Judiciary Committee, Minority Staff
Contact: Tracy Schmaler, 224-7703
See this document at: http://democrats.senate.gov/judiciarycommitteesupremecourt

Fact Check: Judge Alito and Reapportionment

NOW:

Today, Judge Alito testified: "On the issue of reapportionment, as I sit here today in 2006, and I think that's what is most relevant, I think that the principle of 'one person, one vote' is a fundamental part of our constitutional law. I think it would be -- I do not see any reason why it should be reexamined. And I do not know that anybody is asking for that to be done."

THEN:

Yet during his tenure in the Reagan Administration and on the federal bench, Judge Alito has betrayed a more restrictive view of important voting rights protections.

Judge Alito's 1985 Job Application to be Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Meese Justice Dept.

As a 35-year-old attorney seeking a promotion in the Meese Justice Department, Judge Alito filled out an application in which he was asked about his "philosophical commitment" to the policies of the Reagan Administration. In that application, Judge Alito wrote that he developed a "deep interest in constitutional law, motivated in large part by disagreement with Warren Court decisions," including those involving "reapportionment."

This is particularly troubling, given that the Warren Court's reapportionment decisions enshrined the principle of "one person, one vote" - ensuring that everybody's vote would be weighted equally. These are landmark decisions protecting the integrity of the political process and serve as cornerstone of American democracy.

In particular, the Warren Court: These opinions help form the cornerstone of our modern democracy, and Judge Alito's expressed disagreement with some - if not all - of these decisions gives great reason for pause.

Judge Alito's Record on the Bench

Judge Alito has had few opportunities to rule on voting rights cases. In his only case involving interpretation of the Voting Rights Act, which was Congress' effort to protect the constitutional guarantees of equal access to voting, Judge Alito voted to uphold an at-large system of electing members of the Red Clay School District in Delaware. Jenkins v. Manning 116 F.3d 685 (3d Cir. 1997) The case was filed by the Lawyers' Committee For Civil Rights Under Law on behalf of African-American voters, and alleged that the at-large method of election diluted the voting strength of African American voters. Even the majority opinion recognized that the Supreme Court has "long recognized that . . . at-large voting schemes may 'operate to minimize or cancel out the voting strength of racial [minorities in] the voting population.'"

In a strong dissent to the opinion signed by Judge Alito, Judge Max Rosenn wrote that the decision "guarantees that minority voting rights in Red Clay will continue upon happenstance." Id. At 702 (Rosenn, J., dissenting)

Real-Life Consequences:

This is more than an arcane legal issue. The Supreme Court has issued some closely-divided decisions on the fundamental right of Americans to have their votes counted equally. Indeed, the Supreme Court recently agreed to hear a challenge to the partisan redrawing of Texas' Congressional districts, masterminded by Tom DeLay. (League of United Latin v. Perry (05-0204); Travis County v. Perry (04-0254); Jackson, Eddie v. Perry (05-0276); and GI Forum of Texas v. Perry (05-0439).)

Furthermore, Congress is likely to take up reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act this year. That statute has led to dramatic increases in minority representation in Congress and dramatic increases in African American voting in the South. (US Census, "Reported Voting Rates in Presidential Election Years by Selected Characteristics: November 1964 to 2004," May 26, 2005)