Redistricting Lawsuit - Amended

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3:21-cv-03302-JMC-TJH-RMG Date Filed 02/10/22 Entry Number 154 Page 1 of 86

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT


FOR THE DISTRICT OF SOUTH CAROLINA
COLUMBIA DIVISION

THE SOUTH CAROLINA STATE


CONFERENCE OF THE NAACP, and

TAIWAN SCOTT, on behalf of himself and Case No. 3-21-cv-03302-JMC-


all other similarly situated persons, TJH-RMG

Plaintiffs, SECOND AMENDED


COMPLAINT FOR INJUNCTIVE
v. AND DECLARATORY RELIEF

THOMAS C. ALEXANDER, in his official THREE-JUDGE PANEL


capacity as President of the Senate; LUKE A.
RANKIN, in his official capacity as
Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee;
JAMES H. LUCAS, in his official capacity as
Speaker of the House of Representatives;
CHRIS MURPHY, in his official capacity as
Chairman of the House of Representatives
Judiciary Committee; WALLACE H.
JORDAN, in his official capacity as
Chairman of the House of Representatives
Elections Law Subcommittee; HOWARD
KNAPP, in his official capacity as interim
Executive Director of the South Carolina
State Election Commission; JOHN WELLS,
Chair, JOANNE DAY, CLIFFORD J.
EDLER, LINDA MCCALL, and SCOTT
MOSELEY, in their official capacities as
members of the South Carolina Election
Commission,

Defendants.
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INTRODUCTION

1. The South Carolina Legislature has yet again used its redistricting power to harm

South Carolina voters and discriminate against Black voters. First, the Legislature waited months

to pass any maps at all, depriving voters of the ability to know which candidates would represent

them and organize accordingly. The Legislature’s unreasonable postponement of their

constitutional duties forced Plaintiffs South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP (“South

Carolina NAACP”) and Taiwan Scott (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) to seek redress in court.

2. Next, the Legislature finally enacted a racially gerrymandered state House map

that also intentionally discriminates against Black voters. Plaintiffs amended their complaint to

challenge that map.

3. Now, having finally redrawn South Carolina’s U.S. congressional map, the

Legislature again enacted a racially gerrymandered map that, consistent with previous

redistricting cycles, discriminates against Black voters. It ignored the many South Carolinians

who implored lawmakers to draw fair and nondiscriminatory maps that comply with the U.S.

Constitution when redrawing congressional and state legislative maps. Instead, the Legislature

chose perhaps the worst option of the available maps in terms of its harmful impact on Black

voters that it proposed or were proposed by members of the public. Accordingly, Plaintiffs are

compelled to file this Second Amended Complaint.1

4. Having unnecessarily delayed reapportionment and redrawing—most egregiously,

pushing congressional redistricting until after its regular legislative session began on January 11,

1
Because the Senate is not holding elections until 2024, Plaintiffs in this lawsuit are not
currently challenging any Senate districts adopted in H. 4493. Plaintiffs do not waive their right to
challenge these districts later.
2
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2022—the Legislature has imperiled adjudication on the two maps’ legality before the March 30,

2022 candidate qualifying period ends.

5. Defendants’ racial gerrymandering and intentional vote dilution in certain state

House and, now, congressional districts continue South Carolina’s persistent legacy of

discrimination against Black voters. Although South Carolina has made important progress on

voting rights over the past fifty years—in no small part, due to private lawsuits and/or the U.S.

Department of Justice’s intervention—Defendants continue to evade their constitutional

obligations for redistricting. In every redistricting cycle since Congress enacted the Voting

Rights Act of 1965 (“VRA”), courts have needed to adjudicate racial discrimination claims

relating to South Carolina state and/or congressional redistricting plans. This cycle proves no

different.

6. House Bill 4493 (“H. 4493”), which enacted racially gerrymandered state House

districts into law was motivated, at least in part, by a discriminatory purpose. It is the latest

example of a decades-long pattern by the Legislature of proposing or enacting state legislative

districts that discriminate against Black voters to maintain the power of white voters and deny

Black South Carolinians’ voting power. The Legislature did so by using race as the predominant

factor in creating certain state House districts without a legally acceptable justification and

having a discriminatory purpose in packing and cracking Black voters to dilute their vote.

7. Senate Bill 865 (“S. 865”), was enacted on January 26, 2022, after much delay. S.

865 discriminates on the basis of race by appearing to preserve the ability of Black voters to elect

in Congressional District 6 (“CD”) while working adeptly to deny the ability of Black voters to

elect or even influence elections in any of the other six congressional districts. For example,

S.865 purposefully moves a disproportionate number of white voters from CD 1 and CD 2 into

3
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CD 6, as compared to Black voters from the same areas. In CD 2, for example, the movement of

white voters into CD 6 was not driven by pure partisan motivation because the Legislature

selected Voting Tabulation Districts (“VTDs”) with significant populations of white voters, who

in recent elections have voted for Democratic candidates. Conversely, they did not do the same

to VTDs comprised of significant populations of Black voters who also have preferred

candidates running on the Democratic ticket in recent elections. In this decision and others, the

enacted congressional map thus relies on race as the predominant factor over all other

considerations.

8. Black and white voters were sorted among the congressional districts under the

guise of correcting for CD 1’s significant over population and CD 6’s underpopulation. But

various alternatives were proposed to the Legislature which reapportioned South Carolina’s

congressional map without locking in the majority’s advantage in six of the seven congressional

districts and harming Black voters to achieve that objective. Because of Defendants’ unlawful

discrimination, S. 865 dilutes the voting strength of Black South Carolinians in CDs 1, 2, and 5.

9. The consideration of race in drawing districts lines is permissible and necessary in

many areas of South Carolina to ensure compliance with Section 2 of the VRA. But the

Legislature’s consideration of race in the drawing of state House and congressional districts in

H. 4493 and S. 865 was not narrowly tailored for a compelling governmental interest such as

complying with the VRA. Indeed, there is no indication that the Legislature conducted a racially

polarized voting analysis (“RPV”) or any other analysis key to compliance with the VRA to

determine whether the high Black voting-age populations (“BVAPs”) present in the districts that

pack Black voters were necessary to comply with the VRA or whether cracking Black voters at

4
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BVAPs too low would render their votes essentially meaningless in the presence of RPV.2

Instead, H. 4493 and S. 865 represent the Legislature’s intent to use race to maintain political

power by unnecessarily packing Black South Carolinians into certain districts and cracking

Black voters in other districts.

10. In Sumter County, for example, Defendants drew the line between state House

District (“HD”) 51 and HD 67 to almost surgically track areas of the county with a higher

population of Black residents. The result is predictable: Black voters are packed into HD 51,

with a BVAP of more than 61%, and cracked in HD 67, with a BVAP of around 28%. And, for

reasons detailed below, these choices run afoul of the House’s redistricting guidelines regarding

its purported commitment to respect communities of interests, among other traditional

redistricting principles. Moreover, Defendants failed to articulate a legally acceptable

justification for doing so.

2
An RPV analysis considers whether there is a pattern of voting along racial lines in which
voters of the same race tend to support the same candidates, which usually differs from the
candidates supported by voters of a different race. This is the key consideration in determining
whether a redistricting plan dilutes the vote of racial minority voters. See N. Carolina State Conf.
of NAACP v. McCrory, 831 F.3d 204, 221 (4th Cir. 2016) (noting that RPV is “[o]ne of the
critical background facts of which a court must take notice” in Section 2 cases); Collins v. City of
Norfolk, 816 F.2d 932, 936–38 (4th Cir. 1987) (emphasizing that RPV is a “cardinal factor[]”
that “weigh[s] very heavily” in determining whether redistricting plans violate Section 2 by
denying Black voters equal access to the political process). As general matter, the U.S. Supreme
Court in Thornburg v. Gingles, 478 U.S. 30 (1986), found probative for assessing RPV elections
in which voters have been presented with a choice between at least one candidate who is a
member of the minority group at issue and at least one candidate who is not.
5
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(House Districts 51 and 61 H. 4493)

11. Similar mischief is clear in the Legislature’s congressional map. In the downtown

and West Ashley areas of Charleston, for example, the Legislature moved a disproportionate

share of white voters from CD 1 into CD 6, as compared to Black voters in the same area. The

Legislature’s line-drawing, as well as an analysis of how Black and white voters in the precincts

moved out of CD 1, for example, share party preferences, but were sorted differently between

these districts, makes clear that race drove the selection of voters brought into CD 6 over those

left in CD 1 from areas of Charleston.

12. The Legislature enacted South Carolina House Districts 7, 8, 9, 11, 41, 43, 51, 54,

55, 57, 59, 60, 63, 67, 70, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 90, 91, 93, 95, 101, 105 in H. 4493 (the

“Challenged State House Districts”) using race as a predominant factor in a manner not narrowly

tailored to comply with Section 2 of the VRA or any other compelling governmental interest.

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These districts therefore violate the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and must be

enjoined.

13. Likewise, the Legislature subordinated racially redistricting principles and used

race as a predominant factor to enact South Carolina Congressional Districts 1, 2, and 5 (the

“Challenged Congressional Districts”). The Challenged Congressional Districts are not narrowly

tailored to comply with Section 2 of the VRA or any other compelling governmental interest.

They are therefore unlawful.

14. H. 4493 and S. 865 also result from intentional racial discrimination because they

were motivated, at least in part, by a discriminatory purpose. Indeed, the Legislature went

forward with the proposed plans even though, during the legislative process, Black legislators

and members of the public repeatedly warned that they would harm Black South Carolinian

voters. Alternative proposals existed which would satisfy the Legislature’s criteria and not dilute

Black voting strength, and this post-2020 redistricting for the House and Congress is part of a

continuum of using various harmful stratagems over decades to minimize Black voting power in

the state.

15. Accordingly, the Challenged House Districts and the Challenged Congressional

Districts violate the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution and must be

enjoined.

16. And because of Defendants’ delay in passing these unconstitutional maps, the

Court must adjudicate and remedy those issues in time to avoid voter confusion and

disenfranchisement in the upcoming election cycle, or delay election-related deadlines as

necessary.

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PARTIES

17. Plaintiff THE SOUTH CAROLINA STATE CONFERENCE OF THE

NAACP is a nonprofit, nonpartisan membership organization in South Carolina. The South

Carolina NAACP is a state subsidiary of the National Association for the Advancement of

Colored People (“NAACP”), a national civil rights organization. The South Carolina NAACP

was chartered in 1939 and is the oldest civil rights group in South Carolina.

18. Consistent with the national NAACP’s mission, the South Carolina NAACP, on

behalf of its members and the other constituents it serves, seeks to remove all barriers of racial

discrimination through democratic processes and the enactment and enforcement of federal,

state, and local laws securing civil rights, including laws relating to voting rights. For example,

on behalf of its members and other constituents, the South Carolina NAACP has held and has

sponsored voter education and voter registration activities for years and has been credited with

registering thousands of voters throughout South Carolina.

19. The South Carolina NAACP has 77 branches comprised of adult members across

the state, including at least one branch in each of South Carolina’s 46 counties.

20. Together, the South Carolina NAACP has more than 13,000 members across all

46 counties, who are predominantly but not exclusively Black people. Its membership also

includes other racial and ethnic minority residents, as well as white South Carolinians.

21. Its members and constituents reside in House and congressional legislative

districts that the Legislature has racially gerrymandered and intentionally diluted and will be

harmed by the Defendants’ actions. Specifically, members live in the Challenged State House

Districts and Challenged Congressional Districts. These members have been and, if H. 4493 and

S. 865 are not enjoined, will continue to be harmed by their assignment to unconstitutionally

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racially gerrymandered districts and purposefully dilutive districts. The South Carolina

NAACP’s members include registered voters in the Challenged House and Congressional

Districts.

22. Plaintiff TAIWAN SCOTT is a U.S. citizen and Black, registered voter, and

resident of Hilton Head in Beaufort County, South Carolina. Specifically, Mr. Scott resides in

newly formed CD 1. Mr. Scott and members of his family, who have lived in Hilton Head for

seven generations, are Gullah people, descendants of West African people who were enslaved

and forcibly brought to America’s southeastern coast, including South Carolina’s coastal plain

and Beaufort Sea Islands. While living and contributing to South Carolina in a myriad of ways,

Black South Carolinians, including Gullah community members like Mr. Scott, have endured

discrimination and other harms relating to taxation, heirs’ property, land seizures, highway

construction, lack of business and development opportunities, and many other issues.

