its members have less opportunity than other
    members of the electorate to participate in
    the political process and to elect
    representatives of their choice. The extent
    to which members of a protected class have
    been elected to office . . . is one
    circumstance which may be considered:
    Provided, That nothing in this section ________
    establishes a right to have members of a
    protected class elected in numbers equal to
    their proportion in the population.

    42 U.S.C. 1973(b). While the statutory scheme does not provide

    an assurance of success at the polls for minority candidates, see ___

    Johnson v. De Grandy, 114 S. Ct. 2647, 2658 n.11 (1994), it does _______ _________

    provide an assurance of fairness. Thus, when "a certain

    electoral law, practice, or structure interacts with social and

    historical conditions to cause an inequality in the opportunities

    enjoyed by [minority] and white voters to elect their preferred

    representatives," a section 2 claim lies. Gingles, 478 U.S. at _______

    47.

    The platform required to launch a vote dilution claim

    must contain three interleaved planks. First, the plaintiffs

    must prove that they are part of a minority group that is

    "sufficiently large and geographically compact to constitute a

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    majority in a single-member district." Id. at 50.2 Second, ___

    they must show that the group is "politically cohesive." Id. at ___

    51. Third, they must demonstrate significant bloc voting by non-

    minorities. See id. Each of these showings must be specific to ___ ___

    the electoral unit that is under fire.

    The first two Gingles preconditions look to whether, _______

    putting the challenged practice, procedure, or structure to one

    side, minority voters within a given constituency have the

    potential to elect representatives of their choice. See Growe v. ___ _____

    Emison, 113 S. Ct. 1075, 1084 (1993); Gingles, 478 U.S. at 50 ______ _______

    n.17. If, for example, minority voters in an at-large system are

    so widely dispersed that they could not elect preferred

    candidates under some reasonable alternative scheme, then the

    "at-large system cannot be responsible for that group's inability

    to elect its candidates." Solomon v. Liberty County, 899 F.2d _______ _______________

    ____________________

    2This precondition will have to be reconfigured to the
    extent that the courts eventually validate so-called influence
    dilution claims. See Voinovich v. Quilter, 113 S. Ct. 1149, ___ _________ _______
    1157-58 (1993) (discussing treatment of claims brought on behalf
    of persons who constitute a potentially influential bloc, but
    less than the majority, within the relevant electorate, and
    raising prospect that the first Gingles precondition may have to _______
    be "modified or eliminated"). The lower courts are divided on
    the subject, compare Armour v. Ohio, 775 F. Supp. 1044, 1052 _______ ______ ____
    (N.D. Ohio 1991) (three-judge panel) (recognizing influence
    dilution claim) with McNeil v. Springfield Park Dist., 851 F.2d ____ ______ ______________________
    937, 947 (7th Cir. 1988) (rejecting influence dilution claim),
    cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1031 (1989), and the Supreme Court has _____ ______
    declined on four occasions to decide whether such claims are
    cognizable under VRA 2. See De Grandy, 114 S. Ct. at 2656; ___ __________
    Voinovich, 113 S. Ct. at 1157-58; Growe v. Emison, 113 S. Ct. _________ _____ ______
    1075, 1084 n.5 (1993); Gingles, 478 U.S. at 46-47 n.12. We take _______
    no view of the matter today (although we do discuss the potential
    relevance of evidence from elections in a particular "influence
    district" on the plaintiffs' claims, see infra Part V). ___ _____

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    1012, 1018 (11th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1023 (1991). _____ ______

    Similarly, unless the minority group is politically cohesive, "it

    cannot be said that the selection of a [particular] electoral

    structure thwarts distinctive minority group interests."

    Gingles, 478 U.S. at 51. The third Gingles precondition which _______ _______

    embodies a showing that the majority votes sufficiently as a bloc

    to enable it, in the ordinary course, to trounce minority-

    preferred candidates most of the time, see Voinovich v. Quilter, ___ _________ _______

    113 S. Ct. 1149, 1157 (1993) addresses whether the challenged

    practice, procedure, or structure is the cause of the minority

    group's inability to mobilize its potential voting power and

    elect its preferred candidates. See De Grandy, 114 S. Ct. at ___ __________

    2657; Gingles, 478 U.S. at 51. _______

    Proof of all three preconditions creates an inference

    that members of the minority are in fact harmed by the challenged

    electoral practice, procedure, or structure. However, the

    inference is rebuttable. As a result, establishing the three

    Gingles preconditions is necessary, but not always in itself _______

    sufficient, to ensure success on a section 2 claim. That is to

    say, because the inference of vote dilution can be rebutted by

    the force of other evidence, proof of the three preconditions,

    without more, will not invariably carry the day. See De Grandy, ___ _________

    114 S. Ct. at 2657. Put another way, the critical question in a

    vote dilution case is whether minority voters have an equal

    opportunity to participate in the electoral process. While the

    threshold elements catalogued by the Gingles Court shed _______


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    considerable light on this inquiry, they do not comprise the only

    conceivable source of illumination. Completing the inquiry

    demands "comprehensive, not limited, canvassing of relevant

    facts." Id. ___

    Consistent with this approach, courts must be careful

    not to wear blinders. The judge must sift the evidence produced

    at trial and gather enough information to paint a true picture of

    the attendant facts and circumstances. He or she must then make

    a realistic appraisal of what the picture discloses. See ___

    Gingles, 478 U.S. at 45 (advocating achievement of a "practical _______

    evaluation of the past and present reality" through a "functional

    view of the political process"). Some guidance can be found in a

    list of factors highlighted in the congressional report that

    accompanied the 1982 amendment to VRA 2, see S. Rep. No. 417, ___

    97th Cong., 2d Sess., at 28-29 (1982), reprinted in 1982 _________ __

    U.S.C.C.A.N. 177, 206-07, but the judge should not stop there.

    Though helpful, the list is not all-encompassing. See Gingles, ___ _______

    478 U.S. at 45; Little Rock Sch. Dist. v. Pulaski County Special ______________________ ______________________

    Sch. Dist., 56 F.3d 904, 910 (8th Cir. 1995). Since communities __________

    differ, and elections play out differently in different venues at

    different times, the judge must make a case-specific

    determination, giving due weight to the idiosyncracies that bear

    upon the particular situation. See Jenkins, 4 F.3d at 1115. ___ _______

    One road that we believe remains open to a court called

    upon to examine the totality of the circumstances in a vote

    dilution case is to mull other factors, apart from racial bias,


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    that may have caused the white bloc voting identified in the

    third Gingles precondition.3 While the Gingles Court split on _______ _______

    this question, compare Gingles, 478 U.S. at 63-64 (opinion of _______ _______

    Brennan, J.) (stating for four justices that the etiology of

    racially polarized voting is irrelevant under VRA 2) with id. ____ ___

    at 100-02 (O'Connor, J., concurring in the judgment) (stating for

    four justices that the reasons why white voters reject minority

    candidates are relevant) and id. at 82-83 (White, J., concurring) ___ ___

    (rejecting, without explanation, Justice Brennan's view), and

    controversy has raged since then, see, e.g., Nipper v. Smith, 39 ___ ____ ______ _____

    F.3d 1494, 1513-14 (11th Cir. 1994) (en banc) (holding for two

    judges, with two judges dissenting, that the existence of racial

    bias in the community is relevant to a section 2 claim), cert. _____

    denied, 115 S. Ct. 1795 (1995); League of United Latin Am. ______ _____________________________

