WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellant Concerned Citizens For Equality (CCE) brought this suit against Defendants-Appellees the County Commissioners of Orange County, Texas (Commissioners), alleging that the current four-precinct, single-member structure used to elect Constables and Justices .of the Peace in Orange County (JP Precincts) dilutes black voting strength and thus violates § 2 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA).
The Commissioners moved for summary judgment, contending that, as blacks were not a majority in any of the four existing JP Precincts, CCE could not satisfy requirements of
Thornburg v.
Gingles.
CCE countered that if Orange County were divided into five JP Precincts (rather than the four that presently exist), CCE could, under these hypothetical facts, satisfy the
Gingles
preconditions. The district court agreed with the Commissioners’ contention that, under the existing system, CCE could not satisfy the first
Gingles
precondition, and reasoned further that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Holder v.
Hall
foreclosed consideration of CCE’s hypothetical five-precinct model as an alternative way around that aspect of
Gingles.
The district court therefore granted partial summary judgment in
favor of the Commissioners and against CCE, dismissing its § 2 voting rights claim, On appeal from the court’s Rule 54(b) judgment, CCE asks us to reverse the district court for erroneously applying
Holder
to a dilution claim involving a judicial election, We decline CCE’s request, and, instead, affirm the district court’s judgment.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
The facts and proceedings in this ease were elaborately and articulately set forth by the district court.
Thus, we highlight only the essential facts.
A.PROCEDURAL POSTURE
CCE, an unincorporated association of black voters residing in Orange County, brought this suit against the Commissioners. CCE’s complaint alleged that the current judicial precinct structure, consisting of four single-member JP Precincts, minimized black voters’ opportunity to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice, and thus diluted their voting strength in violation of § 2 of the YRA
and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.
The Commissioners answered and moved for summary judgment on the § 2 voting rights claim, explaining that, under the current system, blacks did not constitute a majority in any of the JP Precincts. As a consequence, urged the Commissioners, CCE failed to satisfy the first of the three
Gingles
preconditions.
CCE responded by filing its own motion, seeking summary judgment on its § 2 voting rights claim and arguing that if a hypothetical fifth JP Precinct (a majority-black precinct) were created, CCE could then satisfy the first
Gingles
precondition and state a claim for dilution under § 2 of the VRA. In essence, CCE challenged the Corn-missioners’ decision to retain the four-precinct system rather than change to CCE’s hypothetical five-precinct electoral system for electing Constables and Justices of the Peace in Orange County.
B. The District Court’s Opinion
As the Supreme Court had a similar case under advisement at the time of these cross-motions for partial summary judgment, the district court delayed its ruling until the Court issued its opinion in
Holder v. Hall.
Interpreting
Holder,
the district court held that, absent a benchmark, “[n]o vote dilution claim exists under § 2 of the Voting Rights Act if expansion of the size of the existing governing body must occur to satisfy the first
Gingles
factor.”
As CCE’s § 2 voting rights claim had thus run aground and foundered on the rocks and shoals of
Holder,
the district court entered partial summary judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b) in favor of the Commissioners, dismissing CCE’s voting rights claim.
CCE timely appealed.
C. CCE’s Arguments On Appeal
On appeal, CCE advances two arguments in an effort to salvage its foundered ship. First, CCE attempts to distinguish
Holder
in the following manner: (1)
Holder
applies to a “governmental body”; (2) the Constables and Justices of the Peace in Orange County are not a “governmental body”; (3) therefore
Holder
is inapplicable. Second, CCE con
tends that even if
Holder
were applicable, the Texas Constitution supplies that opinion’s necessary “benchmark,” allowing us to consider whether the size of the governmental authority dilutes black voting strength in Orange County.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s grant of a motion for summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as the district court applied.
The parties have raised no questions of fact; this appeal involves only questions of law. Questions of law are decided just as they are outside the summary judgment context: de novo.
B. SECTION 2 OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT
Section 2 of the VRA prohibits any “qualification or prerequisite to voting or 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” or membership in a language minority group.
To prove that using a multimember district dilutes minority votes in violation of § 2, members of a protected minority group must establish three “necessary preconditions.”
“First, the minority group must be ... sufficiently large and geographically compact to constitute a majority in a single-member district.”
“Second, the minority group must be ... politically cohesive.”
And third, the majority must vote “sufficiently as a bloc to enable it ... usually to defeat the minority’s preferred candidate.”
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WIENER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellant Concerned Citizens For Equality (CCE) brought this suit against Defendants-Appellees the County Commissioners of Orange County, Texas (Commissioners), alleging that the current four-precinct, single-member structure used to elect Constables and Justices .of the Peace in Orange County (JP Precincts) dilutes black voting strength and thus violates § 2 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA).
The Commissioners moved for summary judgment, contending that, as blacks were not a majority in any of the four existing JP Precincts, CCE could not satisfy requirements of
Thornburg v.
Gingles.
