Bethune-Hill v. Va. State Bd. of Elections
This text of 368 F. Supp. 3d 872 (Bethune-Hill v. Va. State Bd. of Elections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
BARBARA MILANO KEENAN, Circuit Judge:
In June 2018, on remand from the Supreme Court of the United States, we held that eleven majority-minority Virginia House of Delegates districts were racial gerrymanders in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. See Bethune-Hill v. Va. State Bd. of Elections ,
The Virginia Department of Elections and its officials (collectively, the state defendants) have ceased defending the composition of the eleven unconstitutional districts. The House of Delegates and the Speaker of the House, who intervened in this action (the intervenors) and took primary responsibility at trial for defending the existing eleven challenged districts, see Bethune II ,
The parties and the interested non-parties now have submitted a total of seven proposed plans for our consideration in this remedial phase of the litigation. Dr. Grofman has filed his final report, in which he evaluated these plans and offered several alternative remedial plans. We also have received extensive briefing from the parties and the interested non-parties, and we have heard testimony from Dr. Grofman and oral argument from counsel.
Upon consideration of all the proposed remedial plans, as well as the special master's recommendations, we conclude that a map composed of four of the special master's regional proposals remedies the constitutional deficiencies identified in our prior opinion, complies with traditional districting criteria, defers to the priorities of the legislature, and does not undermine minorities' rights under the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
I.
The facts of this case are set forth in detail in our liability-phase opinion in Bethune II ,
The plaintiffs are Virginia registered voters living in twelve Virginia House of Delegates districts (the challenged districts).
After extensive briefing on remand, we held a second trial in October 2017, at which both the plaintiffs and the intervenors introduced substantial new evidence. Bethune II
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BARBARA MILANO KEENAN, Circuit Judge:
In June 2018, on remand from the Supreme Court of the United States, we held that eleven majority-minority Virginia House of Delegates districts were racial gerrymanders in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. See Bethune-Hill v. Va. State Bd. of Elections ,
The Virginia Department of Elections and its officials (collectively, the state defendants) have ceased defending the composition of the eleven unconstitutional districts. The House of Delegates and the Speaker of the House, who intervened in this action (the intervenors) and took primary responsibility at trial for defending the existing eleven challenged districts, see Bethune II ,
The parties and the interested non-parties now have submitted a total of seven proposed plans for our consideration in this remedial phase of the litigation. Dr. Grofman has filed his final report, in which he evaluated these plans and offered several alternative remedial plans. We also have received extensive briefing from the parties and the interested non-parties, and we have heard testimony from Dr. Grofman and oral argument from counsel.
Upon consideration of all the proposed remedial plans, as well as the special master's recommendations, we conclude that a map composed of four of the special master's regional proposals remedies the constitutional deficiencies identified in our prior opinion, complies with traditional districting criteria, defers to the priorities of the legislature, and does not undermine minorities' rights under the Voting Rights Act of 1965,
I.
The facts of this case are set forth in detail in our liability-phase opinion in Bethune II ,
The plaintiffs are Virginia registered voters living in twelve Virginia House of Delegates districts (the challenged districts).
After extensive briefing on remand, we held a second trial in October 2017, at which both the plaintiffs and the intervenors introduced substantial new evidence. Bethune II ,
We ordered the General Assembly to adopt a new redistricting plan to remedy the identified constitutional violations.
Dr. Grofman reviewed these seven proposed plans, submitted his report, and later filed four addenda to that report. In his report, detailed further below, Dr. Grofman declined to recommend any of the plans offered by the parties and the interested non-parties. Grofman Rep. App. A.4
*876Instead, Dr. Grofman constructed alternative proposed remedial maps, which he presented in a regional "module" format. See infra p. 881-82.
After receiving additional briefing, we held a hearing on January 10, 2019 to address the remedial plans submitted by the parties and the interested non-parties, and the special master's proposals. At the hearing, Dr. Grofman testified under oath in response to questioning by counsel for the plaintiffs, counsel for the intervenors, and the court. We also heard extensive argument from the parties and the NAACP. At the end of the hearing, we ordered Dr. Grofman to submit a final report incorporating the information from his original report and all four addenda. Upon review of the final report of the special master, we ordered Dr. Grofman to submit a Final Remedial Plan incorporating four specific modules offered in his report and encompassing all 100 House of Delegates districts. Dkt. No. 353. For the reasons set forth below, we now adopt the Final Remedial Plan filed by the special master on January 29, 2019. Dkt. No. 355.