    Citizens, Council No, 4434 [LULAC] v. Clements, 999 F.2d 831, ____________________________ _____ ________

    850-63 (5th Cir. 1993) (en banc) (reaching similar conclusion,

    ____________________

    3We recognize that such widely used terms of art as "white
    bloc voting" and "racially polarized voting" may not always
    capture the subtleties of specific problems that arise in the
    political process. The case at bar, for example, involves the
    voting patterns of the majority (loosely termed "white") and the
    specific minority symbolized by the plaintiffs (loosely termed
    "Hispanics"). Concededly, this taxonomy is imprecise; for
    example, not all people who are considered "Hispanic" necessarily
    consider themselves "non-white." To that extent, then, the
    phrase "white bloc voting," though used repeatedly throughout the
    decided cases, may be somewhat inaccurate or even slightly
    misleading. Similarly, VRA 2 applies to denials of the right
    to vote on account of either race or color, yet the opinions harp ______
    on the phrase "racially polarized voting." To that extent, the
    idiom of the case law may neglect potentially important
    distinctions between the concepts of "race" and "color." While
    acknowledging these limitations, we can think of no universal
    solution, and, thus, take refuge in the pat terminology.

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    with three judges dissenting), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 878 _____ ______

    (1994), we are of the view that De Grandy has removed much of the _________

    doubt.

    Even when the Gingles preconditions coalesce and _______

    thereby create an inference of discrimination, lack of equal

    electoral opportunity remains the central focus of the inquiry.

    Furthermore, that question "must still be addressed explicitly,

    and without isolating any other arguably relevant facts from the

    act of judgment." De Grandy, 114 S. Ct. at 2657. It seems self- _________

    evident that the presence or absence of bias is at least

    "arguably relevant" to the question of whether a minority lacks

    equal electoral opportunity. After all, a minority group's

    prospects for electoral success in a community riven along racial

    lines differ significantly from its prospects in a more unified

    community. We agree with the Fifth Circuit that "[a] tendency

    among whites to cast their votes on the basis of race presents a

    far more durable obstacle to the coalition-building upon which

    minority electoral success depends than disagreements over

    ideology." LULAC, 999 F.2d at 858. _____

    By like token, however, sentiments unrelated to race

    also can be powerful stimuli. When it can be shown that, in a

    particular community, voters are moved primarily by causes

    unrelated to race, it is reasonable to assume that a minority-

    preferred candidate who embodies these values might equally be

    able to engender majoritarian (white) support. See Gingles, 478 ___ _______

    U.S. at 100-01 (O'Connor, J., concurring). Thus:


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    Evidence that a candidate preferred by the
    minority group in a particular election was
    rejected by white voters for reasons other
    than those which made that candidate the
    preferred choice of the minority group would
    seem clearly relevant in answering the
    question whether bloc voting by white voters
    will consistently defeat minority candidates.

    Id. at 100. ___

    The upshot is that when racial antagonism is not the

    cause of an electoral defeat suffered by a minority candidate,

    the defeat does not prove a lack of electoral opportunity but a

    lack of whatever else it takes to be successful in politics (say,

    failure to support popular programmatic initiatives, or failure

    to reflect the majority's ideological viewpoints, or failure to

    appreciate the popularity of an incumbent). Section 2 does not

    bridge that gap nor should it. See De Grandy, 114 S. Ct. at ___ _________

    2658 n.11; see also Baird v. Consolidated City of Indianapolis, ___ ____ _____ __________________________________

    976 F.2d 357, 361 (7th Cir. 1992) (explaining that section 2 "is

    a balm for racial minorities, not political ones even though

    the two often coincide"), cert. denied, 113 S. Ct. 2334 (1993). _____ ______

    We believe it follows that, after De Grandy, plaintiffs cannot __________

    prevail on a VRA 2 claim if there is significantly probative

    evidence that whites voted as a bloc for reasons wholly unrelated

    to racial animus. We so hold.

    This holding draws sustenance from the language of

    section 2 itself, particularly the statute's prohibition of

    electoral structures that result in a denial or abridgement of

    the right to vote "on account of race or color." 42 U.S.C.

    1973(a). Other courts have found this language determinative of

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    the question, see, e.g., Nipper, 39 F.3d at 1515-17; LULAC, 999 ___ ____ ______ _____

    F.2d at 850, especially when coupled with legislative history

    indicating that an electoral scheme violates VRA 2 only when it

    "interacts with racial bias in the community and allows that bias

    to dilute the voting strength of the minority group." Nipper, 39 ______

    F.2d at 1520 (commenting upon legislative history).

    Those including the present plaintiffs who favor a

    more single-minded interpretation of section 2 marshal a regiment

    of counterarguments. Their most serious objection questions the

    compatibility of our holding with Congress's action in amending

    section 2 to scrap the "intent" test imposed by City of Mobile v. ______________

    Bolden, 446 U.S. 55, 62 (1980), and to insert in its place the ______

    "results" test earlier adumbrated in White v. Regester, 412 U.S. _____ ________

    755, 765-66 (1973), and Whitcomb v. Chavis, 403 U.S. 124, 143 ________ ______

    (1971). This substitution permits plaintiffs to show vote

    dilution by proving that electoral structures "result[] in a

    denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United

    States to vote on account of race or color," 42 U.S.C. 1973(a),

    and, concomitantly, relieves them of the burden of proving that

    the structures were set in place to advance a racially

    discrimination purpose. Against this mise-en-scene, some have _____________

    equated Congress's adoption of the "results" test with an

    intention to foreclose any inquiry whatever into the reasons why

    minority groups lack opportunities for electoral participation.

    We do not believe that the 1982 amendment lends itself

    to this restrictive conclusion. The now-discarded "intent" test


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    specifically required plaintiffs to prove that government created

    or maintained the challenged electoral structure with a

    discriminatory purpose, actually intending that a structure would

    disadvantage minority voters. See Mobile, 446 U.S. at 62-63. In ___ ______

    enacting the amendment, Congress shifted the law's focus:

    plaintiffs no longer have to prove discriminatory intent but

    instead have to carry the burden of proving that the challenged

    electoral structure results in a denial of equal opportunity on

    account of race.

    Properly conceived, the results test protects racial

    minorities against a stacked deck but does not guarantee that

    they will be dealt a winning hand. Whitcomb an opinion ________

    purportedly codified in the 1982 amendment illustrates the

    point. There, the Court discerned no denial of equal opportunity

    when a minority group's failure to elect its preferred candidates

    "emerges more as a function of losing elections than of built-in

    bias" directed by the establishment majority against the minority

    group. Whitcomb, 403 U.S. at 153. The lesson to be learned is ________

    that, even when election returns in effect short-circuit a

    minority group's voting power, the electoral structure is not

    illegal if the defeat represents nothing more than the routine

    operation of political factors. See id. In other words, even ___ ___

    under the 1982 amendment, a lack of electoral success unrelated _________

    to race is not a proxy for a lack of opportunity to succeed. __ ____

    Hence, VRA 2, as amended, despite its focus on results, does

    not require courts to ignore evidence that factors other than


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    race are the real obstacles to the political success of a

    minority group. See Gingles, 478 U.S. at 101 (O'Connor, J., ___ _______

    concurring) ("The overall vote dilution inquiry neither requires

    nor permits an arbitrary rule against consideration of all

    evidence concerning voting preferences other than statistical

    evidence of racial voting patterns.").