CCE countered that if Orange County were divided into five JP Precincts (rather than the four that presently exist), CCE could, under these hypothetical facts, satisfy the
Gingles
preconditions. The district court agreed with the Commissioners’ contention that, under the existing system, CCE could not satisfy the first
Gingles
precondition, and reasoned further that the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Holder v.
Hall
foreclosed consideration of CCE’s hypothetical five-precinct model as an alternative way around that aspect of
Gingles.
The district court therefore granted partial summary judgment in
favor of the Commissioners and against CCE, dismissing its § 2 voting rights claim, On appeal from the court’s Rule 54(b) judgment, CCE asks us to reverse the district court for erroneously applying
Holder
to a dilution claim involving a judicial election, We decline CCE’s request, and, instead, affirm the district court’s judgment.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
The facts and proceedings in this ease were elaborately and articulately set forth by the district court.
Thus, we highlight only the essential facts.
A.PROCEDURAL POSTURE
CCE, an unincorporated association of black voters residing in Orange County, brought this suit against the Commissioners. CCE’s complaint alleged that the current judicial precinct structure, consisting of four single-member JP Precincts, minimized black voters’ opportunity to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice, and thus diluted their voting strength in violation of § 2 of the YRA
and the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.
The Commissioners answered and moved for summary judgment on the § 2 voting rights claim, explaining that, under the current system, blacks did not constitute a majority in any of the JP Precincts. As a consequence, urged the Commissioners, CCE failed to satisfy the first of the three
Gingles
preconditions.
CCE responded by filing its own motion, seeking summary judgment on its § 2 voting rights claim and arguing that if a hypothetical fifth JP Precinct (a majority-black precinct) were created, CCE could then satisfy the first
Gingles
precondition and state a claim for dilution under § 2 of the VRA. In essence, CCE challenged the Corn-missioners’ decision to retain the four-precinct system rather than change to CCE’s hypothetical five-precinct electoral system for electing Constables and Justices of the Peace in Orange County.
B. The District Court’s Opinion
As the Supreme Court had a similar case under advisement at the time of these cross-motions for partial summary judgment, the district court delayed its ruling until the Court issued its opinion in
Holder v. Hall.
Interpreting
Holder,
the district court held that, absent a benchmark, “[n]o vote dilution claim exists under § 2 of the Voting Rights Act if expansion of the size of the existing governing body must occur to satisfy the first
Gingles
factor.”
As CCE’s § 2 voting rights claim had thus run aground and foundered on the rocks and shoals of
Holder,
the district court entered partial summary judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b) in favor of the Commissioners, dismissing CCE’s voting rights claim.
CCE timely appealed.
C. CCE’s Arguments On Appeal
On appeal, CCE advances two arguments in an effort to salvage its foundered ship. First, CCE attempts to distinguish
Holder
in the following manner: (1)
Holder
applies to a “governmental body”; (2) the Constables and Justices of the Peace in Orange County are not a “governmental body”; (3) therefore
Holder
is inapplicable. Second, CCE con
tends that even if
Holder
were applicable, the Texas Constitution supplies that opinion’s necessary “benchmark,” allowing us to consider whether the size of the governmental authority dilutes black voting strength in Orange County.
II.
ANALYSIS
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s grant of a motion for summary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as the district court applied.
The parties have raised no questions of fact; this appeal involves only questions of law. Questions of law are decided just as they are outside the summary judgment context: de novo.
B. SECTION 2 OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT
Section 2 of the VRA prohibits any “qualification or prerequisite to voting or 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” or membership in a language minority group.
To prove that using a multimember district dilutes minority votes in violation of § 2, members of a protected minority group must establish three “necessary preconditions.”
“First, the minority group must be ... sufficiently large and geographically compact to constitute a majority in a single-member district.”
“Second, the minority group must be ... politically cohesive.”
And third, the majority must vote “sufficiently as a bloc to enable it ... usually to defeat the minority’s preferred candidate.”
Each of these preconditions is necessary; the absence of any one of them precludes a § 2 dilution violation.
As blacks do not constitute a majority in any of the four extant JP Precincts in Orange County, CCE cannot satisfy the first
Gingles
precondition. In an attempt to avoid this fatal defect, CCE argues that if a hypothetical fifth, majority-black precinct were created, CCE could then satisfy the
Gingles
preconditions. This argument, however, is precluded by
Holder.
C.HoldeR v. Hall
Holder
involved a challenge to the size — in number of Commissioners — of a multimem-ber county commission which performed all the legislative and executive functions in a Georgia county. A five-justice majority of the Supreme Court concluded that a voting rights plaintiff cannot maintain a § 2 challenge to the size of a governmental body unless an “objective and workable standard for choosing a benchmark by which to evaluate a challenged voting practice” can be identified.
The Court reasoned that without such a benchmark, the size of a governmental body cannot be challenged as dilutive under § 2 because “[tjhere is no principled reason why one size should be picked over another... .”
We write today to answer two supplemental questions posed by the instant case. First, does
Holder
apply to a county-wide, multiple precinct structure for electing judicial officers? Second, if so, does the Texas Constitution provide an “objective and workable” benchmark that would allow us to consider whether the numerical size of that structure dilutes minority voting strength?