23. The Legislature used race as the predominant factor motivating its decisions to

place a significant number of voters, like Mr. Scott, within or outside of the Challenged

Congressional Districts. CD 1 is not narrowly tailored to satisfy the VRA or any other

compelling interest. Mr. Scott is further harmed by the congressional map that is intentionally

designed to dilute Black voting power in South Carolina.

24. Defendant THOMAS C. ALEXANDER, in his official capacity as President of

the South Carolina Senate, is a proper defendant as leader of the Senate, which drafts and passes

redistricting legislation, including for Congress, for consideration by the General Assembly, such

as H. 4493 and S. 865.

25. Defendant LUKE A. RANKIN, in his official capacity as Chairman of the Senate

Judiciary Committee, is a proper defendant as leader of the committee responsible for drafting

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and passing redistricting legislation, including for Congress, for consideration by the full Senate,

such as H. 4493 and S. 865.

26. Defendant JAMES H. LUCAS, in his official capacity as Speaker of the South

Carolina House of Representatives, is a proper defendant as leader of the House charged with

presiding over the House and ratifying bills upon passage by both houses of the Legislature

pursuant to Article III, Section 18 of the South Carolina Constitution, such as H. 4493 and S.

865.

27. Defendant CHRIS MURPHY, in his official capacity as Chairman of the

Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives, is a proper defendant as leader of the

committee responsible for drafting and passing redistricting legislation for consideration by the

full House, such as H. 4493 and S. 865.

28. Defendant WALLACE H. JORDAN, in his official capacity as Chairman of the

Election Laws Subcommittee of the House of Representatives, is a proper defendant as leader of

the subcommittee responsible for drafting and passing redistricting legislation for consideration

by the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives and the full House, such as H. 4493

and S. 865.

29. Defendant HOWARD KNAPP, in his official capacity as the interim Executive

Director of the South Carolina State Election Commission (“SEC”), is a proper defendant as the

head of the South Carolina agency responsible for implementing and conducting elections

pursuant to S.C. Code Ann. §§ 7-3-10, et seq. and 7-13-10, et seq., as amended. Specifically,

S.C. Code Ann. § 7-13-45 requires the SEC Executive Director to administer H. 4493 by (1)

accepting filings for state House and U.S. Congressional candidates and (2) publicizing certain

details related to the filing period. In practice, the Executive Director also provides guidance to

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the 46 directors of the county boards of voter registration and election regarding their acceptance

of filings for state House and U.S. Congressional candidates, as well as their publicization of

details related to the filing period, including to implement H. 4493 and S. 865.

30. Defendants JOHN WELLS, JOANNE DAY, CLIFFORD J. EDLER, LINDA

MCCALL, and SCOTT MOSELEY, in their official capacities as SEC members, are proper

defendants as persons charged with the powers and duties of the SEC pursuant to S.C. Code

Ann. §§ 7-3-10, et seq. and 7-13-10, et seq., as amended. In addition, S.C. Code Ann. § 7-11-15

requires the SEC to design, distribute, and process forms for the statement of intention of

candidacy, which candidates for state House seats under H. 4493 and U.S. Congressional under

S. 865 candidates must file during a specified time period.

JURISDICTION AND VENUE

31. This action arises under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the U.S.

Constitution.

32. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(3)

and (4), 2201, 2202, and 2284, as well as 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1983, and 1988.

33. A three-judge panel has been properly appointed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2284(a)

because this action challenges “the constitutionality of the apportionment of congressional

districts” and “the apportionment of any statewide legislative body.”

34. Venue is proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b) and 28 U.S.C. § 2284.

35. This Court has personal jurisdiction over Defendants, who are sued in their

official capacities as state officials. The violations complained of concern their conduct in such

capacities.

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STATEMENT OF FACTS

36. On December 10, 2021, Governor Henry McMaster signed into law H. 4493,

which redistricted the South Carolina House of Representatives and State Senate for the next

decade as Act 117. On January 26, 2022, Governor McMaster signed into law S. 865, which

redistricted the South Carolina congressional districts for the next decade as Act 117. Before

turning to these enactments, discussion of the background and circumstances surrounding H.

4493’s and S. 865’s enactment are warranted.

Brief History of State Legislative Redistricting in South Carolina

37. H. 4493 and S. 865 are the latest iteration of South Carolina’s long pattern of

official acts of racial discrimination including its enactment of various discriminatory voting

rules that deny and abridge the voting rights of Black South Carolinians. One of many examples,

an 1892 South Carolina voter registration law “is estimated to have disfranchised 75 percent of

South Carolina’s [B]lack voters.”3 Three years later, South Carolina “was a leader in the

widespread movement to disenfranchise [eligible Black citizens].”4 Lynching of Black people

and other acts of racial violence also served as impediments to Black voters as they attempted to

exercise their right to vote. Until the VRA’s historic passage in 1965, South Carolina enforced

both a literacy test and a property test that were “specifically designed to prevent [Black people]

from voting.”5 South Carolina promptly challenged the VRA’s constitutionality as part of its

effort to deny equal voting rights to Black people.

3
Condon v. Reno, 913 F. Supp. 946, 949 (D.S.C. 1995) (citing J. Morgan Kousser, The
Shaping of Southern Politics: Suffrage Restrictions and the Establishment of the One Party
South, 1880–1910, p. 49 (New Haven: Yale University Press 1974)).
4
South Carolina v. Katzenbach, 383 U.S. 301, 310 n.9 (1966).
5
Tom Henderson Wells, The Phoenix Election Riot, 31 Phylon 58 (1970).
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38. Racial discrimination against Black South Carolinians has diminished their ability

to participate politically and elect their preferred candidates up to the present day. Since 1982,

Black candidates have run for statewide offices, including for Governor, Attorney General,

Secretary of State, and Treasurer. Yet South Carolina failed to elect a single Black official to a

statewide office in the twentieth century. Prior to the 1992 creation of a district comprised of a

majority of Black voters (“majority-Black district”) for the Sixth U.S. Congressional District, no

Black candidate served in Congress from South Carolina in the twentieth century. And before

Senator Tim Scott’s historic election in 2014, no Black candidate had been elected to statewide

office since Reconstruction.

39. Until the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Shelby County, Alabama v. Holder,

570 U.S. 529 (2013), Section 5 of the VRA played a vital role in safeguarding against proposed

retrogressive voting plans—that is, plans that weakened the ability of racial and ethnic minority

voters to participate politically. With this preclearance requirement in place for South Carolina

and its sub-jurisdictions, the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) objected 120 times between

1971 and 2013 to proposed racially discriminatory changes in voting practices or procedures in

South Carolina. The DOJ has objected to proposed practices that would have affected nearly

every aspect of Black voters’ participation in South Carolina’s electoral processes, including

discriminatory redistricting, annexations, voter assistance regulations, changing county

boundaries, eliminating offices, reducing the number of seats on a public body, majority vote

requirements, changing to at-large elections, using numbered posts or residency requirements,

staggering terms, and the schedule of elections.

40. Of these DOJ objections, at least 27 of them involved a proposed state or local

redistricting plan that “ha[d] the purpose of or w[ould] have the effect of diminishing the ability

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of . . . citizens of the United States on account of race or color . . . to elect their preferred

candidates of choice.”6 Three objections specifically challenged post-census House redistricting

plans in three redistricting cycles in 1971, 1981, and 1994, including maps that would have

resulted in the fragmentation and dilution of Black voting strength.

41. From 1996 until Shelby County, DOJ interposed a total of 13 Section 5 objections,

12 of which concerned voting changes that had the effect, and sometimes also the purpose, of

minimizing the opportunity of Black citizens to elect their preferred candidates. In addition, four

lawsuits under Section 2 of the VRA were brought to challenge discriminatory at-large election

schemes, all of which led to the adoption of single-member district election systems to provide

Black voters with equal electoral opportunities.

42. In the past 25 years, South Carolina has continued to implement or seek to

implement at-large election systems, redistricting plans, and municipal annexations that

minimize and dilute Black voters’ electoral opportunities in the State’s “long and well-

documented” context of racially polarized voting, or “RPV.”7 As a few examples, public officials

in Charleston, Cherokee, Greenville, Lexington, Richland, Spartanburg, Sumter, and Union

Counties have changed district lines or voting rules in ways that would diminish the ability of

Black voters to elect candidates of their choice. Some of the lines in these counties are at issue in

this suit.

6
Voting Determination Letters for South Carolina, U.S. Department of Justice,
https://www.justice.gov/crt/voting-determination-letters-south-carolina (last updated: Aug. 7,
2015); John C. Ruoff & Herbert E. Buhl, Voting Rights in South Carolina: 1982–2006, 17 S. Cal.
Rev. L. & Soc. Just. 645, 655–57 (Spring 2008); 52 U.S.C. § 10304(b).
7
Colleton Cnty. Council v. McConnell, 201 F. Supp. 2d 618, 640–41 (D.S.C. 2002).
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43. South Carolina also has discriminated against Black voters by drawing

malapportioned maps. And for the last five redistricting cycles—every cycle since Congress

enacted the VRA—courts have needed to adjudicate racial discrimination claims relating to

South Carolina’s state legislative and/or congressional redistricting plans. Backus v. South

Carolina, 857 F. Supp. 2d 553 (D.S.C. 2012), aff’d, 568 U.S. 801 (2012); Colleton Cnty.

Council, 201 F. Supp. 2d at 618, opinion clarified (Apr. 18, 2002); Burton v. Sheheen, 793

F. Supp. 1329, 1337 (D.S.C. 1992); S.C. State Conf. of Branches of the NAACP v. Riley, 533 F.

Supp. 1178 (D.S.C. 1982), aff’d 459 U.S. 1025 (1982); Twigg v. West, No. 71-1211 (D.S.C. Apr.

7, 1972). More often than not, courts have found that South Carolina broke the law.

44. Because of South Carolina’s record of malapportionment and racial discrimination

across numerous redistricting cycles, this Court has acknowledged that “judicial intervention in

the South Carolina redistricting process has been frequently unavoidable.” Burton, 793 F. Supp.

at 1337.

South Carolina’s Redistricting Criteria

The House’s Redistricting Criteria

45. On August 3, 2021, the South Carolina House’s Redistricting Ad Hoc Committee

(“House Redistricting Committee”)—the body responsible for preparing and developing

redistricting plans for the House for the post-2020 redistricting cycle—adopted its guidelines and

criteria for U.S. Congressional and state legislative redistricting.8 The Committee did not hold

8
S.C. House of Rep. Judiciary Comm. Redistricting Ad Hoc Comm., 2021 Guidelines and
Criteria for Congressional and Legislative Redistricting (Aug. 3, 2021), available at
https://redistricting.schouse.gov/docs/2021%20Redistricting%20Guidelines.pdf.
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any public hearing to receive feedback and public comment on guidelines or criteria before any

were adopted.

46. These guidelines begin by listing requirements under the U.S. Constitution, other

federal law, and state law.

47. In discussing federal requirements, the House Redistricting Committee’s

guidelines state that “race may be a factor considered in the creation of redistricting plans, but it

shall not be the predominant factor motivating the legislature’s decisions concerning the

redistricting plan and shall not unconstitutionally predominate over other criteria set forth in

these guidelines.”

48. The guidelines further state that “[a]ny proposed redistricting plan that is

demonstrated to have the intent or effect of dispersing or concentrating minority population in a

manner that prevents minorities from electing their candidates of choice will neither be accepted

nor approved.”

49. In addition to listing legal compliance, the guidelines identify five criteria for

redistricting. The first guideline listed is “equal population/deviation,” which states that

Congressional districts “shall be as nearly equal in population as is practicable,” and that state

legislative districts “shall have substantial equality of population.” The guidelines further instruct

that those state legislative districts may have population deviations within plus or minus 2.5% of

the mathematical mean or 5% overall of the total population. Any overall total population

deviation “greater than five percent from equality of population among South Carolina House

districts shall be justified when it is the result of geographic limitations, the promotion of a

constitutionally permissible state policy, or to otherwise comply with the criteria identified in

these guidelines.”

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50. As discussed more below, the Committee rejected amendments and requests from

members of the public to amend its criteria to allow more flexibility by tolerating population

deviations within a range of plus or minus 5% of the mathematical mean, or 10% overall of the

total population, consistent with federal case law.9

51. The next guideline is “contiguity.” This states that each district must be

“comprised of contiguous territory,” and although contiguity “by water is sufficient,” areas that

“meet only at the points of adjoining corners are not considered contiguous.”