    We recognize, of course, that permitting inquiry into

    the causes of white bloc voting potentially jeopardizes the

    remedial purposes of the VRA in the sense that it may make proof

    of vote dilution more difficult. Courts have expressed concern

    on this score, see, e.g., id. at 72 (opinion of Brennan, J.); ___ ____ ___

    LULAC, 999 F.2d at 860, and these concerns are not without _____

    foundation. Yet, two responses spring to mind. First, the VRA

    is designed to ensure that the electoral process is fair and the

    opportunities for access to it are equal. Forcing courts to turn

    a blind eye to other causes of majoritarian bloc voting serves

    neither of these ends, but, rather, facilitates a back-door

    approach to proportional representation. That is not a door

    through which Congress desired courts to pass. See 42 U.S.C. ___

    1973(b) (stating that nothing in the VRA "establishes a right to

    have members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to

    their proportion in the population").

    Second, we suspect that at bottom the skeptics

    misapprehend the nature of the showing needed to support a

    section 2 claim. As amended, the statute allows plaintiffs to

    establish a prima facie case of vote dilution by proving the


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    three Gingles preconditions. The second and third preconditions _______

    are designed to assay whether racial cleavages in voting patterns

    exist and, if so, whether those cleavages are deep enough to

    defeat minority-preferred candidates time and again. If proven,

    these preconditions give rise to an inference that racial bias is

    operating through the medium of the targeted electoral structure

    to impair minority political opportunities. See De Grandy, 114 ___ __________

    S. Ct. at 2657 (noting that a "lack of equal electoral

    opportunity may be readily imagined and unsurprising when

    demonstrated under circumstances that include the three essential

    Gingles factors"); Nipper, 39 F.3d at 1525 (stating that "proof _______ ______

    of the second and third Gingles factors will ordinarily create a _______

    sufficient inference that racial bias is at work"); United States _____________

    v. Marengo County Comm'n, 731 F.2d 1546, 1567 (11th Cir.) _______________________

    (stating that the second and third Gingles preconditions remain _______

    the "surest indication of race-conscious politics"), cert. _____

    denied, 469 U.S. 976 (1984). ______

    The resultant inference is not immutable, but it is

    strong; it will endure unless and until the defendant adduces ______ ___ _____

    credible evidence tending to prove that detected voting patterns

    can most logically be explained by factors unconnected to the

    intersection of race with the electoral system.4 See Nipper, 39 ___ ______

    F.3d at 1524. It is only when such evidence possesses convictive

    ____________________

    4Such factors might include, for example, organizational
    disarray, lack of funds, want of campaign experience, the
    unattractiveness of particular candidates, or the universal
    popularity of an opponent.

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    force that the inference of racial animus will be called into

    serious question. See De Grandy, 114 S. Ct. at 2658. ___ _________

    Even if such proof is forthcoming, the defendant does

    not automatically triumph. Instead, the court must determine

    whether, based on the totality of the circumstances (including

    the original inference and the factual predicate that undergirds

    it), the plaintiffs have proven that the minority group was

    denied meaningful access to the political system on account of

    race. The burden of proof at all times remains with the

    plaintiffs; defendant's burden is an entry-level burden of

    production. Thus, once the defendant proffers enough evidence to

    raise a legitimate question in regard to whether nonracial

    factors adequately explain racial voting patterns, the ultimate

    burden of persuading the factfinder that the voting patterns were

    engendered by race rests with the plaintiffs.

    Despite the allocation of the burden of proof, this

    framework imposes a high hurdle for those who seek to defend the

    existing system despite meaningful statistical evidence that

    suggests bloc voting along racial lines.5 See Jenkins, 4 F.3d ___ _______
    ____________________

    5The proceedings below illustrate this point. The district
    court acknowledged but did not accept the City's attribution
    of the Hispanic community's lack of electoral success to "factors
    other than the at-large system itself, including voter apathy,
    unattractive candidates, poor campaign organizations and the like
    all evidenced by low voter turnout." Holyoke, 880 F. Supp. at _______
    926. The court seemingly rejected the City's alternative
    explanations as a matter of fact. See id. (concluding that, ___ ___
    based on the overall evidence, an Hispanic candidate, "no matter
    how attractive and no matter how effective at bringing out the
    Hispanic vote, [would not have had] a fair opportunity to win any
    at-large election in Holyoke during this period"). Having used
    this illustration, we hasten to add that, on remand, the court is

    17












    at 1135. We predict that cases will be rare in which plaintiffs

    establish the Gingles preconditions yet fail on a section 2 claim _______

    because other facts undermine the original inference. In this

    regard, we emphasize that establishing vote dilution does not

    require the plaintiffs affirmatively to disprove every other

    possible explanation for racially polarized voting. Rather,

    plaintiffs must simply prove that the three threshold

    preconditions (alone or in combination with the totality of the

    circumstances) are strong enough in a given case that,

    notwithstanding the countervailing evidence of other causative

    agents mustered by the defendant, the record sustains a claim

    that racial politics specifically, the interaction of race and

    the electoral system have resulted in significantly diminished

    opportunities for minority participation in elective government.

    IV. THE ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR IV. THE ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

    Having cemented into place the general framework for

    evaluating vote dilution claims, we shine the light of our

    gleaned understanding on the City's objections to the decision

    below. We divide our discussion into four segments.

    A. The Analytic Model. A. The Analytic Model. __________________

    In this case, the district court analyzed fifteen

    different races in six different election years spanning a ten-

    year period from 1983 through 1993. Taking this evidence as an

    undifferentiated whole, the court found a pattern of racially
    ____________________

    free to revisit the evidence and reconsider all its findings,
    including those that touch upon other possible causes of racially
    polarized voting.

    18












    polarized voting sufficient to support the plaintiffs' prayer for

    relief. The City assigns error, positing that racially polarized

    voting cannot be deduced from an overview which blends data from

    a series of separate elections, some suspect and some

    unexceptionable. The City's point is that only evidence from

    "legally significant" elections can be relevant to, or can

    underbrace, a finding that VRA 2 has been abridged. Warming to

    this theme, the City asserts that each of the three Gingles _______

    preconditions must be shown to exist vis-a-vis a particular _________

    election before a court may mull what transpired at that election

    as a link in the evidentiary chain that leads to a determination

    of vote dilution. If this approach were adopted, the court

    below, in considering whether the plaintiffs had established a

    pattern of racially polarized voting over the years, could not

    have relied upon evidence drawn from any discrete election unless

    the plaintiffs first proved a violation of the VRA in regard to

    that election.6 We reject the City's approach.

    In this enlightened day and age, bigots rarely

    advertise an intention to engage in race-conscious politics. Not

    surprisingly, therefore, racially polarized voting tends to be a

    silent, shadowy thief of the minority's rights. Where such

    ____________________

    6To give concrete examples, Holyoke contends that in 1983
    Hispanics did not constitute a sufficiently compact group to
    satisfy the first Gingles precondition, thus rendering any _______
    evidence of white bloc voting in that year legally irrelevant.
    In the same vein, the City insists that the district court should
    have ignored evidence of racially polarized voting in any
    elections won by minority candidates or in which Hispanics did
    not sufficiently cohere.