II.
We begin by reviewing the criteria that we apply in our evaluation of the proposed remedial plans. We later discuss the extent to which the plans proposed by the special master and the other submitted plans are consistent with these redistricting goals.
A.
The foundational purpose of the 2011 redistricting in Virginia was to redistribute population among the 100 House of Delegates districts to achieve the constitutional requirement of equal population based on the results of the 2010 census. See Reynolds v. Sims ,
During the 2011 redistricting process, the legislature determined that each House of Delegates district must have 80,000 residents, with a maximum population deviation of plus or minus one percent. Bethune II ,
During the remedial phase of this litigation, the parties agreed that the one percent figure also should govern the population distribution in our court-imposed plan. We therefore ordered the special master to construct all districts in his proposed *877remedial plans with 80,000 residents, with a maximum population deviation of plus or minus one percent. The special master's proposed plans, as well as those submitted by the parties and the interested non-parties, achieve this population-equality metric.
B.
In addition to the background principle of population equality, our chosen plan also must remedy the Equal Protection violations that we identified in the 2011 plan. As explained above, in Bethune II we concluded that the legislature had subordinated traditional districting criteria to racial considerations in the eleven invalidated districts, and had failed to show a "strong basis in evidence" for its race-based decisionmaking. See generally
Although we must ensure that our plan remedies the Equal Protection violations, we are mindful that redistricting "is primarily a matter for legislative consideration and determination." White v. Weiser ,
In the present case, the task of balancing these considerations is especially complex. The eleven invalidated districts are located in four distinct groupings, and some, but not all, of these groups of districts *878are adjacent to one another. The invalidated districts themselves frequently span multiple municipalities, and many cities and counties have been split between invalidated districts and surrounding non-challenged districts. In choosing a remedial plan, we endeavor to minimize the number of districts affected by our revisions, recognizing that districts immediately adjacent to the invalidated districts may be subject to significant changes. See Abrams ,
C.
Finally, we also seek to ensure that in remedying the identified Equal Protection violations, we do not select a plan under which black voters' rights are diminished when compared with the unconstitutional 2011 plan. We thus consider compliance with Section 2 of the VRA as an "equitable factor" in our redistricting process, and will "implement a plan that complies with federal policy disfavoring discrimination against minority voters."6 See Personhuballah ,
With these principles in mind, we turn to identify the proposed plans that remedy the identified constitutional deficiencies while balancing these priorities that occasionally conflict with one another.
III.
We begin with general observations about the challenges inherent in this remedial process. As discussed above, the number of invalidated districts, and their proximity to and interconnectedness with one another, renders our task especially complex. A single change in one invalidated district will, at a minimum, impact an immediately adjacent district and could impact numerous other districts, both invalidated and non-challenged. We thus agree with Dr. Grofman's commonsense observation *879that, in practice, crafting a plan consistent with traditional districting criteria requires accepting certain tradeoffs among priorities. Grofman Rep. at 30. For example, the creation of a maximally compact district likely would require changing more boundaries than strictly necessary to remedy a particular Equal Protection violation.
We also observe that an inevitable shift of black voters will result from remedying the specific Equal Protection violations we identified in the 2011 plan. In Bethune II , we found that the legislature had sorted black voters into the invalidated districts predominantly on the basis of their race, thereby creating in the invalidated districts BVAP levels much higher than necessary to comply with Section 5 of the VRA.7 See
We turn to consider Dr. Grofman's methodology. Consistent with his task of drawing remedial districts according to traditional districting criteria, Dr. Grofman identified the following nine criteria governing his construction of the proposed remedial maps:
(1) population equality;
(2) avoiding dilution in the voting strength of minorities and avoiding retrogression in minority groups' opportunity to elect preferred candidates, in compliance with Section 2 of the VRA and the Equal Protection Clause;
(3) avoiding using race as a predominant consideration;
(4) contiguity;
(5) avoiding splits of political subdivisions such as cities and counties;
(6) compactness;
(7) avoiding changes to the 2011 plan not required to remedy the identified constitutional violations, by limiting changes to the invalidated districts and immediately adjacent districts and by minimizing the number of non-challenged districts so affected;
(8) partisan neutrality;
(9) avoiding incumbency pairings, to the extent feasible.