52. The next guideline is “compactness” and states that each district must also be

“reasonably compact in form and should follow census geography” under the criteria.

53. The next guideline is “communities of interest.” That guideline states that these

communities should be “considered and balanced.” Under the criteria, “[c]ounty boundaries,

municipality boundaries, and precinct lines (as represented by the Census Bureau’s Voting

Tabulation District lines) may be considered as evidence of communities of interest to be

balanced, but will be given no greater weight, as a matter of state policy, than other identifiable

communities of interest.” The House Committee provides that the following factors may

contribute to a community of interest, “including, but not limited to the following: (a) economic;

(b) social and cultural; (c) historic influences; (d) political beliefs; (e) voting behavior; (f)

governmental services; (g) commonality of communications; and (h) geographic location and

features.”

54. The guidelines also allow “incumbency considerations” to be considered and

instruct that “[r]easonable efforts may be made to ensure that incumbent legislators are not

9
See, e.g., Brown v. Thomson, 462 U.S. 835, 842 (1983) (+/-5% (or 10% overall) deviation
from ideal generally permissible).
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placed into districts where they will be compelled to run against other incumbent members of the

South Carolina House of Representatives. The guidelines are clear that “incumbency

considerations shall not influence the redistricting plan to such an extent as to overtake other

redistricting principles.”

55. The guidelines end with an instruction that the House Redistricting Committee

“should make reasonable efforts to be transparent and allow public input into the redistricting

process.” Moreover, “any deviation from the criteria shall not be any more than necessary to

avoid the violation of law, and the remainder of the redistricting plan shall remain faithful to the

criteria.”

Senate’s Redistricting Criteria

56. On September 17, 2021, the South Carolina Senate Judiciary Redistricting

Subcommittee (“Senate Redistricting Subcommittee”)—the Senate’s body responsible for

preparing and developing redistricting plans for the post-2020 redistricting cycle—adopted its

guidelines and criteria for U.S. Congressional and state legislative redistricting.10

57. These guidelines begin by listing requirements under the U.S. Constitution and

federal law.

58. In discussing the requirements of federal law, the Senate guidelines state a

“redistricting plan for the General Assembly or Congress must not have either the purpose or the

effect of diluting minority voting strength and must otherwise comply with Section 2 of the

10
S.C. Senate Judiciary Comm. Redistricting Subcomm., 2021 Redistricting Guidelines (Sep.
17, 2021), https://redistricting.scsenate.gov/ (document available via “2021 Senate Redistricting
Guidelines” hyperlink).
18
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Voting Rights Act, as expressed through Thornburg v. Gingles and its progeny, and the

Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.”

59. The guidelines further state that “race must not be the predominant factor in that

race-neutral considerations are subordinated to racial considerations, unless that subordination is

narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.”

60. The next guideline is “contiguity.” It states that each district must be “composed

of contiguous geography,” which may include point-to-point contiguity “so long as adjacent

districts do not use the same vertex as points of transversal.”

61. The guidelines also identify additional considerations that “should be given

consideration, where practical and appropriate, in no particular order of preference.” The first

additional consideration is “communities of interest.” Under the guidelines, “[a]reas defined by

geographic, demographic, historic or other characteristics that cause people to identify with one

another, including economic, social, cultural, language, political, and recreational activity

interests common to the area’s population may constitute communities of interest.” And

communities of interest “may be overlapping and may consist of one or more formally, or

informally, defined geographic areas with unifying common interests.”

62. The next additional consideration is “constituent consistency,” which the

guidelines define as “[p]reserving the cores of existing districts, keeping incumbents’ residences

in districts with their core constituents, and avoiding contests between incumbent legislators.”

63. The next two additional considerations are “minimizing divisions of county

boundaries” and “minimizing divisions of cities and towns.”

64. These additional considerations also include “minimizing divisions of voting

precinct boundaries.” The guidelines state that “[b]oth existing lines and pending precinct

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boundary realignments should be considered.” But if “precincts are split, every effort should be

made to divide precincts along recognizable and demonstrable boundaries.”

65. The final additional consideration is “district compactness.” The guidelines state

that to determine “the relative compactness of a district, consideration should be given to

geography, demography, communities of interest, and the extent to which parts of the district are

joined by roads, media outlets, or other means for constituents to communicate effectively with

each other and with their representative.”

The Process Leading to the Enactment of H. 4493

The House Legislative Process

66. The House Redistricting Committee’s redistricting hearings were largely

inaccessible to members of the public. Prior to the release of U.S. Census data in August and

September 2021, meetings were announced with less than a week’s notice. From September 8

through October 4, 2021, the Committee held eleven public hearings on redistricting before

proposing any congressional plans.11 But these meetings were largely inaccessible to the public.

The first few meetings were announced with less than a week’s notice, which left insufficient

time for community members to adjust their schedules and prepare meaningful testimony.

Moreover, the first ten meetings did not offer any opportunities for remote testimony, which

excluded community members who could not attend meetings in person or did not live close

enough to the meeting to attend in-person. These hearings, which had the purported goal of

gathering public input on the redistricting process, were scheduled during a resurgence of

COVID-19 cases in South Carolina, yet only the last two hearings (on September 28 and October

11
S.C. House of Rep. Judiciary Comm. Redistricting Ad Hoc Comm., Public Hearings,
https://redistricting.schouse.gov/publichearing.html.
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4) had a remote-testimony option. But these two hearings were still scheduled on weekdays and

started during normal business hours at 4:30 p.m.

67. These choices effectively limited participation to those who lived near the

location, had access to transportation, and were willing to chance the potential risk of exposure

to COVID-19. If people could not attend these sessions, they could not testify or meaningfully

engage with other people’s testimony during most of the House Redistricting Committee’s public

hearings. Similarly, the two hearings at which a remote testimony option was available began at

4:30 p.m. and ended at 6:30 p.m. on weekdays, making it unlikely that working people and

people with children or other family obligations could attend.

68. On August 9, 2021, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, along with other advocacy

organizations, sent a letter to the House Committee reminding them of their affirmative

obligations under the U.S. Constitution and Section 2 of the VRA, highlighting the House

Committee’s obligation to conduct an RPV analysis and to refrain from developing maps that

unnecessarily “pack” Black voters into districts with high Black populations or “crack” them into

districts with unnecessarily low ones, explaining that both stratagems can illegitimately elevate

race over other considerations and diminish the political power of Black voters.12 The letter also

recommended ways to ensure transparency and opportunities for public input during all stages of

the redistricting process—before, during, and after proposing maps.

69. On August 30, 2021, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, along with other advocacy

organizations, sent a follow-up letter to the House Redistricting Committee reiterating concerns

12
Letter from the South Carolina NAACP, et al., to the S.C. House of Rep. Judiciary
Comm.’s Redistricting Ad Hoc Comm. (Aug. 9, 2021), https://www.naacpldf.org/wp-
content/uploads/Letter-to-SC-HouseRedistricting-Ad-Hoc-Committee_08.09.2021_final.pdf.
21
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about the House Committee’s failure to transparently conduct its redistricting process and

provide opportunities for meaningful public participation.13

70. On October 8, 2021, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, along with other advocacy

organizations, proposed two U.S. Congressional plans and a state House redistricting plan to the

House Committee, along with a submission letter.14 These proposed plans corrected for

population disparities between districts following the 2020 decennial Census and preserved

majority-Black districts or otherwise developed districts that would have continued to be

effective for Black voters (that is, enable them to elect candidates of their choice), among other

considerations and requirements that complied with the House Redistricting Committee’s criteria

and the U.S. Constitution and other federal law. In the submission letter, the groups further

reiterated the House Committee’s affirmative obligations to comply with the U.S. Constitution

and Section 2 of the VRA, as well as reminded the Committee that it must conduct an RPV

analysis to determine its compliance with the VRA.

71. In particular, the letter detailed how RPV patterns persist in various parts of

South Carolina. On the state level, for example, according to an RPV analysis of the 2020

election for U.S. Senate, Jamie Harrison, the candidate of choice of Black voters across South

Carolina, received only approximately 25% of white voter support and lost, despite receiving

approximately 98% of Black voter support. Similar patterns were present in elections featuring

13
Letter from the South Carolina NAACP, et al., to the S.C. House Judiciary Comm.’s
Redistricting Ad Hoc Comm. (Aug. 30, 2021), https://www.naacpldf.org/wp-
content/uploads/Follow-Up-Letter-to-SCHouse-Redistricting-Ad-Hoc-Committee-8-30-21.pdf
14
Letter from the South Carolina NAACP, et al., to the S.C. House Judiciary Comm.’s
Redistricting Ad Hoc Comm. (Oct. 8, 2021), https://www.naacpldf.org/press-release/ldf-submits-
proposed-submitting-proposed-congressional-and-senate-maps-to-the-south-carolina-senate-
judiciary-redistricting-subcommittee-and-the-house-redistricting-ad-hoc-committee/ (documents
available via hyperlinks).
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Black-preferred candidates in other key elections, including in the 2018 elections for the

Secretary of State and State Treasurer. For example, in the 2018 election for Secretary of State,

Melvin Whittenburg, the candidate of choice of Black voters across South Carolina, received

only approximately 23% of white voter support and lost with approximately 95% of Black voter

support. In the 2018 election for State Treasurer, Rosalyn Glenn, the candidate of choice of

Black voters across South Carolina, received only approximately 21% of white voter support and

lost, despite receiving 95% of Black voter support.

72. An RPV analysis demonstrates that similar patterns also exist at the county level

in most parts of the state for these elections. That is, Black voter-supported candidates have been

defeated because of insufficient white cross-over voting for those candidates in counties across

the state from Anderson to Greenville, to York, to Berkeley, Georgetown, and Charleston.

73. After this October 8 submission deadline, the House Redistricting Committee

gave no information about when it would release maps or deliberate further, until November 8,

when it released a state “House Staff Plan” and announced that it would hold a public hearing on

it less than 48 hours later, on November 10, 2021, with the option for another hearing on

November 12, 2021. In reality, the public had less time to prepare because on November 8 at

6:30 p.m., the House Redistricting Committee released a revised state House working draft to

address discrepancies in the previously released files.

74. On November 10, the House Redistricting Committee invited members of the

public to testify on its state House Staff Plan. To begin, Rep. Jordan asserted that the state House

Staff Plan complied with the U.S. Constitution and other federal law, but he did not explain what

analysis had been undertaken to reach that conclusion, and gave no indicia that the Committee

had conducted an RPV analysis. During the hearing, several members of the public asked

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whether the Committee conducted any RPV analysis, explaining that such an analysis is

necessary for compliance with the U.S. Constitution and Section 2 of the VRA and to avoid

racially gerrymandering. In explaining these concerns, some members of the public discussed

how RPV patterns exist statewide. The Committee did not address or answer these questions or

give any indicia that it had conducted an RPV analysis. Nor did the Committee directly address

repeated concerns raised by members of the public that the state House Staff Plan unnecessarily

cracked and packed Black communities and split communities of interest.

75. Instead, Rep. Wm. Weston J. Newton attempted to cast doubt on these concerns

by claiming that it was “noteworthy” that the previous set of redistricting plans were precleared

by the DOJ under Section 5 of the VRA under a non-retrogression standard (i.e., whether the

plan weakened the ability of Black voters to participate in the process when compared to the

benchmark map). Representative Jason Elliott also claimed that the non-retrogression standard is

the same one that applies for consideration of maps today. But multiple members of the public

corrected this misstatement, explaining that DOJ preclearance determinations did not include an

analysis of whether the maps comply with Section 2, for example. In contrast, as Plaintiff South

Carolina NAACP and other organizations repeatedly conveyed in correspondence and testimony,

Section 2 prohibits maps that dilute minority voting strength based on the U.S. Supreme Court’s

framework in Thornburg v. Gingles, 478 U.S. 30 (1986), regardless of whether the challenged

map is retrogressive when compared to the benchmark map. As members of the public

explained, this means a precleared plan could still run afoul of the U.S. Constitution and Section

2 of the VRA because they involve different standards than what was used for preclearance

determinations.

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76. Representative Newton also attempted to downplay concerns about the dilution of

Black voters’ voting strength by claiming that the state House Staff Plan included more districts

comprised of a majority of minority districts (“majority-minority districts”) than Plaintiff South

Carolina NAACP’s proposed state House map. In addition to addressing this point during the

hearing, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP also wrote to the House Redistricting Committee on

November 15.15 In that letter, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP and other groups explained to the

Committee that, although the House’s proposed staff map had one more majority-Black district

than its proposed House map, the House map proposed by the South Carolina NAACP and its

coalition had more opportunity districts in which Black voters would be between 40-50% of the

voting-age population (“VAP”) and, thus, could influence elections.