    19












    activity is detected at all, the process of detection typically

    involves resort to a multifaceted array of evidence including

    demographics, election results, voting patterns, campaign

    conduct, and the like. Usually, such evidence is not neatly

    packaged but must be pieced together bit by bit from data

    accumulated in a series of elections. See Gingles, 478 U.S. at ___ _______

    57; Jenkins, 4 F.3d at 1119; Gomez v. City of Watsonville, 863 _______ _____ ____________________

    F.2d 1407, 1417 (9th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 489 U.S. 1080 _____ ______

    (1989); City of Carrollton Branch of NAACP v. Stallings, 829 F.2d __________________________________ _________

    1547, 1557 (11th Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 485 U.S. 936 (1988). _____ ______

    Thus, the question whether a given electoral district experiences

    racially polarized voting to a legally significant extent demands

    a series of discrete inquiries not only into election results but

    also into minority and white voting practices over time.

    We think that this analysis exposes the principal flaw

    in Holyoke's thesis. The requirement of "legal significance" is

    not a barometer for deciding what evidence of racially polarized

    voting may be considered; rather, it is the benchmark against

    which all the evidence, taken in sum, must be measured. And

    although weaknesses in plot lines siphoned from individual

    elections may well imperil an overall conclusion of legally

    significant racially polarized voting the whole is frequently

    not greater than the sum of the parts such weaknesses do not

    render evidence from those elections inadmissible. It follows

    that reliance on such evidence does not necessarily invalidate an

    overall conclusion that unlawful vote dilution exists. See ___


    20












    Gingles, 478 U.S. at 57 (explaining that "in a district where _______

    elections are shown usually to be polarized, the fact that

    racially polarized voting is not present in one or a few

    individual elections does not necessarily negate the conclusion

    that the district experiences legally significant bloc voting").

    This paradigm is fully consistent with the reality of

    events. One swallow does not a summer make, and the results of a

    single election are unlikely, without more, to prove the

    existence or nonexistence of embedded racial cleavages. Thus,

    race-conscious politics (or its absence, for that matter) can

    more readily be seen by producing a documentary that spans a

    series of elections than by taking an isolated snapshot of a

    single election. After all, to be legally significant, racially

    polarized voting in a specific community must be such that, over

    a period of years, whites vote sufficiently as a bloc to defeat

    minority candidates most of the time. See id. at 56. In order ___ ___

    reliably to tell whether racial groups do (or do not) band

    together behind particular candidates with regularity, all

    elections in the relevant time frame (or, at least, a

    representative sampling of them) must be studied not just those

    elections that, taken in isolation, reveal the cicatrices of

    racially polarized voting.

    On this basis, we reject the City's contention that the

    failure to prove any one Gingles precondition in any one election _______

    eliminates that election from judicial consideration. The

    preconditions are necessary to prove an overall conclusion of


    21












    vote dilution, not to demonstrate the relevance vel non of ___ ___

    particular morsels of evidence. Hence, the court below had every

    right to analyze all the elections (suspect and non-suspect) in

    its effort to ascertain both whether (1) the Hispanic community

    usually coheres behind particular candidates, and (2) Holyoke's

    white citizens usually vote against Hispanic-preferred candidates

    in sufficient numbers to prevent their election.

    B. Compactness. B. Compactness. ___________

    Holyoke's city council model seven ward seats and

    eight at-large seats dates back more than three decades (to an

    era when few persons of Hispanic descent dwelt in the

    municipality). Currently, the Hispanic community effectively

    controls two of the fifteen city council seats (Wards 1 and 2).

    In addition, Hispanics constitute about 28% of the voting age

    population in Ward 4. Based on these population statistics, the

    City strives to persuade us that the plaintiffs cannot satisfy

    the Gingles preconditions because Hispanics, as a group, are _______

    insufficiently compact to constitute the majority in a third

    ward. We are unconvinced for two reasons.

    First, the City failed to make this claim in its brief,

    asserting it for the first time at oral argument. Thinking on

    one's feet is a useful tool of appellate advocacy only if the

    thinker has a suitable foothold in the record. Here, the thought

    was too little too late. See United States v. Gertner, 65 F.3d ___ _____________ _______

    963, 971 n.7 (1st Cir. 1995) (refusing to entertain an argument

    not raised in the government's appellate brief); see also Fed. R. ___ ____


    22












    App. P. 28(a).

    In all events, the City's spur-of-the-moment retort is

    founded on a faulty premise. It assumes that the relevant

    benchmarks for matching the Hispanic population and its

    opportunity for access are the seven single-member wards. This

    assumption is faulty because the litigation challenges Holyoke's

    electoral system as a whole, and, to the extent the challenge is

    scissile, its cynosure is not the wards but the system's at-large

    component a component that allegedly dilutes the plaintiffs'

    opportunity for full political participation in municipal

    affairs. Refined to bare essence, the plaintiffs' theory is

    that, because of the combined impact of the at-large electoral

    structure and an incipient pattern of racially polarized voting,

    Hispanics can only hope to elect candidates to two of the fifteen

    city council seats (i.e., about 14% of the seats) even though

    they comprise at least 22% of Holyoke's total population. Thus,

    the City's emphasis on the seven wards misses the point.

    This does not mean that the wards are an irrelevancy.

    A successful vote dilution challenge "must find a reasonable

    alternative practice as a benchmark against which to measure the

    existing voting practice." Holder v. Hall, 114 S. Ct. 2581, 2585 ______ ____

    (1994). In that sense, the single-member districts are relevant

    to an assessment of the system's at-large component. While it

    may be theoretically possible to analogize the plaintiffs' claim

    to a challenge addressed to a multimember at-large district in

    which case the court would have to compare Hispanic opportunities


    23












    to elect candidates to one of the eight undifferentiated at-large

    seats to the potential opportunities that might exist if the

    multimember district were divided into eight contiguous single-

    member districts, see, e.g., id. at 2589 (O'Connor, J., ___ ____ ___

    concurring) ("In a challenge to a multimember at-large system . .

    . a court may compare it to a system of multiple single-member

    districts.") the analogy cannot be carried past its logical

    limits. Here, the analogy would be imperfect because the

    plaintiffs' challenge is addressed to Holyoke's electoral system

    as a whole. Accordingly, the district court had an obligation to

    consider whether that system not just its at-large component

    provides minorities with an equal opportunity to elect candidates

    of their choice. See Baird, 976 F.2d at 360; NAACP v. City of ___ _____ _____ _______

    Columbia, 850 F. Supp. 404, 429 (D.S.C. 1993), aff'd, 33 F.3d 52 ________ _____

    (4th Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 1095 (1995). _____ ______

    Bearing this in mind, we think that the lower court

    constructed a reasonable benchmark by comparing current Hispanic

    opportunities to potential opportunities that would exist if the

    municipality were divided into fifteen single-member councilmanic

    districts. And since we find no clear error in the court's

    conclusion that, under its projected set of circumstances,

    Hispanics would constitute a majority of the votes in at least

    three of fifteen reconstituted wards, we cannot set aside its

    finding that Hispanics are a sufficiently compact group.