1.
Holder and the JP Precincts
CCE contends that
Holder
is inapplicable to judicial elections. In
Holder,
the Supreme Court held that challenges to the numerical size of a “governmental authority” or a “governmental body” are precluded.
Locking in on those terms, CCE observes that this case involves judicial precincts, not a “governmental body”, and submits that to apply
Holder
to a county’s judicial precincts would be an error. We disagree.
Both Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit precedent state that judicial elections are subject to § 2 of the VRA.
Holder
is a controlling Supreme Court precedent and,
a for-tiori,
must be considered in our review of § 2 vote dilution claims. The question remains, however, just how does
Holder
apply to the instant case.
In its narrowest sense,
Holder
stands for the proposition that when challenging the numerical size of a multimember, collegial county commission, a plaintiff may not, absent a “benchmark”, posit a hypothetical expansion of the size of that multimember body.
Thus,
Holder
is not a perfectly congruent precedent, factually replicating and surgically resolving the precise issue now before us. Nevertheless, in the teachings of
Holder
we discern a broader and more generally applicable proposition: In a § 2 vote dilution claim, grounded in the numerical size of a governmental body, the plaintiff cannot beg the first prong of
Gingles.
In other words, when the existing size of the governmental body precludes a plaintiff from satisfying the first prong of
Gingles,
that plaintiff may not invoke hypothetical mutations and transfigurations of the existing political structure to circumvent that
Gingles
prerequisite. Such a use of hypothetical would nullify the first prong, for whenever the first
Gingles
prong presented a problem, a plaintiff would only need to hypothesize some other political structure under which the first
Gingles
precondition would be met. The preconditions set forth in
Gingles
are necessary: Voting rights plaintiffs may not employ a self-serving thought experiment to leapfrog one of the “necessary”
Gingles
preconditions.
Based on this lesson of
Holder,
we acknowledge that when a state elects its judges, as Texas has done in its JP Precincts,
those elections must be conducted in compliance with the VRA and the Supreme Court’s interpretations of the VRA, including
Holder.
CCE’s judiciary-exclusive interpretation of “governmental body” is spuriously narrow and simply wrong. We find nothing in
Holder
indicating that the Supreme Court’s use of the term “governmental body” overruled, modified, or otherwise changed its consistent position that the VRA applies to judicial elections. Neither do we discern in
Holder
anything to indicate that its teachings are limited to elections of “representatives” from single-member districts or precincts who, together with similarly elected colleagues from other such districts, function as a multimember deliberative body, such as appellate courts, county commissions, school boards, or boards of aldermen.
Following Supreme Court precedent as well as our own, we hold that, in general,
Holder
does apply to the election of “judges whose responsibilities are exercised independently in an area coextensive with the districts from which they are elected.”
In this particular case,
Holder
applies to the election of Justices of the Peace and Constables from Orange County’s existing four JP
Precincts and forecloses consideration of CCE’s hypothetical five-precinct arrangement.
2.
Is “For The Convenience of the People” a Benchmark?
In
Holder,
the Supreme Court observed that if a “benchmark” — a principled reason why a given number of precincts or districts is preferable to another — against which to test a challenged voting practice can be identified, a voting rights plaintiff may challenge the numerical size of a governmental body.
CCE argues that the Texas Constitution provides such a benchmark for determining the number of JP Precincts for a given county.
The Texas Constitution states that “for the convenience of the people,” counties with a population of 30,000 or more “shall be divided into not less than four and not more than eight [Justice of the Peace] precincts.”
The Texas Constitution offers no guidance whatsoever for determining whether a covered county should have four, five, six, seven, or eight JP Precincts, yet CCE urges that the phrase “for the convenience of the people” supplies the necessary benchmark. We must disagree.
As the Supreme Court stated, a benchmark must be derived from an “objective and workable standard” that allows a court “to evaluate a challenged voting practice.”
Although at this juncture the precise contours of the term “benchmark” have yet to be described, we are confident that the elastic and amorphous phrase, “for the convenience of the people,” cannot supply the type of “objective and workable standard” that the Supreme Court envisions. In the for-the-convenience-of-the-people benchmark suggested by CCE, we are simply unable to discern
any
standard, much less an “objective and workable” one, by which to evaluate the dilutive effect of the four-precinct system.
III.
CONCLUSION
In closing, we reiterate that
Holder
controls, dictating that a dilution claim under § 2 of the VRA, challenging the size of an elected “governmental body” — whether it be legislative, executive, or judicial — cannot be maintained absent a readily identifiable “benchmark by which to evaluate a challenged voting practice.”
The state constitutional provision proffered by CCE cannot supply the requisite benchmark; and, without such a benchmark, CCE’s hypothetical five-precinct model cannot pass muster under
Holder.
Accordingly, we AFFIRM, in all respects, the judgment of the district court dismissing CCE’s § 2 voting rights claim, and REMAND this case for further proceedings concerning CCE’s remaining claims.
AFFIRMED and REMANDED.