77. During the hearing, Rep. John Richard C. King, a Black legislator, also reiterated

his concerns about the House’s arbitrary designation to use a total population deviation of +/-

2.5% (or 5% overall total deviation). He explained that this standard could be detrimental to

racial minorities and rural communities and asked the Committee to reconsider using a 10% total

population deviation standard. But the Committee did not amend its criteria; Rep. Newton

incorrectly asserted that state legislative maps cannot have a total population exceeding 5% of

the total population.

78. Members of the public also raised concerns about transparency and meaningful

opportunities for public review of maps. One member of the public, for example, explained that

the House Redistricting Committee’s decision to make its proposed map public less than 48

15
Letter from the South Carolina NAACP, et al, to the House of Rep. Judiciary Comm.’s
Redistricting Ad Hoc Comm. (Nov. 15, 2021), https://www.naacpldf.org/wp-
content/uploads/Supplemental-Comments-on-House-2021-Working-Draft-Plan-11-15-21.pdf.
25
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hours before a hearing on it gave inadequate time for members of the public to conduct

meaningful analyses. In addition, members of the public posed several questions to the

Committee, including as described above, whether any RPV analysis was completed.

Representative Beth Bernstein inquired whether the Committee would respond to these questions

before adopting any map. Representative Jordan declined to commit that the House Committee

would answer any specific questions.

79. At the end of the hearing, Rep. Jordan also announced that, because members of

the public testified during its hearing, the House Committee did not need to hold a second

hearing on November 12 to give members of the public additional opportunity to testify.

80. On November 16, 2021, the House Redistricting Committee met again to discuss

its state House Staff Plan without any further public input or testimony. This hearing lasted less

than ten minutes.

81. After a brief overview of the redistricting process, during which the House

Committee acknowledged having received oral and written testimony, and without any

additional consideration of the state House Staff Plan, the House Committee approved an

amendment to H. 4493 to incorporate its amended plan and issued favorable report. There was

no public discussion during this hearing about how the plan had been changed following the

November 10 hearing. As the House Redistricting Committee Chair, Rep. Jordan also stated his

expectation that the House Judiciary Committee would consider “necessary” additional

amendments to the working draft plan. As a result, members of the public were not given an

opportunity to give additional input and review of the amendments to the plan.

82. Less than two hours after the House Redistricting Committee hearing ended, the

House Judiciary Committee met to consider the amended state House Staff Plan, hear testimony

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from only House Judiciary Committee members, and consider any amendments to its plan. No

public testimony was allowed at this hearing. After the Judiciary Committee voted to adopt the

amended state House Staff Plan, it considered eight amendments, approving six amendments and

tabling the other two.

83. One of the tabled amendments proposed amending the House Redistricting

Committee’s criteria to permit population deviations within a range of plus or minus 5% of the

mathematical mean (or 10% overall of the total population). To support this amendment, Rep.

King once again explained how this permissible standard would assist in the preservation of

majority-minority districts. At the end of the meeting, the Judiciary Committee voted to adopt

the state House Staff Plan as amended within H. 4493.

84. The House Judiciary Committee did not invite members of the public to provide

oral or written comments on the state House Staff Plan as amended or before it was voted out of

Committee and sent it to the full House.

85. The full House reconvened on December 1, 2021, and conducted a first reading of

H. 4493 without any debate or discussion.

86. The next day the House conducted a reading of H. 4493. To begin, Rep. Jordan

testified on the process leading to the creation of the House map and a brief overview of the map.

Afterwards, the House considered several amendments and either adopted or tabled them. The

House, for example, voted to table two amendments that Rep. Wendy Brawley, a Black

legislator, proposed. The first, substituted the plan submitted by Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP

for the working plan. During debate, Rep. Brawley explained that she had no indication that the

House Committee conducted any analysis of racial minority voting patterns (that is, RPV), even

though members of the public had repeatedly requested that such analysis be performed.

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87. Rep. Jordan claimed that the Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP’s proposed state

House map appears to have “systematic partisan gerrymandering” based on the number of paired

incumbents and purported “excessive amounts of splits.”

88. The second amendment proposed substituting a House plan submitted by the

League of Women Voters of South Carolina (the “League”) for the working draft plan. In

explaining Rep. Jordan’s motion to table the amendment, he claimed the “big issue” with the

League’s map is population deviation because it used a 10% overall of the total population

standard (i.e., the same standard used in the Senate Guidelines and accepted by federal courts)

instead of the House Redistricting Committee’s 5% (overall) total population standard.

89. During this debate, Rep. Brawley also characterized the House Redistricting

Committee’s process for creating and developing maps as “shrouded in secrecy.” Representative

Hosey, a Black legislator, echoed a similar concern, explaining during discussion on another

amendment that he had not been consulted about changes to district boundaries of the areas that

he represents.

90. Following consideration of amendments, Rep. Robinson, another Black legislator,

made a motion to table consideration of H. 4493. Supporting this motion, Rep. Robinson

explained that the state amended House Staff Plan would result in Black voters’ candidates of

choice, who were Black representatives, losing their seats, in part because several Black

incumbents would be paired with each other and forced to compete against each other in primary

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elections. The House rejected this motion. It then proceeded to vote in favor of the working draft

as amended.

91. At no point during the hearing did any member indicate that either the House or

the Judiciary or House Committees conducted an RPV analysis to inform development of its

map.

92. On December 6, 2021, the House reconvened and conducted a second reading of

H. 4493. In opposition to H. 4493, Rep. Govan, a Black legislator, reiterated concerns that Black

incumbents were being paired in the same districts under the House Staff Plan as amended,

thereby forcing them to compete against each other. As one example, he explained how Rep.

Johnson, a Black legislator, and Rep. Brawley are included in the same district under the State

House Plan as amended. His opposition was also rooted in the House Redistricting Committee’s

refusal to amend its criteria to change its total population deviation standard, which would be

detrimental to racial minority voters. Following Rep. Govan’s remarks, the House voted to

approve H. 4493 and sent it to the Senate for consideration.

93. On December 9, 2021, the House voted to concur with the Senate amendments to

H. 4493, which included the addition of the state Senate Plan.

94. The next day, Gov. McMaster signed H. 4493 into law.

The Process Leading to the Enactment of S. 865

95. The Legislature’s process for enacting a map for South Carolina’s seven

congressional districts is marked the same lack of transparency and limited opportunities for

public input that defined its process for enacting state House and Senate maps. Moreover, the

Legislature also unnecessarily delayed and postponed proposing and then adopting a

congressional map to the point where South Carolina is among the last set of states to enact such

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a plan. Indeed, as described below, both the House and Senate proposed maps and then enacted

S. 865 within a six-week timeline. Yet the Legislature waited until mid-December 2021 to begin

publicly posting maps and holding relevant hearings on those maps.

96. On July 23, 2021, the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee announced that it would

hold ten public hearings to receive public testimony about interests to be considered in redrawing

Congressional and state legislative districts. The first hearing was held on July 27 and the last on

August 12. Each hearing was held on weekday nights from 6:30 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. with

opportunities for in-person and remote testimony.16 No congressional maps were considered or

proposed during the hearings.

97. On August 2, 2021, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, along with other advocacy

organizations, sent a letter to the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee reminding members of their

affirmative obligations under the U.S. Constitution and Section 2 of the VRA.17 The August 2

letter highlighted the Subcommittee’s obligation to conduct RPV analyses to ensure compliance

with Section 2 of the VRA. The letter also provided recommendations for ensuring transparency

and opportunities for public input during all stages of the redistricting process.

98. A week later, as described above in ¶ 68, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, along

with other advocacy organizations, sent a similar letter to the House Redistricting Committee.

99. On August 30, 2021, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, along with other advocacy

organizations, sent a follow-up letter to the House Redistricting Committee reiterating concerns

16
S.C. Senate Judiciary Comm., Meeting Information – Public Hearings,
https://redistricting.scsenate.gov/meetinginfo.html.
17
Letter from the South Carolina NAACP, et al., to the S.C. Senate Judiciary Comm.’s
Redistricting Subcomm. (Aug. 2, 2021), https://www.naacpldf.org/wp-content/uploads/Letter-to-
South-Carolina-Senate-Judiciary-Redistricting-Subcommittee-8-2-21.pdf.
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about the Committee’s failure to transparently conduct its redistricting process and provide

opportunities for meaningful public participation.

100. From September 8 until October 4, 2021, the House Redistricting Committee

conducted eleven public hearings on redistricting before any Congressional plans were proposed.

But as described above in ¶ 66, these meetings were largely inaccessible to members of the

public.

101. On September 17, 2021, as described above in ¶ 56, the Senate Redistricting

Subcommittee met and adopted its redistricting criteria and guidelines without any public input.

The criteria and guidelines were available only to Subcommittee members before the meeting.

102. On October 8, 2021, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, along with other advocacy

organizations, proposed two U.S. Congressional redistricting plans, along with a submission

letter to the House and Senate, which, among other points, reiterated the House Redistricting

Committee and Senate Redistricting Subcommittee’s affirmative obligations to comply with the

U.S. Constitution and Section 2 of the VRA, as well as reminded each body that it must conduct

RPV analyses.18

103. On October 19, 2021, the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee announced that it

was actively soliciting proposed congressional maps from members of the public.

18
Letter from the South Carolina NAACP, et al., to the S.C. House Judiciary Comm.’s
Redistricting Ad Hoc Comm. (Oct. 8, 2021), https://www.naacpldf.org/press-release/ldf-submits-
proposed-submitting-proposed-congressional-and-senate-maps-to-the-south-carolina-senate-
judiciary-redistricting-subcommittee-and-the-house-redistricting-ad-hoc-committee/ (documents
available via hyperlinks); Letter from the South Carolina NAACP, et al., to the S.C. Senate
Judiciary Comm.’s Redistricting Subcomm. (Oct. 8, 2021), https://www.naacpldf.org/press-
release/ldf-submits-proposed-submitting-proposed-congressional-and-senate-maps-to-the-south-
carolina-senate-judiciary-redistricting-subcommittee-and-the-house-redistricting-ad-hoc-
committee/ (documents available via hyperlinks).
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104. Almost a month later, on November 12, 2021, the Senate Redistricting

Subcommittee met to receive public testimony on congressional maps that were submitted by

members of the public. During this hearing, members of the public, among other points,

reiterated that the Subcommittee has an obligation to conduct a RPV analysis for any

redistricting plans, especially because federal courts have repeatedly found RPV patterns existing

throughout South Carolina.19

105. Consistent with previous correspondence, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP also

urged the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee during the November 12 hearing to not “pack”

Black voters into districts with unnecessarily high Black populations or “crack” them into

districts with populations that are insufficient to provide Black voters an opportunity to elect

candidates of their choice or even influence elections. Members of the public also urged the

Subcommittee that Charleston County must remain whole in CD 1 because of shared

communities of interest.

106. At the end of the November 12 hearing, the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee

approved a motion for its staff to begin drawing a congressional redistricting map.

19
See, e.g., Colleton Cnty. Council, 201 F. Supp. 2d at 643 (“Voting in South Carolina
continues to be racially polarized to a very high degree . . . in all regions of the state and in both
primary elections and general elections.”); see also, e.g., United States v. Charleston Cnty., 365
F.3d 341, 350 (4th Cir. 2004) (county voting “is severely and characteristically polarized along
racial lines”); Jackson v. Edgefield Cnty., S.C. Sch. Dist., 650 F. Supp. 1176, 1196 (D.S.C. 1986)
(observing that “the outcome of each [election] could be statistically predicted and reasonably
explained by the race of the voters”); id. at 1198 (“The tenacious strength of white bloc voting
usually is sufficient to overcome an electoral coalition of black votes and white ‘crossover’
votes.”).
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107. On November 23, 2021—the Tuesday before Thanksgiving—the Senate

Redistricting Subcommittee announced that it had released its “Staff Senate Congressional Plan”

and would hold a hearing on it at 10:30 a.m. on Monday, November 29, 2021.

108. On November 29, the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee received public

testimony on its Staff Senate Congressional Plan. To begin, the Senate Redistricting

Subcommittee’s cartographer, Will Roberts, provided a brief description of the proposed

congressional map.