    C. Low Voter Turnout. C. Low Voter Turnout. _________________

    The City also asserts that, given the consistently low


    24












    turnout among Holyoke's Hispanic voters, see Holyoke, 880 F. ___ _______

    Supp. at 925 ("Hispanic turnout rates in Holyoke have varied from

    22% to as low as 2% over a ten-year period, . . . differing

    considerably from election to election and from precinct to

    precinct."), the district court erred as a matter of law in

    declaring the Hispanic community to be politically cohesive. In

    the City's view, low turnout betokens voter apathy and precludes

    a finding that particular candidates received significant

    minority support (as required to show minority political cohesion

    under Gingles, 478 U.S. at 56). The plaintiffs concede the _______

    anemic turnout but argue that it is irrelevant to the political

    cohesion inquiry. They take the position that courts should

    frame answers to such inquiries after considering the behavior of

    those minority voters who actually opt to participate in the

    electoral process, and not gaze beyond that group (whatever its

    size) to count the number that sit on the sidelines.

    We walk a middle path. A principal objective of the

    VRA is to provide a level playing field on which minority

    candidates like all candidates will be exposed only to the

    routine vicissitudes of the electoral process, not to special

    impediments arising out of the intersection of race and the

    electoral system. So, if a defeat at the polls (or even a string

    of defeats) is caused by, say, a candidate's lack of merit or a

    campaign's lack of focus, the Voting Rights Act is not infringed.

    See Whitfield v. Democratic Party of State of Ark., 890 F.2d ___ _________ ___________________________________

    1423, 1430 (8th Cir. 1989) (explaining that a "causal connection


    25












    between the challenged practice . . . and the diluted voting

    power of the minority must be established"). By like token, if

    the defeat of minority candidates occurs because the votes of the

    members of the minority community are scattered due to their

    diverse interests, then the requisite causal connection is

    lacking. See Gingles, 478 U.S. at 51. Under such circumstances, ___ _______

    the interaction of race with the electoral system cannot justly

    be blamed for a minority group's lack of success at the polls.

    In the case of low voter turnout, the electoral system

    may not always be so easily absolved. For one thing, even with a

    modest turnout, the actual votes cast may be probative of

    minority cohesion if a sufficiently strong pattern emerges. See, ___

    e.g., United States v. Dallas County Comm'n, 739 F.2d 1529, 1536 ____ _____________ ____________________

    n.4 (11th Cir. 1984). For another thing, low voter turnout in

    the minority community sometimes may result from the interaction

    of the electoral system with the effects of past discrimination,

    which together operate to discourage meaningful electoral

    participation. In such instances, low turnout itself may

    actually be probative of vote dilution. See, e.g., Gingles, 478 ___ ____ _______

    U.S. at 69 (opinion of Brennan, J.); see also Gomez, 863 F.2d at ___ ____ _____

    1416 n.4 (suggesting that voter apathy traceable to past

    discrimination is "evidence of minority voters' lack of ability _______

    to participate effectively in the political process"); Kirksey v. _______

    Board of Supervisors, 554 F.2d 139, 145 n.13 (5th Cir.) _______________________

    (observing that failure to register may be a residual effect of

    previous lack of access or feelings of futility in light of white


    26












    bloc voting), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 968 (1977); see also _____ ______ ___ ____

    Buckanaga v. Sisseton Indep. Sch. Dist., 804 F.2d 469, 475 (8th _________ ___________________________

    Cir. 1986). When low turnout results from the very problems that

    the Voting Rights Act is intended to ameliorate, it would be

    mindless for courts to ignore the evidence of minority cohesion

    that can be culled from the actual ballot tallies.

    This is not to say, as the plaintiffs would have it,

    either that low voter turnout is altogether irrelevant to a vote

    dilution inquiry, or that courts should look only to actual

    voting results. The cause of poor turnout is often difficult to

    detect. If minority voters have not made reasonable efforts to

    organize and participate in the electoral system, courts cannot

    accurately gauge the effects of the system on the minority

    group's political aspirations. See City of Columbia, 850 F. ___ _________________

    Supp. at 415-16. Furthermore, low turnout sometimes may be an

    indicium of ebbing community support for a particular minority

    candidate. See id. at 418-19. Hence, evidence of this nature ___ ___

    may or may not be probative on the issue of minority

    cohesion.

    In the final analysis, the question of whether low

    minority voter turnout helps or hurts a claim of vote dilution,

    and the related question of whether actual votes cast provide a

    sufficient (or better) measure of minority political cohesion

    without regard to turnout, both depend on the facts and

    circumstances of the particular case. Consequently, courts

    cannot resort to the easy visibility of a bright-line rule. On


    27












    this delicate, fact-sensitive issue, only a case-by-case approach

    satisfactorily permits courts to peel away the layers and conduct

    the functional vote dilution inquiry that the VRA requires.

    In the case at hand, the district court made reasonably

    detailed findings concerning the relationship between depressed

    turnout among Hispanics and the structural attributes of

    Holyoke's electoral system. The court determined that the City

    imposed or neglected to remove a variety of obstacles to

    Hispanic political participation. The court mentioned, inter _____

    alia, the City's niggardly deployment of bilingual registrars and ____

    poll workers, its removal from voter registration rolls of

    Hispanics who did not fill out English-language census forms, and

    its failure to print ballot information posters in Spanish. See ___

    Holyoke, 880 F. Supp. at 925. In the court's estimation, these _______

    deficiencies, along with downtrodden socioeconomic conditions,

    accounted for the low turnout among Hispanic voters. Id. And to ___

    cap matters, the court found that the actual turnout, though

    small, was adequate to reflect political cohesion in the Hispanic

    community. Id. ___

    We believe that these findings are supportable. In a

    vote dilution case characterized by meager turnout among minority

    voters, plaintiffs need not show that the sole cause of low

    numbers is the interaction between racial divisions in the

    community and identifiable elements of the electoral system. It

    is sufficient if the plaintiffs persuade the trial court that

    considerations implicating race contributed substantially to


    28












    repressing minority participation. In light of the aggregate

    facts and circumstances, coupled with the district court's

    explicit findings, we believe that the plaintiffs satisfied this

    burden here. Thus, the evidence of low Hispanic turnout does not

    undercut the court's ultimate conclusion that the plaintiffs

    established minority political cohesion.7

    D. Adequacy of the Findings. D. Adequacy of the Findings. ________________________

    The City's most telling point involves the lower

    court's application of relevant legal principles to discerned

    facts. In condoning the necessary appraisal, we are mindful that

    a district judge sitting without a jury cannot paint with too

    broad a brush. Rule 52(a) requires the judge to make findings of

    fact and conclusions of law that are sufficiently detailed to

    permit a reviewing court to ascertain the factual core of, and

    the legal foundation for, the rulings below. See Touch v. Master ___ _____ ______

    Unit Die Prods., Inc., 43 F.3d 754, 759 (1st Cir. 1995); Pearson _____________________ _______

    v. Fair, 808 F.2d 163, 165-66 & n.2 (1st Cir. 1986) (per curiam). ____

    This bedrock rule has particular force in cases of this

    genre. Vote dilution claims are often marked by a significant

    degree of complexity. Typically, the resolution of such claims

    demands a careful sifting of imbricated, highly ramified fact

    patterns. The legal principles that must be applied are

    ____________________

    7We leave open the possibility that especially low minority
    voter turnout in a particular election may be evidence that
    factors other than racially based politics (say, poor political
    organization or lack of minority community support) were the
    cause of the minority community's inability to elect its
    preferred candidate in that election.