Grofman Rep. at 25-28.
Among these criteria, Dr. Grofman was "especially attentive to issues of contiguity, compactness, and avoiding splitting of existing political subunit boundaries," because those political units represent identifiable communities of interest. Grofman Rep. at 32 & nn. 20-22, 53-54, 165 ("[T]he most appropriate way to remedy the constitutional violation ... is to replace the present unconstitutional districts with contiguous equipopulous districts with fewer city or county splits than are found in the 2011 plan and with at least as high average level of compactness."). He also viewed partisan neutrality as a "necessity" in any court-ordered plan. Grofman Rep. at 32-33. And finally, none of Dr. Grofman's proposed *880remedial maps paired any incumbent delegates who held office in 2017. Grofman Rep. at 175.
Dr. Grofman also sought to confine the impact of his proposals in recognition of our limited remedial role. First, the only non-challenged districts that Dr. Grofman changed are located adjacent to invalidated districts. Grofman Rep. at 60-61. Second, he made changes to adjacent, non-challenged districts only where such districts contained a portion of a city or county that also was included in one of the invalidated districts. Grofman Rep. at 61-62. Dr. Grofman concluded that these two constraints resulted in the creation of plans that adequately remedied the constitutional violations in the invalidated districts while avoiding unnecessary changes to non-challenged districts.8 Grofman Rep. at 62-63. After a thorough evaluation of Dr. Grofman's qualifications, report, and testimony, we find that Dr. Grofman was a credible witness and that he used an appropriate methodology.
We reject the intervenors' assertion that Dr. Grofman's methodology used race improperly as the predominant criterion by applying a 55% BVAP "ceiling" to the invalidated districts. Throughout his report and testimony, Dr. Grofman emphasized under oath that he never sought to achieve a predetermined BVAP level in any of the proposed districts. Grofman Rep. at 51, 158-59, 166; Jan. 10, 2019 Tr. at 30-32, 66, 115. He averred that only after redrawing the invalidated districts according to traditional districting criteria did he seek to ensure that the new districts had not inadvertently resulted in minority vote dilution.9 Grofman Rep. at 51-52, 54, 158-59, 166; Jan. 10, 2019 Tr. at 66. And, as Dr. Grofman explained, the fact that the BVAP in the invalidated districts fell below 55% in his remedial maps was a foreseeable consequence of applying traditional districting criteria to "the geography and demography" of Virginia. See Jan. 10, 2019 Tr. at 30, 32. We therefore credit Dr. Grofman's explanations regarding the manner in which he considered race in constructing his proposals.
We also reject the intervenors' contention that Dr. Grofman intentionally sought to reduce voter support for certain Republican House leaders in their redrawn districts. Nothing in the record suggests that Dr. Grofman acted with animus toward any incumbents, or toward any party. We credit Dr. Grofman's contention that he constructed his proposals without regard to partisan outcome in the non-challenged districts, and that he treated all incumbents *881equally.10 Grofman Rep. at 65-66, 176-77.
In view of our credibility findings and our approval of the special master's methodology, we adopt Dr. Grofman's recommendation that we reject the remedial maps proposed by the parties and the interested non-parties.11 See generally Grofman Rep. App. A. Some of those maps made more extensive changes than are required to remedy the constitutional violations, and some failed to impose an adequate remedy for those violations. Grofman Rep. at 29-30, 108. Most notably, each of the proposed plans from the parties and the interested non-parties includes changes to 30 or more districts. Grofman Rep. at 120. Dr. Grofman explained that changing so many districts was "certainly" unnecessary to remedy the Equal Protection violations in the invalidated districts. Grofman Rep. at 120. In contrast, Dr. Grofman's proposals would change between 21 and 26 districts.12 Grofman Rep. at 120. Given the narrow scope of our remedial mandate, we agree with Dr. Grofman's assessment that our court-ordered plan should avoid these excessive and unnecessary changes. Grofman Rep. at 120-21.
Dr. Grofman also criticized the proposed plans submitted by the parties and the interested non-parties as imposing "an excessive number of avoidable [political subdivision] splits," Grofman Rep. at 131, thereby unnecessarily dividing identifiable communities of interest. Because a plan that disregards political subdivision boundaries is inconsistent with traditional districting criteria, see Alabama ,
We proceed to consider the special master's various remedial maps. Dr. Grofman presented his proposals in a regional "module" format, in which he provided multiple versions of a remedial map for each geographical region in which the invalidated districts are located, namely, Petersburg, Richmond, North Hampton Roads (the peninsula), and South Hampton Roads (Norfolk). Grofman Rep. at 70. The creation of multiple modules allowed us to select the most appropriate module from each region to create a final remedial map that includes all 100 House of Delegates districts. See Grofman Rep. at 70-71.