109. Next, Sen. Harpootlian raised a concern about a lack of transparency, explaining

that he had only received the proposed map the Tuesday before Thanksgiving. He then referred

to proposed CD 6 as being next to the definition of gerrymander in the dictionary, explaining that

it represented a “racial overlay” and warned the Subcommittee that it should “be very conscious

about the fact of—about the issue of packing African Americans into one district.”

110. During public comment, former CD 1 Congressman Joe Cunningham testified that

the proposed map made sure that significant “Black population would be packed into the Sixth

Congressional District” and asserted that the Subcommittee “made sure that the first [CD] was

almost entirely white.” He further described proposed CD 1 by saying how he “saw up close and

personal how the district was just chopped up, based upon one thing, race. You could drive down

Chapel Street . . . —the current district boundary right now and look on one side and see the

African American community, and the other side and see a white community. The white

community was in the First Congressional District, and the Black community was in the Sixth

Congressional District.” He questioned “why is Charleston County split into two different

districts” with “one for white residents and one for black residents.” He implored the Senate to

draw “fair maps, keeping communities of interest together and not dividing communities based

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on the color of their skin.” Senator Bright Matthews, a Black legislator, replied, “I don’t

understand why on this map, those Black voters in Charleston County were carved out.” Mr.

Cunningham also questioned why proposed CD 1 had the lowest Black population of any

proposed CD in the Staff Senate Congressional map.

111. Senator Harpootlian also remarked that members of the Subcommittee, including

himself, were not consulted before the Staff Senate Congressional Plan was published.

112. Next, testifying on behalf of the League, Ms. Teague and Dr. John Ruoff

explained that the proposed map packed and cracked Black communities. As one example, Ms.

Teague explained how the map unnecessarily cracked Charleston County by moving the city of

North Charleston into proposed CD 6, which did not adhere to communities of interest

principles. Ms. Teague also said the proposed map split Black communities in Northwest

Richland County to keep Fort Jackson within proposed CD 2, which Dr. Ruoff testified achieved

a goal that appears unclear to him to be based on traditional redistricting principles.

113. After public testimony on the Staff Senate Congressional Plan, the Senate

Redistricting Subcommittee took no further action.

114. More than two months after some members of the public submitted proposed

congressional maps, the House Redistricting Committee finally released its proposed “Staff

House Congressional Plan” on December 13, 2021. At approximately 4:54 p.m. the same day,

the Committee announced that it would hold a hearing on December 16 at 12:00 p.m., less than

72 hours after releasing its map.

115. During the December 16 hearing, the House Redistricting Committee received

public comment on its proposed congressional map. Members of the public affirmed the need to

keep Charleston County whole, explaining that it is an important community of interest. Other

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members of the public testified that Beaufort County should remain in CD 1, claiming that it is

very similar to Charleston County.

116. On December 22, 2021, the House Redistricting Committee posted an alternative

congressional map (“Congressional House Staff Plan Alternative 1”) map on its website, as well

as provided public notice that it would conduct a hearing on December 29, 2021.

117. On December 29, the House Redistricting Committee received public testimony

on its original and alternative congressional maps, as well as the Senate’s proposed Staff Senate

Congressional Plan. To begin the hearing, Rep. Jordan explained that the Committee received

oral and written feedback on its original House Staff Congressional Plan. Representative Jordan

stated that Committee created the alternative map because of concerns about Beaufort County

being included in CD 2 under its original map. He also claimed that the alternative map included

“some positive features” from the Senate’s proposed map.

118. During the hearing, the House Redistricting Committee heard that its alternative

congressional map unnecessarily splits Black communities in northern Richland County and

parts of Sumter County, among other areas. Along the same lines, members of the public,

including Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, repeated concerns about splitting Charleston County,

including explaining why it is important to keep the cities of Charleston and North Charleston

together. And members of the public voiced concern that the proposed CD 1 in the alternative

map also unnecessarily reduced the BVAP by splitting Black communities.

119. Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP also reiterated concerns that Congressional

House Staff Plan Alternative 1—like the Staff Senate Congressional Plan—ended CD 6’s status

as a district where a majority of Black voters reside. Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP reminded

the Committee that it received proposed congressional maps from that organization and other

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members of the public that maintained CD 6 as a majority-minority district, while also correcting

for malapportionment, respecting communities of interest, and following other criteria.

120. After the public-comment portion, Rep. Bernstein stated that the Congressional

House Staff Plan Alternative 1 was drafted “unbeknownst” to her. She also explained that she

was unsure why the Committee was even considering the alternative map because it replicated

the Senate Staff Congressional map, “which received numerous complaints” and “vocalized

concerns.”

121. In response to a question from Rep. Bernstein, Rep. Jordan said that national

partisan groups’ “plans and inputs were received, and as a result, were available for

consideration.” But the House Redistricting Committee only posted four plans submitted by

members of the public, including two by Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP, one by the non-

partisan organization League of Women Voters of South Carolina, and one by an individual

named Michael Roberts.

122. Representative Jordan also could not answer whether any current

Congressmember submitted plans or provided input into the creation of Committee’s two

congressional maps. Instead, he claimed that “staff can probably get us to the bottom of that at an

appropriate time.” But he did not offer any more details or timelines, including whether such

information would be publicly shared.

123. On January 5, 2022, the House Redistricting Committee gave public notice that it

would hold a hearing on January 10, 2022 at 1:00 p.m. Although the Committee invited members

of the public to submit written testimony and other relevant information up until January 9, it did

not indicate that there would be any public-comment portion for the January 10 meeting. The

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same notice also stated that there would be a House Judiciary Committee on January 10 at 3:00

p.m.

124. On January 10, 2022, the House Redistricting Committee met to consider

congressional maps. During the meeting, Rep. Henegan, a Black legislator, asserted that Black

voters only have the possibility to elect their preferred candidate in proposed CD 6.

125. In response to a question by Rep. Bernstein, Rep. Jordan said that he did not think

the “math works” to keep Beaufort and Charleston Counties whole in a proposed CD 1.

Representative Bernstein also reiterated concerns that the Congressional House Staff Plan

Alternative 1 packs Black voters in Charleston County into proposed CD 6 by carving out Black

communities in proposed CD 1, particularly in the city of North Charleston.

126. After testimony by just Committee members, the Committee voted to amend S.

865 and H. 4492 to include Congressional House Staff Plan Alternative 1 and gave the map a

favorable report.

127. Less than two hours later, the House Judiciary Committee met to discuss the

Congressional House Staff Plan Alternative 1. To begin the meeting, Rep. Newton stated that he

would be serving as Chair because Rep. Murphy could not attend. He explained that he had just

received a letter from Rep. Murphy designating him to serve as Chair during the meeting due to

purported “extraordinary circumstances.” In response, Rep. King, a Black legislator, asked for a

point of order to understand why he, as House Judiciary Vice Chair, would not serve as Chair in

Rep. Murphy’s absence as prescribed under the House Judiciary Committee’s rules. Because of

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this alleged rule deviation, Rep. King formally objected to the meeting moving forward without

him serving as Chair. The meeting proceeded.

128. Next, Rep. Jordan offered a strike-all amendment to S. 865 and H. 4492 that

would replace each bill’s previous text with Congressional House Staff Plan Alternative 1. In

doing so, he summarized the House Redistricting Committee’s efforts to date. He explained why

the Committee recommended Congressional House Staff Plan Alternative 1, including because it

attempted to address concerns raised by Beaufort County residents, shared features with the

Senate’s Congressional map, and aligned with the configuration of district lines that were

“approved by the Department of Justice and passed judicial scrutiny in 2011.” This map, he also

said, complied with the House Redistricting Committee’s redistricting guidelines and criteria.

Following Rep. Jordan’s remarks, Rep. King raised concerns that Congressional House Staff

Plan Alternative 1 cracked Black voters in Charleston County by removing them from proposed

CD 1 and unnecessarily packing them into proposed CD 6. He argued that communities in

Charleston and Richland Counties do not have shared interests. He asked why the BVAP in other

proposed CDs could not be higher.

129. Next, Rep. Bernstein reiterated concerns about Congressional House Staff Plan

Alternative 1. Because this plan is “very similar to the Senate map,” she reminded the House

Judiciary Committee that the Senate’s map had been highly criticized during a recent Senate

Redistricting Subcommittee meeting. She further explained that members of the public expressed

those concerns to the House Redistricting Committee during recent hearings. In addition to these

concerns, she also expressed reservations about the process for recommending Congressional

House Staff Plan Alternative 1, which she explained was presented to the public at the same time

it was presented to House Redistricting Committee members. She questioned why the House

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Redistricting Committee could not have just continued its process with its initially proposed

congressional map and amend that map based on continued public feedback and input.

130. After Rep. Bernstein’s testimony, Rep. Thigpen, a Black legislator, raised

concerns about characterizations that there were “many” responses by community members in

Beaufort County. He asked why input by community members from one county were considered

so weighty that it generated the creation of an entirely new proposed congressional map. More

specifically, he asked, “what about the information, input, and feedback made it rise to the level

that we would draw another map.” In response, Rep. Jordan claimed the points made by Beaufort

County community members were “well taken” and that the House Redistricting Committee was

trying to “get this done as quickly as possible.”

131. Representative Wetmore then asked if the House Redistricting Committee

received feedback from Charleston County community members, and if so, how that feedback

was weighed compared to feedback from Beaufort County community members. Representative

Jordan acknowledged that the House Redistricting Committee “did hear from folks in Charleston

that expressed displeasure” with the Congressional House Staff Plan Alternative 1. But he

claimed it was not the same “number-wise degree” and the “volume wasn’t quite as high

perhaps.”

132. Afterwards, Rep. Thigpen again reiterated concerns about the process leading to

the creation of Congressional House Staff Plan Alternative 1, explaining that he was not sure the

concerns by Beaufort County community members were weighty enough or outweighed

complaints from other South Carolina community members to trigger the creation of a new

proposed congressional map.

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133. Despite the reservations discussed above, the House Judiciary Committee voted to

pass the strike-all amended incorporating Congressional House Staff Plan Alternative 1 into S.

865 and H. 4492 and issued a favorable report.

134. On January 11, 2022 at approximately 4:20 p.m., the Senate Redistricting

Subcommittee announced that it posted two more proposed Congressional maps. The notice said

the Subcommittee would hold a hearing on those maps at a meeting scheduled for January 13,

2022 at 12:00 p.m.

135. On January 12, 2022, the House did a first reading of S. 865 and H. 4492.

136. The next day, the House reconvened to debate S. 865 and H. 4492. To begin, Rep.

Jordan gave an overview of the House Redistricting Committee’s work and the Congressional

House Staff Plan Alternative 1 map, which was being considered as an amendment to S. 865 and

S. 4492. In doing so, he referred only to public feedback about keeping Beaufort County within

CD 1. In closing, he claimed that maps submitted by the public “d[id] not offer superior

alternatives.”

137. Rep. King then testified that nobody spoke for CD 5 on the Ad Hoc Committee

because the Representative assigned to the Committee withdrew because of an important familial

obligation. Representative King explained that the Committee could have assigned another

Representative within CD 5 to ensure its representation.

138. Representative Brawley, a Black legislator, explained that the House Judiciary

Committee did not follow its rules when it voted to approve the Congressional House Staff Plan

Alternative 1 map. Representative King concurred, explaining that the vote “constituted a breach

of decorum in the House of Representatives” by not having the first Vice Chair preside over the

meeting the Chair’s absence.

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139. Representative Garvin, a Black legislator, explained that he watched all the House

Redistricting Committee hearings. Based on those, Rep. Garvin asked Rep. Jordan whether he

knew that many people were pleased with the House Redistricting Committee’s initial proposed

map. Representative Jordan said: “we heard from some folks that said it was not that bad.” Then

he remarked that people who gave feedback on Beaufort County described that initial map as

“awful.” In response, Rep. Garvin asked “what made the concerns of the Beaufort folks more

prevalent to change the action of a committee, versus the folks in Charleston.” Speaking only for

his vote, Rep. Jordan responded by asserting that the concerns raised about Beaufort County

were “compelling” because “it wasn’t fair to ping pong them back and forth” between two CDs.

140. Throughout the debate, several Representatives reminded the full House that it

was possible to keep Beaufort and Charleston Counties whole, as some proposed maps did.

Others reminded the full House that this was a point the House Redistricting Committee

repeatedly heard through public testimony.

