Christian Ministerial Alliance v. Arkansas, State of

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedJuly 25, 2023
Docket4:19-cv-00402
StatusUnknown

This text of Christian Ministerial Alliance v. Arkansas, State of (Christian Ministerial Alliance v. Arkansas, State of) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christian Ministerial Alliance v. Arkansas, State of, (E.D. Ark. 2023).

Opinion

Case 4:19-cv-00402-JM Document 193 Filed 07/25/23 Page 1 of 48

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS CENTRAL DIVISION

THE CHRISTIAN MINISTERIAL ALLIANCE, et al. PLAINTIFFS

v. Case No. 4:19-CV-00402-JM

SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS 1, in her official capacity as Governor of the State of Arkansas, et al. DEFENDANTS

ORDER

Plaintiffs challenge Arkansas’s use of at-large voting for the Arkansas Supreme Court

and the current district configuration for the Arkansas Court of Appeals as being violative of

Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The Court held a bench trial on these claims from

April 25-28, 2022 and on May 2, 2022. The parties submitted post-trial briefs. After

consideration of all the evidence and the arguments of counsel, the Court finds as follows:

I. Findings of Fact

1. Since 1874, when Arkansas adopted its current constitution, all Arkansas Supreme

Court justices have been elected in statewide elections.

2. The Arkansas Supreme Court consists of seven justices.

3. Of the twenty-two states that elect their supreme courts, Arkansas and seventeen

other states elect the supreme court statewide, while only four states opt for districting.

4. The Arkansas Court of Appeals, an intermediate appellate court with statewide

jurisdiction, was created in 1979.

5. In 1999, the General Assembly assigned appointees to the Court of Appeals,

1 Current Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Attorney General Tim Griffen, in their official capacities, are substituted as defendants in place of Asa Hutchinson and Leslie Rutledge. Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d). Case 4:19-cv-00402-JM Document 193 Filed 07/25/23 Page 2 of 48

Judges Neal, Roaf, and Griffen, who are Black 2, to interim districts and made them eligible to run

for reelection in the November 2000 general election.

6. They were assigned, respectively, to Districts 1, 5, and 6.

7. In 2000, those districts had non-Hispanic white voting-age population of 84%,

70%, and 73%, respectively.

8. Judges Neal, Roaf, and Griffen were re-elected in 2000 without drawing an

opponent.

9. The current seven districts for the Arkansas Court of Appeals were established in

2003.

10. Five of the seven districts elect two judges to numbered positions, while the other

two districts elect a single judge.

11. Each district consists of a number of whole counties.

12. Arkansas has never made any attempt to perfectly equalize its Court of Appeals

districts.

13. According to the 2000 Census, the population of Arkansas Court of Appeals

District 7 was 48.6% Black, and its voting-age population was 44.4% Black.

14. Because of the General Assembly’s plan for a gradual transition into the Court of

Appeals districts adopted in 2003, the first election was not held in District 7 until 2008.

15. By the 2010 Census, District 7’s citizen voting-age population was 49.2% Black.

16. Today, its citizen voting-age population is roughly 50.9% Black.

17. Since its inception, District 7 has elected just one judge, Judge Waymond Brown,

who is Black.

2 The Court will follow Plaintiffs’ lead in this opinion and capitalize Black as a race designation.

2 Case 4:19-cv-00402-JM Document 193 Filed 07/25/23 Page 3 of 48

18. Candidates cannot win judgeships in Arkansas unless they receive a majority of

the votes.

19. Accordingly, Arkansas holds two types of judicial elections: general elections, and

if necessary, runoffs.

20. General elections for nonpartisan offices, such as judgeships, are held on the same

date as primary elections for partisan elections, called the “preferential primary elections” in the

Arkansas election code.

21. Nonpartisan runoff elections, by contrast, take place “on the same date and at the

same times and places as the November general election.”

22. If any judicial candidate receives a majority of the votes during the nonpartisan

general election (in May or March, depending on the election cycle), that candidate wins the

election for the judicial office outright, and there will be no nonpartisan runoff election for that

office in November.

23. If no candidate receives a majority of the votes, the two candidates who received

the greatest shares of votes are certified to a runoff election, which takes place on the same date

as the November general election for partisan offices.

24. Since 2001, Arkansas’s judicial elections have been nonpartisan. See Ark. Const.

amend. 80, secs. 17(A), 18(A).

25. With partisanship removed from consideration, diverse coalitions of voters have

frequently come together to support the same candidates, and Black voters have elected judicial

candidates of their choice at rates far in excess of their share of the population.

26. In 2010, 16.07% of Arkansans were “Any Part Black,” a demographic that

includes voters who identify as only “some part Black, including Hispanic Black.”

3 Case 4:19-cv-00402-JM Document 193 Filed 07/25/23 Page 4 of 48

27. By 2019, that number had risen slightly to 16.60%, or almost exactly one out of

six.

28. A majority of the judges and justices currently serving on Arkansas’s appellate

courts were preferred by Black voters when they were elected to their current position—even

excluding the Court of Appeals’ District 7, where Black voters make up a majority of the

electorate.

28. Plaintiffs’ expert, William S. Cooper, developed Illustrative Plans to assess

whether the Black population in Arkansas is sufficiently large and geographically compact to

allow for: (1) two single-member majority-Black districts for the Arkansas Court of Appeals and

(2) one single-member majority-Black district for the Arkansas Supreme Court, which currently

elects seven justices at large. Mr. Cooper also reviewed current and historical demographics of

Arkansas, including the socio-economic, employment, education, and health characteristics of

the Black and non-Hispanic white populations.

29. Mr. Cooper is qualified to serve as an expert witness in redistricting and

demographics. Since 1986, Mr. Cooper has prepared redistricting maps for hundreds of

jurisdictions in Section 2 cases, comment letters under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, and

other efforts to comply with the Voting Rights Act (“VRA”). Since the release of the 2010

Census, Mr. Cooper has developed statewide redistricting plans in nine states, as well as over

150 local redistricting plans in approximately thirty states. Mr. Cooper has qualified as an expert

witness on redistricting and demographics in federal courts in approximately forty-five voting

rights cases in eighteen states, having been retained by both civil rights plaintiffs and

government entities.

30. To develop the Illustrative Plans, Mr. Cooper used (1) population and geographic

4 Case 4:19-cv-00402-JM Document 193 Filed 07/25/23 Page 5 of 48

data from the 1980 to 2020 Censuses, (2) the 2019 U.S. Census Bureau population estimates, and

(3) geographic boundary files created from the U.S. Census and 1990, 2000, 2010, and 2020

Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (TIGER) files. He used

Maptitude for Redistricting, a geographic information system (“GIS”) software that many local

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