We begin with the Petersburg region, in which we must remedy the racial gerrymander in District 63. Non-challenged Districts 62, 64, 66, and 7513 also are located *882in the Petersburg region. Grofman Rep. at 83. In concluding that the 2011 version of District 63 was drafted primarily on the basis of race, we relied on the "avowedly racial" decision to split Dinwiddie County with District 75 in order to distribute the black population between those two majority-minority districts, as well as on the significant reduction in compactness of District 63 caused by the 2011 redistricting. Bethune II ,
After considering the potential reconfigurations of District 63, we conclude that the "Petersburg 2" module offered by Dr. Grofman best remedies the constitutional violations we identified previously and complies with traditional districting criteria.14 First, and most notably, the Petersburg 2 module includes all of Dinwiddie County within District 63, directly remedying the explicitly race-based split of that county that we criticized in Bethune II . Grofman Rep. at 89. The reconfigured district also includes the entire city of Petersburg. Grofman Rep. at 89. In total, District 63 now comprises some or all of three political subdivisions, including a portion of Chesterfield County, instead of the five political subdivisions included in the 2011 version of District 63. See Grofman Rep. at 83, 89. All the non-challenged districts in the Petersburg region similarly include fewer segments of political subdivisions, or retain the same number, as in the 2011 map. Grofman Rep. at 83, 89. In total, the Petersburg 2 module allocates 20 segments of cities and counties to the five districts in the Petersburg region, while, in the 2011 map, the political subdivisions were divided into 28 segments in these districts. Grofman Rep. at 83, 89. Accordingly, the Petersburg 2 module advances the important goal of respecting political subdivision boundaries and associated communities of interest.15
The Petersburg 2 module also substantially increases the compactness scores of District 63, more than doubling the Reock score from .25 to .57, and nearly doubling the Polsby-Popper score.16 Grofman Rep. at 83, 89. All the non-challenged districts in the region either maintain nearly identical compactness scores, or improve in compactness compared with the 2011 plan. Grofman Rep. at 83, 89. Upon review of the map of the Petersburg 2 module, we conclude that the map was drawn in accordance with traditional districting criteria.
Based on the data in the record, we further conclude that black voters in Districts 63 and 75 will continue to have a reasonable opportunity to elect candidates of their choice. Under the 2011 map, racially polarized voting in these two districts was higher than in any of the other majority-minority districts. See Bethune II ,
Notably, Dr. Maxwell Palmer, who was qualified by this court as an expert witness in political science, testified credibly at the second trial that despite some racially polarized voting, black voters in the 2011 version of District 63 could elect their preferred candidates even at a 45% BVAP.17 Bethune II ,
With respect to the Petersburg 2 module specifically, Dr. Grofman examined the vote share of black Democratic candidates in two recent elections, namely, President Barack Obama's 2012 general election and Justin Fairfax's 2013 primary election for Virginia attorney general,18 to estimate the likely success of future minority candidates in the redrawn invalidated districts.19 Grofman Rep. at 42-43. More than 59% of voters in the reconfigured versions of Districts 63 and 75 voted for President Obama in 2012. Grofman Rep. at 89. In reconfigured District 63, Mr. Fairfax won 68.5% of the Democratic primary vote in 2013. Grofman Rep. at 89. He won 58.23% of that vote in reconfigured District 75. Grofman Rep. at 89. Put simply, these two black Democratic candidates were preferred by a significant majority of the voters who will reside in the versions of Districts 63 and 75 drawn in the Petersburg 2 module.20
Accordingly, upon our review of the voting practices in the Petersburg region, we are satisfied that our adoption of the Petersburg 2 module will not result in dilution of the voting rights of black voters. The Petersburg 2 module also remedies the identified constitutional violation and complies with traditional districting criteria. We therefore adopt the configuration of the districts in the Petersburg 2 module into our remedial map.