141. Representative Garvin also reiterated that Congressional House Staff Plan

Alternative 1 “mirrors” the Senate’s Congressional map with a “few minor tweaks.” He

explained that the Senate map was “wildly criticized.”

142. During the session, several Representatives voiced opposition to Congressional

House Staff Plan Alternative 1 because it, among other issues, “cracks” and “packs” Black voters

throughout the state. Others voiced concerns that the proposed CDs in the Congressional House

Staff Plan Alternative 1 were designed to ensure districts were not politically competitive.

143. Responding to these concerns, Rep. Jordan repeated that the district lines look

“very, very similar” to the 2010 Congressional district lines, which he said were approved by the

U.S. Department of Justice. During an exchange with Rep. Matthews, however, Rep. Jordan

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conceded that Charleston County is being split differently than under current district boundaries.

Then, Rep. Matthews, a Black legislator, asserted that proposed CD 1 is being given “the white

areas” and that CD 6 will keep Charleston County’s predominantly Black areas. To explain these

splits, she directed the chamber to visual representation of Census tracts 51 and 54. She also said

that she did not understand why the area of West Ashley was cut in half or Johns Island put in

CD 6, because this would not keep communities of interest together. Representative McDaniel, a

Black legislator, echoed similar concerns, noting that North Charleston and Charleston are

communities that should remain together.

144. Next, Representative Cobb-Hunter, a Black legislator, asked Rep. Jordan whether

the House’s criteria was applied “uniformly across the board at all levels” or whether there were

different applications depending on districts. Without a direct response from Rep. Jordan, Rep.

Cobb-Hunter posed the question again, asking whether criteria was similarly weighted and

applied consistently from one district to another. In response, Rep Jordan said, “I would say, the

criteria is the criteria. I don’t mean to be trying to avoid the question, but we put that before the

Ad Hoc Committee.”

145. Representative Cobb-Hunter then asked whether the House Redistricting

Committee did any VRA Section 2 analysis on the proposed maps. Rep. Jordan answered: “we

did everything in compliance with the law that we were told and required to do.” Based on that

answer, Rep. Cobb-Hunter asked Rep. Jordan for a yes or no response. Again, Rep. Jordan

stated, “to my knowledge, we did everything possibly needed to do under the terms of the law.”

Representative Jordan never responded to Rep. Cobb-Hunter’s question whether she could see a

Section 2 analysis. Later, Rep. Cobb-Hunter reiterated her concern that she never received a yes

or no answer on whether a Section 2 analysis had been conducted. That analysis, she explained,

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was necessary to ensure that communities of color are not “cracked” and “packed” into districts.

She ended by saying that neither the House nor the House Redistricting Committee could sign

off on a proposed Congressional map without a Section 2 analysis.

146. Representative Jordan also disclaimed that any “outside partisan stuff took place”

during the House Redistricting Committee’s process for drawing proposed Congressional maps.

147. The House voted to adopt S. 865 as amended with Congressional House Staff

Plan Alternative 1.

148. Afterward, Rep. Govan provided a brief overview of the history of racial

discrimination in South Carolina and repeated concerns about the state’s failure to comply with

the U.S. Constitution and Voting Rights Act in previous redistricting cycles by proposing and

enacting maps that diluted Black voting rights.

149. After Rep. Govan’s testimony, the House conducted a second reading of S. 865 as

amended.

150. On January 13, the House conducted a final reading of S. 865 as amended, which

it passed and transmitted to the Senate.

151. On January 13, the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee held a hearing on

Congressional maps, less than 48 hours after publicly disclosing two new proposed maps. To

begin, Sen. Rankin acknowledged that the Subcommittee just posted two proposals—House

Congressional Plan 2 Senate Amendment 1 (“Senate Amendment 1 Plan”) and House

Congressional Plan 2 Senate Amendment 2 (“Senate Amendment 2 Plan”)—less than 48 hours

before the hearing. He also stated that the House voted to amend S. 865 with the House

redistricting map.

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152. During public testimony, Joey Opperman testified that he had been hired by Sen.

Harpootlian to draw the Senate Amendment 2 Plan. He then explained the map’s details,

including by noting that it complies with the Senate’s redistricting criteria and does better on

certain criteria than the Senate Amendment 1 Plan. In the Senate Amendment 2 Plan, Mr.

Opperman explained that Charleston County remained whole. Splitting Charleston County, he

explained, did not follow traditional redistricting criteria.

153. Mr. Opperman also testified that proposed CDs in the Senate Amendment 1 Plan

suggest that race may have been a predominate factor, which he explained is unconstitutional.

154. Ms. Teague of the League raised concerns that proposed CD 1 in the Senate

Amendment 1 Plan received poor ratings for proportionality, compactness, efficiency, and other

standard redistricting measures. She then voiced support for the Senate Amendment 2 Plan,

explaining that proposed CD 1 is “consistent with real regional relationships in” the state. More

than two-thirds of the remaining members of the public who testified supported Amendment 2

for similar reasons. Witnesses testified that keeping Charleston County whole is important and

explained that splitting cities like North Charleston would harm Black communities.

155. Less than a third of the remaining members of the public supported the Senate

Amendment 1 Plan. A delegation of elected city and county council members justified their

support for Amendment 1 because it kept their respected bodies in either Berkeley or Dorchester

Counties within CD 1. About four members stated their support for Amendment 1 because it

kept Beaufort County within proposed CD 1. But they did not address the fact that, as other

members of the public pointed out, the Senate Amendment 2 Plan also kept Beaufort County

whole within proposed CD 1. After the public-comment portion, the Senate Redistricting

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Subcommittee voted to approve both the Senate Amendment 1 and Senate Amendment 2 Plans

and send them to the full Senate Judiciary Committee for debate and consideration.

156. On January 19, 2022, the Senate Judiciary Committee met to consider the Senate

Amendment 1 and Senate Amendment 2 Plans. To begin, Sen. Rankin explained that “there does

not appear” to be a court deadline “hanging over” the Committee to resolve the congressional

map.

157. Then Sen. Campsen provided an overview of the Senate Amendment 1 Map,

which he authored. At a general level, according to Sen. Campsen, it “restores key aspects of the

Senate Staff plan and is intended to be responsive to some of the public input received by the

subcommittee.” Senator Campsen, however, did not provide any other information about how

the map responded to public input, or whose public input.

158. Senator Bright Matthews, a Black legislator, explained to the Senate Judiciary

Committee members that “speaker after speaker” at the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee

public hearings wanted to keep Charleston County whole because it aligned with the principles

of keeping communities of interest together. Senator Bright Matthews also explained that Senate

Amendment 1 led to pulling out Black communities in West Ashley and other areas in the city of

North Charleston to pack them into proposed CD 6. Echoing similar concerns, Sen. Kimpson, a

Black legislator, also explained that the people of Charleston County want their community to be

kept whole, explaining that she represents more people from Charleston County than anyone else

in the Legislature.

159. According to Sen. Campsen, the pieces of Charleston County being moved into

proposed CD 6 are comprised of roughly a 50% BVAP, though Sen. Kimpson stated that the

BVAP in Charleston County is about 30%.

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160. During an exchange with Sen. Harpootlian, Sen. Campsen acknowledged that any

redistricting map must comply with a VRA Section 2 analysis. But he conceded that neither he

nor the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee conducted an RPV analysis in compiling the Senate

Amendment 1 map, claiming the Subcommittee “decided not to do that.” Instead, Sen. Campsen

claimed that an RPV analysis would have “happened if and when a plan is litigated,” claiming

that this is something a plaintiff would do if they filed a lawsuit. In response to a follow-up

question about whether an RPV analysis would be productive to avoid a lawsuit, Sen. Campsen

responded that such an analysis “would have resulted in us perhaps taking race into account and

having racial targets.”

161. At the end of the meeting, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted down a motion

that would have carried both the Senate Amendment 1 and Senate Amendment 2 Plans to the full

Senate for debate. Then the Committee voted in favoring of adopting the Senate Amendment 1

Plan and issued a favorable report.

162. On January 20, 2022, the Senate reconvened to consider a strike-all amendment

that would incorporate the Senate Amendment 1 Plan into S. 865. To begin, Sen. Rankin

provided an overview of the Senate Redistricting Subcommittee’s plan and a brief overview of

the Senate’s redistricting criteria.

163. Then, Sens. Rankin, Massey, Talley, and Campsen gave an overview of the

Senate Amendment 1 Plan. Following this presentation, Sen. Scott asked Sen. Campsen to

provide a working document because he explained it was hard to follow the presentation without

one. Senator Bright Matthews also moved for unanimous consent to pass out the Senate’s

redistricting guidelines because she explained that “quite a few members in the chamber do not

have the guidelines.”

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164. Sen. Campsen claimed that the Senate could not gerrymander if it created “very

little change on the existing map” because that is a legitimate reapportionment principle. But he

conceded that the Senate’s criteria do not mention any principle that the Senate should begin

with the benchmark or existing map.

165. In response to a question by Sen. Harpootlian, Sen. Campsen confirmed for the

full Senate that his plan did not include any RPV analysis. According to Sen. Campsen, he

“didn’t even look at race numbers” or even ask for “what’s the BVAP” of this or that district.

Senator Harpootlian also noted during the floor session that even state agencies like the South

Carolina Revenue and Fiscal Affairs Office advises counties, cities, and school boards to conduct

an RPV analysis as part of their redistricting processes.

166. Senator Bright Matthews reminded the full Senate that 90% of the public

testimony the Senate Redistricting Committee received at its last meeting were to keep

Charleston County whole. Along the same lines, based on his representation of the majority of

residents in Charleston County, he explained that the majority of his constituents want

Charleston County to remain whole.

167. Several Senators repeatedly characterized the Senate Amendment 1 Plan as being

designed to limit political competition by cracking and packing Black communities into CDs.

168. Senator Harpootlian questioned the process leading to the creation of the Senate

Amendment 1 Plan. As one example, he explained that, even as members of the Senate

Redistricting Subcommittee, neither he nor Sens. Bright Matthews or Saab, both Black

legislators, saw the plan before it was publicly shared. He also explained that he never had any

input into the plan, discussed it, or was called back into the “map room.”

169. Following debate, the Senate adopted the Senate Amendment 1 map.

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170. Next, the Senate considered a strike-all amendment by Sen. Harpootlian that

proposed a map like the Senate Amendment 2 map. Before explaining the map, Sen. Harpootlian

outlined parts of the state redistricting history, as well as its history of racial voter suppression. In

this map, Sen. Harpootlian, among other points, confirmed that Beaufort and Charleston

Counties remain whole.

171. The Senate voted to table this amendment. The Senate then voted to table another

amendment, which, according to Sen. Harpootlian, was the League of Women Voters of South

Carolina’s map with some slight tweaks that would have allowed Dorchester, Berkeley, and

Charleston Counties to remain whole. To close, the Senate voted to table five additional strike-all

amendments to amend S. 865 with a new proposed Congressional map—one amendment offered

by Sen. Martin and four by Sen. Hutto.

172. To close, the Senate approved S. 865 as amended and transmitted it back to the

House.

173. On January 25, 2022, the House reconvened without considering S. 865 as

amended by the Senate.

174. The next day, January 26, the House reconvened and voted to concur with S. 865

as amended by the Senate. Hours later, Gov. McMaster signed S. 865 into law.

State House Districts 7–9, 11, 41, 43, 51, 54–55, 57, 59–60, 63, 67, 70, 72–79, 90, 91, 93, 95,
101, and 105 are Racially Gerrymandered

175. Defendants racially gerrymandered at least 29 state House districts, in

contravention of the U.S. Constitution.

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176. South Carolina’s population grew by 10.7% between 2010 and 2020. Although

the BVAP grew only slightly over the last decade,20 it shifted within the state, leading to

significant population disparities between legislative districts that needed to be addressed to

ensure equality of access to representatives to all people and voters in the state, as well as the

non-dilution of the vote of protected citizens.

177. The House purportedly endeavored to balance the populations (within its criteria

of plus or minus 2.5% of the mathematical mean or 5% of the total population), comply with the

VRA and not racially gerrymander in contravention of the U.S. Constitution, and adhere to state

criteria based on its guidelines (e.g., keep districts contiguous and compact; and consider

communities of interest and incumbency protection).

178. Yet the House enacted a plan that overall dilutes South Carolinian Black voting

power by (i) packing Black voters in certain districts at unnecessarily high concentrations

without any indicia that they conducted an analysis that these populations were necessary to

satisfy the VRA, while also (ii) cracking Black voters in certain districts by increasing the

number of districts in which Black voters are kept at unnecessarily low populations, rendering

their voice ineffective in elections.