    29












    convoluted, and they almost always touch upon constitutional

    precepts, together with important issues of federalism and the

    separation of powers. Accordingly, a trial court that decides a

    vote dilution case must be scrupulous in chronicling the relevant

    facts and delineating the linkages between those facts and the

    ultimate conclusion of vote dilution vel non. See Cousin v. ___ ___ ___ ______

    McWherter, 46 F.3d 568, 574-75 (6th Cir. 1995); Buckanaga, 804 _________ _________

    F.2d at 472; Velasquez v. City of Abilene, 725 F.2d 1017, 1020 _________ ________________

    (5th Cir. 1984). To this end, the district court must discuss

    "not only the evidence that supports its decision but also all

    the substantial evidence contrary to its opinion." Harvell v. _______

    Ladd, 958 F.2d 226, 229 (8th Cir. 1992) (quoting Buckanaga, 804 ____ _________

    F.2d at 472); see also Houston, 56 F.3d at 612 n.6 (similar; ___ ____ _______

    collecting cases). Despite the district judge's obvious

    investment of time and effort in the proceedings below, and his

    thoughtful analysis of difficult legal issues, the findings of

    fact in the instant case fail to satisfy these demanding

    criteria.

    In any claim brought under VRA 2, the Gingles _______

    preconditions are central to the plaintiffs' success. Here, the

    trial court sounded an uncertain trumpet in respect to both the

    second and third preconditions. This uncertainty stems from a

    lack of congruence between the court's subsidiary findings anent

    the particular elections it studied and its overall findings of

    minority cohesion and white bloc voting in Holyoke. We explain

    briefly.


    30












    The lower court analyzed fifteen elections in which

    Hispanic candidates ran for office.8 Of these, only four were

    at-large elections; the rest were ward elections for either city

    council or school committee seats. In four of the eleven ward

    elections, Hispanic candidates ran unopposed. These elections

    reveal little about either minority cohesion or white bloc

    voting.9 The district court found neither minority cohesion

    behind Hispanic candidates nor racially polarized voting in seven

    of the eleven elections in which Hispanic candidates ran against

    non-Hispanic opponents. The court found minority cohesion in the

    four remaining elections, and found white bloc voting only in the





    ____________________

    8Although the VRA does not require for a successful section
    2 showing that minority-preferred candidates be members of the
    minority group, see Clarke v. City of Cincinnati, 40 F.3d 807, ___ ______ __________________
    810 n.1 (6th Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 1960 (1995); _____ ______
    Sanchez v. Bond, 875 F.2d 1488, 1495 (10th Cir. 1989), cert. _______ ____ _____
    denied, 498 U.S. 937 (1990), elections in which minority ______
    candidates run are often especially probative on the issue of
    racial bloc voting. See, e.g., Jenkins, 4 F.3d at 1128; Magnolia ___ ____ _______ ________
    Bar Ass'n, Inc. v. Lee, 994 F.2d 1143, 1149 (5th Cir.), cert. ________________ ___ _____
    denied, 114 S. Ct. 555 (1993). But evidence exhumed from "white ______
    only" elections may still be relevant in assessing the totality
    of the circumstances in a vote dilution case, especially if it
    tends to rebut the evidence of cohesion or white bloc voting
    extracted from "mixed" elections. See Jenkins, 4 F.3d at 1128. ___ _______

    9To be sure, the district court implied that blank ballots
    cast in three of these four elections (the 1989 and 1993 school
    committee elections in Ward 2, and the 1993 city council race in
    the same ward) evinced white bloc voting. See Holyoke, 880 F. ___ _______
    Supp. at 923-24. But the record furnishes no foundation for the
    implication that white voters cast blank ballots as a protest
    against unopposed Hispanic candidates. In 1989, for example, the
    highest percentage of blank ballots was recorded in the precinct
    that had the highest percentage of Hispanic voters.

    31












    three that occurred before 1988.10 See Holyoke, 880 F. Supp. ___ _______

    at 921-24.

    Viewed from a different angle, the court's finding that

    so few elections exhibited telltale signs of minority cohesion

    and/or white bloc voting seems to be tantamount to a finding that

    those characteristics were absent from approximately two-thirds

    of the analyzed elections. The finding also seems to contradict

    the district court's conclusion that the plaintiffs established

    the second and third Gingles preconditions. Of course, it is _______

    possible that the apparent contradiction can be explained away:

    we recognize that determining whether racial bloc voting exists

    is not merely an arithmetic exercise that consists of totting up

    columns of numbers, and nothing more. To the contrary, the

    district court should not confine itself to raw numbers, but must

    make a practical, commonsense assay of all the evidence. See ___

    Magnolia Bar Ass'n, Inc. v. Lee, 994 F.2d 1143, 1147 (5th Cir.), ________________________ ___

    cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 555 (1993); see also S. Rep. No. 417, _____ ______ ___ ____

    supra, at 29-30 & n. 118, reprinted in 1982 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 207- _____ _________ __

    08. But allowing for the possibility of a sophisticated

    evaluative judgment does not dissipate the need to explain that

    ____________________

    10The district court also found that the minority community
    had cohered behind a non-Hispanic candidate, Elaine Pluta, in her
    successful 1991 bid for an at-large seat on the city council. In
    fact, Pluta ranked ahead of a Hispanic candidate on Hispanic
    voters' ballots. However, she received strong support from non-
    Hispanic voters as well; that segment of the electorate ranked
    her fifth (out of sixteen) among at-large candidates. Thus,
    while there may have been minority cohesion behind Pluta, the
    record reflects no evidence of white bloc voting against the
    candidate that minority voters preferred.

    32












    judgment.

    The district court, forced to juggle several issues at

    once, offered no explanation of this seeming contradiction. The

    court not only glossed over the raw numbers but also failed to

    clarify why evidence reflecting racially polarized voting in at

    most three or four elections (out of eleven) justified a finding

    of vote dilution. While we are unprepared to say, here and now,

    that such a finding is incorrect as a matter of law, we cannot

    accept it without a better articulated rationale. Thus, because

    we are unable to follow the district judge's thought processes in

    this regard, we must return the case to him for a more detailed

    explication of his reasoning. See Houston, 56 F.3d at 612-13 & ___ _______

    n.8 (remanding because the "district court findings are too

    general to allow us to conduct our appellate review") (citing

    cases); Cousin, 46 F.3d at 575 (remanding because the "record ______

    fails to provide the bases for the district court reasoning");

    Velasquez, 725 F.2d at 1021 (similar); cf. Westwego Citizens for _________ ___ _____________________

    Better Gov't v. City of Westwego, 946 F.2d 1109, 1119 (5th Cir. ____________ _________________

    1991) (ascribing error when district court's facially

    inconsistent findings were not explained).

    We take this step reluctantly, mindful that district

    courts have heavy workloads and that appellate tribunals should

    not stand unduly on ceremony, but should fill in blanks in the

    district court's account when the record and the circumstances

    permit this to be done without short-changing the parties. See ___

    Applewood Landscape & Nursery Co. v. Hollingsworth, 884 F.2d ____________________________________ _____________


    33












    1502, 1503-04 (1st Cir. 1989) (collecting cases). In this

    situation, however, the record does not lend itself to curing the

    omissions in this fashion.

    We are fortified in this cautious approach by what we

    envision as the distinct possibility that the district court may

    have undervalued the import of Holyoke's rapidly changing

    political environment. During the decade analyzed by the court,

    1983 to 1993, the embryonic Hispanic community grew to maturity,

    gathering both numbers and political muscle. Hispanic leaders

    mounted a "successful community-based voter registration drive"

    in the mid-1980s and boosted voter turnout dramatically.