We turn to consider the Richmond region, which includes invalidated Districts 69, 70, 71, and 74, as well as non-challenged Districts 27, 68, 72, and 73. Grofman Rep. at 76. In Bethune II , we identified numerous instances of race-based line drawing involving all four invalidated districts. In several cases, for example, high *884BVAP VTDs21 were transferred into an invalidated district to ensure that the recipient district achieved a BVAP of over 55%. See, e.g. , Bethune II ,
We begin by highlighting two factors complicating our task in the greater Richmond area. First, given the dense population and the number of districts in the region, even a small change to an invalidated district may affect multiple nearby non-challenged districts. We therefore recognize the need to ensure that given changes actually are required to remedy the violations in the invalidated districts. Second, the population numbers would allow the drawing of between two and three districts wholly within Richmond's city boundaries. Grofman Rep. at 67. The 2011 map, however, split Richmond into five districts, with four 2011 incumbents living in the part of the city north of the James River. Grofman Rep. at 67, 75-76. As a result, the reallocation of parts of Richmond according to traditional districting criteria, while retaining incumbents in their districts, was challenging. We are mindful that we cannot "perfectly" achieve all desirable goals, but must balance competing considerations in pursuit of an adequate remedy. See Grofman Rep. at 30.
Upon review of the submissions of the parties, the interested non-parties, and the special master, we conclude that the "Richmond 1A" module offered by Dr. Grofman remedies the identified Equal Protection violations, avoids vote dilution, and complies with traditional districting principles in accordance with our remedial mandate. One feature of the Richmond 1A module is especially compelling in our evaluation. In this module, six of the eight districts in the region, including three of the four invalidated districts, are contained wholly within single political subdivisions. Grofman Rep. at 78. Specifically, reconfigured Districts 69 and 71 are located entirely within the city of Richmond, Districts 72, 73, and 74 are located entirely within Henrico County, and District 27 is located wholly within Chesterfield County. Grofman Rep. at 78. In contrast, in the 2011 map, only three of the eight districts, and none of the invalidated districts, were encompassed within a single political subdivision.22 Grofman Rep. at 76. In total, political subdivisions are split into 13 segments in the Richmond 1A module, compared with 16 segments in the 2011 map.23 Grofman Rep. at 76, 78. This *885increased consistency between political subdivision and district boundaries substantially improves the map's compliance with traditional districting criteria by focusing on identifiable communities of interest.24
The NAACP and the intervenors assert that because the Richmond 1A module retains certain lines in the invalidated districts we have identified as racially motivated, the Richmond 1A module fails to remedy the constitutional violations in the Richmond region.25 We reject that argument. We have found that the special master did not act with race as a predominant motive in constructing the remedial modules. And, as plaintiffs' counsel explained, the goal of the remedial process is not to "correct" every suspicious boundary. Jan. 10, 2019 Tr. at 85-86. Our identification of race-based lines during the liability phase was necessary to evaluate the legislature's motive in drawing the 2011 plan. Indeed, as the Supreme Court has explained, a legislature may act with a predominantly racial motive and still draw lines consistent with traditional districting criteria, requiring a nuanced inquiry into legislative purpose. See Bethune-Hill ,
Additionally, as noted above, our mandate is circumscribed by our remedial role. We will not redraw a non-challenged district to improve its compliance with traditional districting criteria when such a change is divorced from the constitutional deficiencies we identified in the invalidated districts.26 In our view, the Richmond 1A module appropriately avoids unnecessary changes to non-challenged districts by slightly altering the boundaries of non-challenged District 72 and by otherwise leaving the non-challenged districts unchanged. Grofman Rep. at 78. Given our remedial task, and the substantially improved preservation of political subdivision boundaries offered by the Richmond 1A module, we conclude that this module best remedies the constitutional violations we found in the Richmond-area invalidated districts.
We further hold that implementation of the Richmond 1A module will not affect black voters' ability to elect their preferred candidates. In the 2011 map, the BVAP percentages in the four invalidated Richmond districts ranged from 55.19% in District 69 to 57.24% in District 74. Grofman Rep. at 76. In the Richmond 1A module, these BVAP levels decrease slightly, ranging from 52.29% in District 70 to 54.38% in District 69. Grofman Rep. at 78.