179. Indeed, the House drew very few districts in which Black voters comprise 30-50%

of the BVAP, which would provide them with the opportunity to influence elections for the

House.

180. This is despite the fact that Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP and its coalition

produced a map that, in balancing redistricting criteria and taking into account the State’s 27%

20
Unless otherwise indicated in this second amended complaint, BVAP uses the Census
Bureau’s Any Part Black or “AP Black” category for all districts.
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BVAP, developed more opportunity districts in which Black voters would be between 30–50%

of the VAP and, thus, have the ability to elect their candidates of choice.

181. In prioritizing race-based considerations, the House ignored its own redistricting

criteria. It ignored incumbent considerations by pitting Black representatives in House District

70 against one another. Where doing so allowed it to pack or crack Black voters, it ignored its

own criterion to keep districts compact and avoid slicing through communities of interest.

State House Districts 7, 8, 9, and 11 (Anderson County)

182. Race was the predominant factor in drawing State House Districts 7, 8, 9, and

11 in Anderson County, and it was not employed in a narrowly tailored manner to comply with

Section 2 of the VRA or any other compelling governmental interest.

183. A significant cluster of precincts with high BVAPs in the center of Anderson

County—which could have been combined to form one or more districts in which Black voters

form an influential voting bloc—are instead cracked into these four districts, in which BVAP is

driven down to around 20% or below. To effectuate this cracking, these district lines also split

multiple precincts, including splitting one precinct between Districts 7 and 11, one precinct

between Districts 8 and 11, and at least two precincts between Districts 7 and 9.

184. The figure below shows how these district lines knife through the center of the

City of Anderson, unnecessarily splitting the area into four districts like a shattered mirror.21

21
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
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185. Defendants knew that this cracking of Black voters, who form a community of

interest (“COI”) because of shared history, including the above-mentioned voting discrimination

in South Carolina, and shared voting patterns in Anderson, was unnecessary.

186. Cracking and submerging Black voters in these districts ensure that their voices

will be diluted given RPV patterns present in Anderson as in other parts of the state. According

to an analysis of the 2020 election for U.S. Senate in Anderson County, Mr. Harrison received

only 19% of white voter support, despite receiving 92% of Black voter support. Similarly, in the

2018 election for the Secretary of State, in Anderson County, the candidate of choice of Black

voters only received 17% of white voter support, despite receiving 93% of Black voter support.

Likewise in Anderson County, the candidate of choice of Black voters for State Treasurer only

received 16% of white voter support, despite receiving 88% of Black voter support.

187. Moreover, the map that Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP submitted on October 8,

2021 (below) keeps the Anderson community of interest largely whole, creating a single district

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which, based on an analysis of RPV patterns, provides that Black voters have a chance of

electing or influencing the election of the candidate of their choice. By comparison, none of

Districts 7, 8, 9, or 11 in Defendants’ map has any realistic chance of doing so.22

188. On November 30, 2021, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP warned that failure “to

make necessary changes [to these districts] [would] continue to crack Black voters in the

communities . . . particularly in the City of Anderson in Anderson County[,] [thereby]

render[ing] Black voters with little to no ability to influence elections in these areas of the

State.”23

22
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
23
NAACP LDF, S.C. NAACP, ACLU, and ACLU S.C., Supplemental Comments on the
House Judiciary Committee’s Proposed State House Redistricting Plan, 8,
https://www.naacpldf.org/wp-content/uploads/Second-Set-of-Supplemental-Comments-on-
House-Judiciary-Committees-Proposed-House-Plan-11-30-21.final_.pdf.
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189. Indeed, shattering this community of interest violates the House’s own

redistricting criteria, in addition to the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment

and is probative of the intentional dilution of Black voting strength in Anderson.

190. Forcing these House districts into the heart of Anderson also makes them

relatively non-compact. House Districts 9 and 11, in particular, are over twice as non-compact

using statistical measures of compactness as the corresponding districts that Plaintiffs submitted

to the Legislature.

191. Moreover, based on a statewide analysis of the probability of electing a Black-

preferred candidate in South Carolina at different levels of BVAP, the reduction from an

approximately 38% BVAP district (as in the above proposed plan) to an approximately 21%

BVAP district, or even lower (as in Districts 7, 8, 9, and 11 in the adopted plan) can be very

significant.

192. Though estimates would vary somewhat by region, at approximately 38% BVAP,

there may be almost a 50% chance of electing a Black-preferred candidate. When a district is

forced down to approximately 21% BVAP—as in adopted State House District 11—this chance

of electing a candidate of choice of Black voters falls precipitously: down to about 3%. At

around 16% BVAP—as in adopted State House District 9—the chance of electing a Black-

preferred candidate is even lower: approximately 1%.

193. No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the

VRA, justifies the use of race to crack Anderson into these four districts.

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State House Districts 41 and 43 (Chester County)

194. Race was the predominant factor in drawing State House Districts 41 and

43 in Chester County. Race was not employed in a narrowly tailored manner to advance

compliance with Section 2 of the VRA or any other compelling governmental interest.

195. State House District 41, a majority-Black district mostly made up of Fairfield

County, reaches up past the Fairfield County line to create a bizarrely shaped, bunny-eared

appendage that grabs the Black-majority City of Chester, as well as other areas comprised

heavily of Black voters in Chester County. In the process, Defendants split eight precincts in

Chester County across State House Districts 41 and 43.

196. Defendants were on notice, via the map Plaintiffs submitted on October 8, that

neighboring State House District 43 could have been drawn more compactly to include Chester

County, the city of Chester, and potentially nearby Lancaster, to create a district in which Black

voters would have greater influence.

197. The figure below reveals how the irregular and non-compact district lines in

Chester County were drawn to carve out Black communities in a manner that allowed map-

drawers to minimize Black voters’ influence in neighboring districts.24

24
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
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198. No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the

VRA, justifies the use of race in drawing Districts 41 and 43.

State House Districts 51 and 67 (Sumter County)

199. Race was the predominant factor in drawing State House Districts 51 and

67 in Sumter County, and it was not employed to comply with Section 2 of the VRA or in a

narrowly tailored manner to advance any other compelling governmental interest.

200. The border between majority-Black State House District 51 and District 67 cuts

through the city of Sumter on clear racial lines. As a result of this irregular border, District 67 is

also one of the least compact districts in the entire state House using statistical measures of

compactness, and its shape is particularly irregular. These erratic district lines leave District 51

with a BVAP of 61.2%, and District 67 with BVAP of only 28.1%.

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201. The figure below reveals how district lines in Sumter County carefully carve out

Black populations around Sumter to pack Black voters into District 51.25

202. Black voters in Sumter form a community of interest because of, among other

things, voting patterns and shared history.

203. No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the

VRA, justifies the use of race to unnecessarily pack Black voters into District 51 and to

intentionally dilute Black voting strength through the packing and cracking in these districts.

25
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
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State House Districts 54, 55, 57, and 105 (Dillon County and Horry County)

204. Race was the predominant factor in drawing State House Districts 54, 55, 57, and

105 in northeastern South Carolina, including Marlboro County, Dillon County, Horry County,

and Marion County, and it was not employed to comply with Section 2 of the VRA or in a

narrowly tailored manner to advance any other compelling governmental interest.

205. State House District 55, largely based in Dillon County, reaches out and extends

far past the Dillon County line and into areas with large white voters in Horry County. This

brings the BVAP of District 55 down to 39.4%. Meanwhile, there are three majority-Black

districts that surround District 55, and District 55 could have been drawn much more compactly

by pulling, in part, from these nearby areas, rather than stretching all the way out to (select parts

of) the city of Loris in Horry County. Indeed, District 55 is one of the least compact districts in

the state House using statistical measures of compactness.

206. The figure below reveals how these district lines around Marlboro County, Dillon

County, Marion County, and Horry County are drawn to create a long and irregularly shaped

District 55 that needlessly caps BVAP at 39.4%.26

26
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
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207. The portion of the border between State House District 55 and District 105 around

the city of Loris cracks the Black population in this area by not only splitting the city of Loris,

but also splitting seven nearby precincts. This district line needlessly divides these communities

of interest in Horry based on voting patterns and the above-mentioned shared history and leaves

District 55 with 39.4% BVAP.

208. Submerging Black voters among white voters in the redrawing of the lines in

these areas of the state is likely to diminish Black voters’ voting power given the above-

mentioned RPV voting patterns at the state and county level across South Carolina. For example,

in the 2020 election for U.S. Senate in Horry County, Mr. Harrison received only 23% of white

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voter support, while receiving 87% of Black voter support. In the 2018 election for Secretary of

State in Horry County, the candidate of choice of Black voters only received 27% of white voter

support, despite receiving 81% of Black voter support. And in the 2018 election for State

Treasurer in Horry County, the candidate of choice of Black voters only received 26% of white

voter support, despite receiving 79% of Black voter support.

209. The figure below reveals how, after unnecessarily extending State House District

55 deep down into heavily white Horry County, all the way to the city of Loris, the district lines

in Horry County then proceed to crack the Black community around Loris and impair the ability

of these voters to have a meaningful opportunity to impact elections in their assigned district.27

27
Although other figures throughout the complaint generally show municipalities in dotted
gray lines, this figure shows the city of Loris in dotted blue lines for visual clarity. The other
elements of the figure remain the same: district lines appear in yellow, and counties in dotted red
lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with darker areas indicating a
higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with the number below the
district number showing BVAP for that district, and the number below that showing the
population deviation of the district.
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210. No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the

VRA, justifies the use of race to produce these lines and intentionally pack and crack Black

voters in these districts.

State House Districts 59, 60, 63, and 101 (Florence County and Williamsburg County)

211. Race was the predominant factor in drawing State House Districts 59, 60, and 63

in Florence County, as well as District 101 in neighboring Williamsburg County, and it was not

employed to comply with Section 2 of the VRA or in a narrowly tailored manner to advance any

other compelling governmental interest.

212. The city of Florence is split among three districts: District 59, 60, and 63. The

border between these districts follows clear racial lines, and the border between Districts 59 and

60 splits one precinct, the border between Districts 60 and 63 splits at least three precincts, and

the border between Districts 59 and 63 splits at least seven precincts. As a result, District 59 has

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60.8% BVAP, while District 60 has 30.5% BVAP, and District 63 has 25.6% BVAP. Compared

to the rest of the adopted state House districts, Districts 59 and 60 are also both relatively non-

compact using statistical measures of compactness.

213. The figure below reveals how district lines in Florence unnecessarily pack Black

voters into District 59.28

28
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
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214. Defendants also were on notice, via letters submitted by Plaintiff South Carolina

NAACP and other organizations on October 8, November 15, and November 30, that Black

incumbent legislators in District 59 had “been paired and will be forced to compete against one

another,” despite their own criteria that “[r]easonable efforts may be made to ensure that

incumbent legislators are not placed into districts where they will be compelled to run against

other incumbent members of the South Carolina House”29 and the fact that Plaintiff South

Carolina NAACP’s proposed plan showed the legislature “a way to meet its constitutional and

statutory obligations and respect other redistricting principles without pairing such

incumbents.”30 Despite this notice, Defendants persisted in using race as a predominant factor in

its redistricting process.

215. No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the

VRA, justifies the use of race to pack Black voters into District 59 and to intentionally dilute

Black voting strength through the packing and cracking in these districts.

216. On the other side of District 60, majority-Black District 101 extends past the

Williamsburg County line to grab areas of Lake City that have heavy BVAPs, splitting and

excising these areas from the rest of Florence County. As a result, District 101 is packed with

29
S.C. House of Rep. Judiciary Comm. Redistricting Ad Hoc Committee, 2021 Guidelines
and Criteria for Congressional and Legislative Redistricting (Aug. 3, 2021), available at
https://redistricting.schouse.gov/docs/2021%20Redistricting%20Guidelines.pdf.
30
NAACP LDF, S.C. NAACP, ACLU, and ACLU S.C., Supplemental Comments on the
House Judiciary Committee’s Proposed State House Redistricting Plan, 8,
https://www.naacpldf.org/wp-content/uploads/Second-Set-of-Supplemental-Comments-on-
House-Judiciary-Committees-Proposed-House-Plan-11-30-21.final_.pdf.
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59.0% BVAP, while District 60 is left with only 30.5% BVAP. The figure below reveals how

these district lines pack Black voters into District 101.31

31
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
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217. No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the

VRA, justifies the use of race to unnecessarily pack Black voters into District 101 and to

intentionally dilute Black voting strength in the manner described above.