    Holyoke, 880 F. Supp. at 922. In 1985, Holyoke voters elected an _______

    Hispanic to political office for the first time in Massachusetts'

    history. See id. at 921. Hot on the heels of this signal ___ ___

    victory, the 1987 municipal elections witnessed the "most

    successful city-wide campaign ever run by an Hispanic in

    Holyoke." Id. at 922.11 Those elections also witnessed the ___

    last contest in which the district court supportably found white

    bloc voting. From that time forward, Hispanics have maintained

    political dominance over two wards and have represented those

    wards on both the school committee and the city council. See id. ___ ___

    at 921-24.

    This rise in the Hispanic community's political
    ____________________

    11Success is, of course, relative; the Hispanic candidate
    came close but nevertheless lost. While some might say that
    close only counts in horseshoes, hand grenades, and ballroom
    dancing, we think that progress of this sort, even short of an
    electoral win, is significant.

    34












    fortunes is significant. The ultimate question in any section 2

    case must be posed in the present tense, not the past tense. The

    court must determine whether the challenged electoral structure

    deprives a racial minority of equal opportunity to participate in

    the political process at present. Though past elections may be __ _______

    probative of racially polarized voting, they become less so as

    environmental change occurs. In particular, elections that

    provide insights into past history are less probative than those

    that mirror the current political reality. See LULAC, 999 F.2d ___ _____

    at 891; Meek v. Metropolitan Dade County, 985 F.2d 1471, 1482-83 ____ ________________________

    (11th Cir. 1993).

    In this instance, the district court alluded to

    Holyoke's political evolution, see, e.g., Holyoke, 880 F. Supp. ___ ____ _______

    at 927, but does not appear to have given it weight in evaluating

    either the Gingles preconditions or the strength of any inference _______

    to be drawn therefrom. Under these circumstances, we think it is

    incumbent upon the court to explain more fully its view that vote

    dilution persists in spite of improved political conditions.

    V. ADDITIONAL MATTERS V. ADDITIONAL MATTERS

    Because remand is required, we take this opportunity to

    comment briefly on two other areas of continuing interest.

    First, the shortcomings we have catalogued in the

    district court's findings cloud the relationship between evidence

    of racially polarized voting in the ward elections and the trial

    court's conclusion that the at-large component of the electoral

    system unlawfully dilutes the Hispanic vote. Though we do not


    35












    quarrel with the court's decision to consider evidence from the

    ward elections in analyzing racial polarization in the at-large

    elections as we have indicated supra, a court has a duty to _____

    ponder all available evidence concerning racially polarized

    voting that promises to cast light on the factors at work in a

    particular electoral scheme, see, e.g., Citizens for a Better ___ ____ ______________________

    Gretna v. City of Gretna, 834 F.2d 496, 502 (5th Cir. 1987) ______ _______________

    (approving use of data from exogenous elections when other

    evidence is sparse), cert. denied, 492 U.S. 905 (1989) we _____ ______

    remain at a loss, on the record as it stands, to comprehend why

    and how the court thought that the evidence from the ward

    elections informed the analysis of what had transpired in the

    contests for at-large seats on the city council. These

    questions, too, demand more specific findings. See Monroe v. ___ ______

    City of Woodville, 881 F.2d 1327, 1330 (5th Cir.) (holding that _________________

    when a trial court relies on information from exogenous

    elections, it should undertake fact-specific assessments of their

    relevance and probative worth), modified in other respects, 897 ________ __ _____ ________

    F.2d 763, cert. denied, 498 U.S. 822 (1990). _____ ______

    Second, we think that the district court, which made no

    reference to Ward 4 in its initial assessment, must meet head-on

    the City's contention that this ward (in which Hispanics comprise

    approximately 28% of the voting age population) constitutes a so-

    called influence district and therefore should be taken into

    account in evaluating whether Hispanic voting strength has been

    illegally diluted.


    36












    Although "society's racial and ethnic cleavages

    sometimes necessitate majority-minority districts to ensure equal

    political and electoral opportunity, that should not obscure the

    fact that there are communities in which minority citizens are

    able to form coalitions with voters from other racial and ethnic

    groups, having no need to be a majority within a single district

    in order to elect candidates of their choice." De Grandy, 114 S. _________

    Ct. at 2661; see also Chisom v. Roemer, 501 U.S. 380, 397 n.24 ___ ____ ______ ______

    (1991) (rejecting "the erroneous assumption that a small group of

    voters can never influence the outcome of an election"); Gingles, _______

    478 U.S. at 87-88 (O'Connor, J., concurring) (intimating that a

    group's voting strength should be assessed with reference not

    only to its prospects for electoral success but also in terms of

    "other avenues of political influence"). These precedents merely

    confirm the lessons of practical politics: the voting strength

    of a minority group is not necessarily limited to districts in

    which its members constitute a majority of the voting age

    population, but also extends to every district in which its

    members are sufficiently numerous to have a significant impact at

    the ballot box most of the time. See Latino Political Action ___ ________________________

    Comm., Inc. v. Boston, 609 F. Supp. 739, 747-48 (D. Mass. 1985), ___________ ______

    aff'd, 784 F.2d 409 (1st Cir. 1986); see also Rural W. Tenn. _____ ___ ____ _______________

    African-Am. Affairs Council, Inc. v. McWherter, 877 F. Supp. ___________________________________ _________

    1096, 1105 (W.D. Tenn.) (three-judge court) (holding that an

    influence district exists if a minority group constitutes at

    least one-quarter of the voting age population because the group


    37












    then "ha[s] significant influence on candidates in virtually

    every election"), aff'd, 116 S. Ct. 42 (1995); City of Columbia, _____ ________________

    850 F. Supp. at 429 (discussing minority's "shared influence"

    over at-large seats in districts where the minority comprises 40%

    of the total voting age population).

    Although we are unwilling to prescribe any numerical

    floor above which a minority is automatically deemed large enough

    to convert a district into an influence district, we believe that

    when, as now, a minority group constitutes 28% of the voting age

    population, its potential influence is relevant to a

    determination of whether the group lacks a meaningful opportunity

    to participate in the electoral system. Accord McWherter, 877 F. ______ _________

    Supp. at 1102. As is true of other factors, the district court

    should make a searching evaluation of the degree of influence

    exercisable by the minority, consistent with the political

    realities, past and present, and should enter its findings and

    conclusions as to how (if at all) the voting strength of

    Hispanics in Ward 4 affects the section 2 calculus.

    In requiring that influence districts be considered in

    section 2 cases, we are guided by the Court's recent admonition

    that the VRA's goals include "eradicating invidious

    discrimination from the electoral process and enhancing the

    legitimacy of our political institutions." Miller v. Johnson, ______ _______

    115 S. Ct. 2475, 2494 (1995). These goals are poorly served by

    balkanizing electorates and carving them into racial fiefdoms.