*886Despite these reduced BVAP levels in the Richmond 1A module, black voters will retain their ability to elect preferred candidates. Dr. Palmer estimated that with a 45% BVAP in the 2011 version of the Richmond-area invalidated districts, candidates preferred by black voters would win between 65.4% and an overwhelming 81% of the vote. Pl. Ex. 71 at 68. Consistent with this prediction, President Obama won between 72.38% and 86.72% of the vote in the reconfigured invalidated districts. Grofman Rep. at 78. Mr. Fairfax won majorities in all four redrawn invalidated districts as well. Grofman Rep. at 78. We easily conclude that the reduction in BVAP levels in the Richmond-area invalidated districts will not dilute the voting strength of black voters.
For these reasons, we conclude that the Richmond 1A module is drawn according to traditional districting criteria and remedies the Equal Protection violations we identified in Districts 69, 70, 71, and 74. Black voters will retain their ability to elect their candidates of choice in these redrawn districts. We therefore adopt the Richmond 1A module as part of our remedial map.
D.
We proceed to consider the North Hampton Roads area, commonly known as the peninsula. See Bethune II ,
At the outset, we observe that as a result of the patently race-based appendage in District 95, the 2011 version of that district shared borders with four other districts on the peninsula. See Grofman Rep. at 91; DI Ex. 94 at 14. Excising the appendage from District 95 will have a significant impact on the surrounding districts, a result that is required to remedy the racial gerrymander. See Grofman Rep. at 95. Upon review of the submitted proposals, we adopt the "Peninsula 2" module offered by Dr. Grofman as the appropriate remedy for the unconstitutional racial gerrymanders in Districts 92 and 95.27
In the Peninsula 2 module, Districts 92 and 95 both are contained entirely within single municipalities, the city of Hampton and the city of Newport News, respectively. Grofman Rep. at 96. In the 2011 map, District 92 was split between Hampton and Newport News, and Hampton was divided into three separate districts (Districts 91, 92, and 93). Grofman Rep. at 92. District 95 improves significantly in compactness in our remedial plan, with the district's Polsby-Popper score more than doubling. Grofman Rep. at 92, 96. District 92 retains nearly identical compactness scores as in the 2011 map. Grofman Rep. at 92, 96.
With respect to surrounding non-challenged districts, District 94 previously was divided into four municipalities, but is now contained wholly within the city of Newport News. Grofman Rep. at 92, 96. Although Districts 91 and 93 now include more portions of municipalities than in the *8872011 map, the Peninsula 2 module reduces overall the number of political subdivision splits in the region from 11 in the 2011 plan to 10 in the remedial module. Grofman Rep. at 92, 96. Similarly, the mean compactness score of all the districts in the region improves according to both the Reock and Polsby-Popper measures.28 Grofman Rep. at 92, 96. Balancing all the relevant factors, we conclude that the Peninsula 2 module complies with traditional districting criteria and remedies the constitutional violations in Districts 92 and 95.
Our consideration of potential vote dilution in the invalidated districts leads us to conclude that black voters will retain their ability to elect their preferred candidates in Districts 92 and 95 as drawn in the Peninsula 2 module. In the 2011 map, both districts had high BVAP levels of around 60%, and President Obama and Mr. Fairfax won nearly 80% of the vote in those districts. Grofman Rep. at 92. The Peninsula 2 module would reduce the BVAP in District 92 to 53.87%, and to 47.36% in District 95. Grofman Rep. at 96.
Although these are significant decreases in BVAP levels, Dr. Palmer found that candidates preferred by black voters would prevail with more than 60% of the vote with a BVAP of only 45% in the 2011 versions of Districts 92 and 95. Pl. Ex. 71 at 68. Consistent with this prediction, President Obama won 75.75% of the vote in District 92 as drawn in the Peninsula 2 module, and 72.42% of the vote in reconfigured District 95. Grofman Rep. at 96. Similarly, Mr. Fairfax won 77.9% of the vote in redrawn District 92, and 71.03% of the vote in redrawn District 95. Grofman Rep. at 96. Given these substantial margins of victory by two recent black Democratic candidates, the implementation of the Peninsula 2 module will not diminish black voters' ability to elect their preferred candidates.
For these reasons, we conclude that the Peninsula 2 module is an appropriate remedy for the identified constitutional violations in the peninsula region. We therefore adopt the Peninsula 2 module as part of our remedial plan.
E.