    See id. Influence districts, on the other hand, are to be prized ___ ___


    38












    as a means of encouraging both voters and candidates to dismantle

    the barriers that wall off racial groups and replace those

    barriers with voting coalitions.12 In fine, influence

    districts bring us closer to "the goal of a political system in

    which race no longer matters." Shaw v. Reno, 113 S. Ct. 2816, ____ ____

    2832 (1993); see also De Grandy, 114 S. Ct. at 2661 (reflecting ___ ____ _________

    that "minority voters are not immune from the obligation to pull,

    haul, and trade to find common political ground, the virtue of

    which is not to be slighted in applying a statute meant to hasten

    the waning of racism in American politics").13

    VI. CONCLUSION VI. CONCLUSION

    To recapitulate, the district court's opinion is well-

    considered and in many respects deftly navigates the marshy

    terrain of voting rights jurisprudence. Yet, at the risk of

    seeming unappreciative of a job well done, we believe the court's

    opinion lacks essential clarity in its factual findings. For one

    ____________________

    12Factoring influence districts into the calculus also helps
    ease the tension between Congress's desire to permit vote
    dilution claims to be brought under section 2 and its intent to
    avoid creating a right to proportional representation. See ___
    Gingles, 478 U.S. at 84 (O'Connor, J., concurring) (discussing _______
    "inherent tension between what Congress wished to do and what it
    wished to avoid").

    13It is important to realize that influence districts serve
    these goals only to the extent that they reflect a meaningful
    opportunity for minority voters to participate in the political
    process. Consequently, before the existence of an influence
    district is given significant weight in the balance, the evidence
    must reveal that minority voters in the district have in fact
    joined with other voters to elect representatives of their
    choice. Moreover, the record must show that elected
    representatives from such a district serve, at least in part, the
    interests of the minority community and vie for its support.

    39












    thing, the court neither acknowledges nor discusses critical

    evidence that appears to contradict its ultimate conclusion of

    vote dilution. For another thing, it never adequately explains

    the relevance of some evidence upon which it relies quite heavily

    to support this conclusion. And, finally, it omits any

    meaningful mention of potentially salient factors (such as

    influence districts). Rather than guess at the missing elements,

    we think that the course of prudence is to vacate and remand.

    We leave the procedure to be followed on remand to the

    lower court's informed discretion, without endeavoring to set an

    outer limit on its range of options. See Lussier v. Runyon, 50 ___ _______ ______

    F.3d 1103, 1115 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 69 (1995). _____ ______

    At a minimum, the court must discuss the evidence we have

    identified as troubling (or as possibly overlooked) and explain

    the relationship of this evidence to the issue of vote dilution.

    The court need not stop there, however; it is free to reopen the

    record, to take additional evidence, and/or to reconsider all (or

    any part) of its findings in light of the comments contained in

    this opinion. To this end, while we neither require nor

    anticipate an entirely new trial, the court in its discretion may

    permit the parties to supplement the existing record with

    additional facts (including, but not limited to, evidence gleaned

    from the new round of municipal elections that have recently been

    completed). See Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal ___ _______

    Practice and Procedure 2577 (2d ed. 1995). ______________________

    We are mindful that, in addition to the assignments of


    40












    error that we have discussed, the City strenuously objects to the

    remedy fashioned by the court below. We do not address this

    objection today. If the district court, after further

    consideration, again finds that Holyoke's electoral structure

    violates section 2 of the VRA and we do not intimate any

    expectancy in this regard we anticipate that it will then

    revisit the question of how best to mold an appropriate remedy.

    Withal and, perhaps, at the expense of remarking the obvious

    we offer two brief bits of general guidance that may be helpful

    if this contingency materializes.

    First, the court must be sure to analyze the question

    of remedy in light of any new findings that it makes on remand.

    Second, the court now has and should take advantage of the

    luxury of time. The court originally attempted to craft a remedy

    in time for the 1995 municipal elections. That cycle has turned,

    and the next is well in the future. Given this window of

    opportunity, the option of choice (assuming that the court finds

    a section 2 transgression) is to give the defendant the first

    chance to assemble a remedial plan. We think it is a fundamental

    tenet of voting rights law that, time permitting, a federal court

    should defer in the first instance to an affected state's or

    city's choice among legally permissible remedies. See Cane v. ___ ____

    Worcester County, 35 F.3d 921, 927 (4th Cir. 1994), cert. denied, ________________ _____ ______

    115 S. Ct. 1097 (1995); Westwego, 946 F.2d at 1124. ________

    If, and only if, the City fails to formulate a

    satisfactory remedial plan should the district court step in and


    41












    fashion the appropriate anodyne ex proprio vigore. See Miller, __ _______ ______ ___ ______

    115 S. Ct. at 2488. It goes almost without saying that this

    authority must be exercised responsibly and with due attention to

    the Supreme Court's recent warnings about the social and

    political costs of dividing communities along racial lines in the

    name of improving electoral systems. See, e.g., Shaw, 113 S. Ct. ___ ____ ____

    at 2832 (observing that "[r]acial gerrymandering, even for

    remedial purposes, may balkanize us into competing racial

    factions").



    Vacated and remanded. All parties will bear their own Vacated and remanded. All parties will bear their own ____________________ ________________________________

    costs on this appeal. costs on this appeal. ____________________






























    42






Document Info

Docket Number: 95-1581

Filed Date: 12/29/1995

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015

Authorities (30)

City of Mobile v. Bolden , 100 S. Ct. 1490 ( 1980 )

Whitcomb v. Chavis , 91 S. Ct. 1858 ( 1971 )

Growe v. Emison , 113 S. Ct. 1075 ( 1993 )

Shaw v. Reno , 113 S. Ct. 2816 ( 1993 )

David Baird v. The Consolidated City of Indianapolis , 976 F.2d 357 ( 1992 )

league-of-united-latin-american-citizens-council-no-4434-and-jesse , 999 F.2d 831 ( 1993 )

Vecinos DeBarrio Uno v. City of Holyoke , 880 F. Supp. 911 ( 1995 )

frank-clarke-w-rickey-barksdale-sen-william-bowen-samuel-britton-faye , 40 F.3d 807 ( 1994 )

jennie-sanchez-stella-sanchez-adeline-sanchez-dora-trujillo-and-charles , 875 F.2d 1488 ( 1989 )

maria-velasquez-isaiah-moreland-amelia-aguirre-ben-aguirre-and-john , 725 F.2d 1017 ( 1984 )

honiss-w-cane-jr-v-worcester-county-maryland-george-m-hurley-john-e , 35 F.3d 921 ( 1994 )

Westwego Citizens for Better Government v. City of Westwego , 946 F.2d 1109 ( 1991 )

celine-buckanaga-francis-gill-harvey-dumarce-nancy-smith-individually , 804 F.2d 469 ( 1986 )

Chisom v. Roemer , 111 S. Ct. 2354 ( 1991 )

Magnolia Bar Association, Inc. v. Roy Noble Lee , 994 F.2d 1143 ( 1993 )

Wilma Cumpiano A/K/A Wilma Cumpiano Sanchez v. Banco ... , 902 F.2d 148 ( 1990 )

shirley-m-harvell-emmanuel-lofton-reverend-hattie-middlebrook-mary-alice , 958 F.2d 226 ( 1992 )

alden-jenkins-harlan-roberts-gwendolyn-neal-v-red-clay-consolidated-school , 4 F.3d 1103 ( 1993 )

Maxine B. Cousin v. Ned R. McWherter Governor of Tennessee , 46 F.3d 568 ( 1995 )

Beatrice Houston, Annie Ruth Manning, Mary Ann Williams v. ... , 56 F.3d 606 ( 1995 )

View All Authorities »