Finally, we turn to consider Dr. Grofman's remedial proposals for the South Hampton Roads region, encompassing the cities of Norfolk, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, and surrounding areas. Bethune II ,
*888Upon consideration of the proposed remedial plans, we adopt the "Norfolk 1A" module as the configuration that best remedies the identified constitutional violations in the region, is consistent with traditional districting criteria, and avoids diluting the voting strength of black voters. The benefits of the Norfolk 1A module are apparent. Notably, under this remedial plan, the four invalidated districts in the region now are contained wholly within single municipalities: District 77 within the city of Chesapeake; District 80 within the city of Portsmouth; and Districts 89 and 90 within the city of Norfolk. Grofman Rep. at 101.
By contrast, District 89 was the only invalidated district in the region contained within a single city under the 2011 map. Grofman Rep. at 99. District 80 was split in the 2011 map among the four distinct cities of Chesapeake, Norfolk, Portsmouth, and Suffolk, thereby "render[ing] the shape of the district bizarre on its face, resembling a sideways 'S.' " Bethune II ,
The Norfolk 1A module also improves the compactness of the districts in the region overall, increasing the average Polsby-Popper score from .24 to .35, and slightly improving the overall Reock score. Grofman Rep. at 99, 101. Invalidated Districts 77 and 80 increase substantially in both measures of compactness. By correcting the bizarre shape of District 80, that district's Reock score more than doubled and its Polsby-Popper score more than tripled. Grofman Rep. at 99, 101. Similarly, the Norfolk 1A module nearly triples the Reock score for District 77, and increases that district's Polsby-Popper score from just .15 to a highly compact .52. Grofman Rep. at 99, 101. Districts 89 and 90 also show marked improvement in their Polsby-Popper scores in this remedial module. Grofman Rep. at 99, 101. Given these significant improvements in compliance with traditional districting criteria, the Norfolk 1A module clearly remedies the violations we identified in South Hampton Roads.
We turn to evaluate whether black voters will experience vote dilution as a result of our implementation of the Norfolk 1A module. The BVAP levels in reconfigured Districts 77 and 90 are the lowest in any of the invalidated districts in our remedial map. See Grofman Rep. at 78, 89, 96, 101. The BVAP in District 77 decreases from 58.78% in the 2011 map to 40.23% in the Norfolk 1A module, the lowest BVAP in any invalidated district. Grofman Rep. at 99, 101. The BVAP in District 90 decreases from 56.59% in the 2011 map to 41.93% in the Norfolk 1A module. Grofman Rep. at 99, 101.
The plaintiffs, black voters who live in the affected districts, affirm explicitly that these relatively low BVAP figures do not risk diluting their ability to elect their preferred candidates. See Dkt. No. 328 at 7; Jan. 10, 2019 Tr. at 152. After examining the results of elections involving President Obama and Mr. Fairfax in the reconfigured versions of these districts, we agree with the plaintiffs' assessment. Dr. Grofman determined that in reconfigured District 77, both candidates won with substantial *889majorities, President Obama with 63.53% of the vote, and Mr. Fairfax with 73.03% of the vote. Grofman Rep. at 101. And, according to Dr. Grofman, in reconfigured District 90, President Obama won with nearly 70% of the vote and Mr. Fairfax earned nearly 60% of the vote. Grofman Rep. at 101. Additionally, Dr. Palmer estimated that, with a 45% BVAP level in the 2011 version of the districts, candidates preferred by black voters would receive 63.5% of the vote in District 77, and 66.2% of the vote in District 90. Pl. Ex. 71 at 68. Accordingly, despite the significant decrease in BVAP in some of the reconfigured districts in South Hampton Roads, black voters will retain their ability to elect candidates of their choice under the Norfolk 1A module.29
In sum, we find that the Norfolk 1A module remedies the constitutional violations we identified in Districts 77, 80, 89, and 90, substantially improves compliance with traditional districting criteria, and does not dilute the voting strength of black voters. We therefore adopt the districts as drawn in the Norfolk 1A module into our remedial plan.
IV.
For these reasons and upon review of the proposed remedial plans, we adopt the Final Remedial Plan submitted by the special master [Dkt. No. 355], comprising modules Petersburg 2, Richmond 1A, Peninsula 2, and Norfolk 1A. The state defendants are directed to implement the Final Remedial Plan for use in the 2019 Virginia House of Delegates elections.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
ROBERT E. PAYNE, Senior District Judge, dissenting:
For the reasons set forth in Bethune-Hill v. Va. State Bd. of Elections ,
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