State House Districts 70, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, and 79 (Richland County)

218. Race was the predominant factor in drawing State House Districts 70, 72, 73, 74,

75, 76, 78, and 79 in Richland County, and it was not employed to comply with Section 2 of the

VRA or in a narrowly tailored manner to advance any other compelling governmental interest.

219. The figure below reveals how district lines throughout Richland County pack

Black voters into Districts 70, 73, 74, 76, 77, and 79, with BVAP ranging from 55.7% to 66.6%.

By packing these districts, the map also reduces the influence of Black voters in neighboring

Districts 72, 75, and 78.

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220. District 70 includes the area of Richland County southeast of Columbia (formerly

District 80). By combining previous Districts 70 and 80 into a single new District 70, Richland

County will lose a state House seat, with the new district now pitting current Black incumbents

Wendy Brawley and Jermaine Johnson against one another. By eliminating former District 80

and moving it to become a new district in Charleston, this also left District 70 packed, with

BVAP of 66.3%.

221. The border between majority-Black District 70 and Districts 72, 75, and 78 clearly

follows racial lines. As a result, District 72 only has 26.7% BVAP, District 75 has 17.9% BVAP,

and District 78 has 33.0% BVAP. The figure below reveals how these district lines pack Black

voters into District 70.

222. The western side of District 78 includes an appendage that reaches out to grab the

areas of Arcadia Lakes that are comprised of heavy populations of white voters, while leaving
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out all the areas that are comprised of significant populations of Black voters in neighboring

District 76. This leaves District 76—which is one of the least compact districts in the state House

using statistical measures of compactness—with a BVAP of 66.6%, while bringing District 78’s

BVAP down to 33.0%. The figure below reveals how these district lines pack Black voters into

District 76 and reduce Black voters’ influence in District 78.32

223. District 72, another of the very least compact districts in the state House using

statistical measures of compactness, is drawn with an irregular shape and a BVAP of only

26.7%, when it could easily be drawn to give Black voters greater influence in elections in this

district. Meanwhile, neighboring majority-Black district 74 is packed with 55.65% BVAP. The

32
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
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border between Districts 72 and 74 splits three precincts. The figure below reveals how district

lines in Richland County pack Black voters into District 74.33

224. No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the

VRA, justifies the use of race to unnecessarily pack Black voters into Districts 70, 73, 74, 76, 77,

and 79 and reduce the influence of Black voters in Districts 72, 75, and 78 and to intentionally

dilute Black voting strength through the packing and cracking in these districts.

33
In this and other figures, district lines appear in yellow, counties in dotted red lines, and
municipalities in dotted gray lines. Green shading indicates the concentration of the BVAP, with
darker areas indicating a higher BVAP percentage. District numbers appear in black boxes, with
the number below the district number showing BVAP for that district and the number below that
showing the population deviation of the district.
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State House Districts 90, 91, 93, and 95 (Orangeburg County)

225. Race was the predominant factor in drawing State House Districts 90, 91, 93, and

95 in Orangeburg County, and it was not employed to comply with Section 2 of the VRA or in a

narrowly tailored manner to advance any other compelling governmental interest.

226. District 90 crosses county lines to pull in voters from the City of Orangeburg,

which has a Black population of 76%, and pack the district at 56% BVAP. By contrast, for

example, Plaintiffs’ October 8 map demonstrates that District 90 can be drawn in such a way as

to respect county lines and avoid extending upward into Orangeburg.

227. Defendants increased District 93’s BVAP an unusually high amount, from 43% to

51%, unnecessarily moving a large number of BVAP precincts into the area. By contrast, for

example, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP’s October 8 map demonstrates that this district could

easily be drawn in such a way as to avoid packing Black voters.

228. By slicing through Orangeburg County, including the City of Orangeburg, along

racial lines, the House contravenes its own criterion to avoid “[b]izarrely-shaped districts,”
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identifying and sorting voters with the purpose of harming voters of color. Members of the public

put the House Committee on notice of how these splits would negatively harm Black communities

and split communities of interest.

229. No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the

VRA, justifies the use of race to carve up Orangeburg and ignore vital community interests at

stake.34

Congressional Districts 1, 2, and 5 are Racially Gerrymandered

230. As noted above, recent Census results show that South Carolina experienced

significant population shifts and growth in the past decade. These changes created unequal

apportionment among South Carolina’s seven congressional districts. Most significantly, CD 1

was nearly 12% overpopulated, while CD 6 was 11.59% underpopulated. Below are the

population shifts in all seven congressional districts.

Deviation
2010 2020 from Ideal Percent
District Shift
Population Population 2020 Deviation
Population
1 660,766 818,893 +158,127 +87,689 11.99%
2 660,766 721,829 +61,063 -9,375 -1.28%
3 660,767 706,785 +46,018 -24,419 -3.34%
4 660,766 760,233 +99,467 +29,029 3.97%
5 660,766 736,286 +75,520 +5,082 0.70%
6 660,766 646,463 -14,303 -84,741 -11.59%
7 660,767 727,936 +67,169 -3,268 -0.45%
231. The Legislature repeatedly heard from members of the public and legislators that

any lawful congressional map must preserve CD 6 as a district that provides Black voters with an

34
During the December 2, 2021 House debate, Rep. Govan (also a South Carolina NAACP
member) conveyed that Orangeburg County Council and leadership in the City of Orangeburg
are concerned about cracking communities of interest and combining communities in Bamberg,
Barnwell, and Allendale “that have nothing in common with Orangeburg.”
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effective opportunity to elect their preferred candidates—that is, an effective minority-

opportunity district—consistent with Section 2 of the VRA. The Legislature was also repeatedly

reminded that it could not needlessly pack Black voters into CD 6 from CD 1 or any other

district to correct for malapportionment in CDs 1 and 6. More specifically, as described in ¶¶ 95–

174, members of the public and legislators warned against splitting Black voters from their

communities of interest in Charleston, Richland, and Sumter Counties to correct the population

disparities among the districts.

232. Members of the public and legislators, for example, repeatedly urged legislators

not to crack Black communities of interest in CD 1, including the areas in which Black people

have historically lived in West Ashley, or split the cities of North Charleston and Charleston

because these cities form a single community of interest based on shared history, voting patterns,

and socioeconomic realities. Public testimony also emphasized a strong preference by residents

to keep Charleston Counties whole in CD 1.

233. Members of the public and legislators also urged legislators to ensure that Black

voters, who represent 29% of voters statewide, had an opportunity to elect candidates of choice

or at minimum influence elections outside of just CD 6, the sole majority-Black district in the

state. In one of Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP’s proposed maps, for example, the BVAP in

CD 1 was 34%.

234. But the Legislature discounted and ignored this testimony. Instead, it enacted a

map that does the bare minimum to correct for population deviations, particularly in CDs 1 and

6, while harming Black voters not only in those two districts, but in almost all of the other ones.

235. The Legislature significantly dropped the BVAP in CD 6, and, given RPV

patterns, also ensured that no other district would have a meaningful opportunity for Black voters

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to elect candidates of their choice. These changes result in a significantly reduced BVAP in CD

6, but no benefit of increasing Black voters’ ability to meaningfully elect or even influence the

election of candidates of choice in other CDs—benefits which various maps submitted by

members of the public did provide.

236. While CD 6 now has a 46.9% BVAP that may still be an effective district for

Black voters, the Legislature used race as a predominate factor to draw the Challenged

Congressional Districts in a way that was not narrowly tailored to comply with Section 2 of the

VRA or any other compelling governmental interest.

237. The Legislature moved a disproportionate number of the white VAP (“WVAP”)

from CD 2, particularly in Richland County, into CD6. More specifically, based on an analysis,

the Legislature moved VTDs with a significant majority of white voters, who have preferred

Democratic candidates in recent elections from Richland County in CD2 and brought them into

CD 6 from Richland County. At the same time, it left VTDs with a majority of Black voters who

prefer Democratic candidates in recent elections in Richland in CD2, though those VTDs were

available to be moved into CD 6. There is thus an inference that race, not party, drove the

selection of voters that were moved into CD 6 and left in CD 2.

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Richland

238. Under S. 865, the Legislature also moved Black voters out of CD 6, including

from Berkeley, Orangeburg, and Richland Counties. Based on the level of RPV discussed above

in ¶¶ 186–87, 208, the Legislature’s actions here will result in subsuming Black voters in the

minority among a majority of white voters, who, based on an analysis of recent elections,

consistently vote against Black-preferred candidates in congressional and other elections.

239. Under S. 865, despite a purported concern in the redistricting criteria for keeping

municipal boundaries whole, the Legislature also split the municipal boundaries of Charleston

between CDs 1 and 6. This deviation from the Legislature’s own redistricting principles was

done to grab Black voters from CD 1, such as the Black population of West Ashley, and bring

them into CD 6. As a result, CD 1 now has a disproportionately small portion of the Black

population of Charleston County, limiting the ability of Black voters to influence elections in

CD 1.

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No compelling governmental interest, including compliance with Section 2 of the VRA, justifies

the use of race to move Black voters into CD 6 by cracking communities of interest CD 1.

240. Under S. 865, despite a purported concern for keeping counties and municipalities

whole according to its criteria, the Legislature unnecessarily splits Florence, Orangeburg,

Richland, and Sumter Counties and, in at least one case, a municipality within Sumter County. In

so doing, Black communities within these areas are dispersed among CDs 2, 5, and 7,

purposefully subsumed in congressional districts with a majority of white voters, which, in the

presence of RPV patterns, will render Black voters unable to meaningfully influence

congressional elections in those districts.

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Florence

Orangeburg

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Richland

As one example, under S. 865, CD 6 reaches into Sumter County to grab VTDs with

significant populations of Black voters in the city of Sumter. In so doing, the Legislature left

other Black voters in Sumter in CD5 where they lack any opportunity to elect given the known

voting patterns in congressional and other elections. No compelling governmental interest,

including compliance with Section 2 of the VRA, justifies the use of race to crack Black voters

in CDs 2, 5, and 7.

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Sumter

241. In comparison to S. 865, Plaintiff South Carolina NAACP proposed two plans to

the Legislature. One of them kept Charleston County whole within CD 1, like other maps

proposed to the Legislature. The other map split Charleston between CDs 1 and 7 to allow the

creation of a second minority-opportunity district for Black voters. However, as enacted, CD 1

splits Charleston while developing no new opportunity and maintaining approximately the same

level of BVAP in CD 1 as under the benchmark plan. S. 865 flies in the face of the geography of

the state post-2020 which reflects the movement of Black people to the South Carolina coast. It

also disregards the various alternative plans that showed that the severe imbalance in population

between CD 1 and CD6 could be corrected, while at the same time preserving the ability of

Black voters to continue to elect candidates of their choice in CD 6, respecting communities of

interest in CD 1, and developing the BVAP in CD 1 to as high as 34%.

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242. Although the Legislature did not significantly change CDs 3, 4, and 7, notably it

did design a CD 5 that disproportionately moved white voters in and Black voters out. The result

is that the Legislature slightly decreased the BVAP of CD 5 to even lower than it had been under

the post-2011 benchmark plan.

243. S. 865 subordinated public input and made race the predominate factor in drawing

CDs 1, 2, and 5. The use of race was not narrowly tailored to comply with Section 2 of the VRA

or any other compelling governmental interest. The Legislature also subordinated traditional

race-neutral redistricting principles, including but not limited to, compactness, respecting county

and municipal boundaries, and respecting communities of actual shared interests.

244. For example, out of all voters in the “envelope” of possible counties in which CD

6 includes at least a part, Defendants chose to keep the majority of Black voters—whether

Democrats or Republicans—inside CD 6, while keeping a much smaller percentage of white

voters—also whether Democrats or Republicans.

245. Defendants did the opposite in CD 1. There, out of all voters in the envelope of

possible counties, Defendants kept the vast majority of white voters inside CD 1, regardless of

partisan affiliation. Conversely, Defendants only kept a much smaller percentage of possible

Black voters in CD 1, again regardless of partisan affiliation.

246. In other words, keeping partisan affiliation constant, the probability that VTDs

were moved into or kept inside CD 6 increased as BVAP increased. On the other hand, the

probability that VTDs were moved into or kept inside CD 1 increased as BVAP decreased.

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CAUSES OF ACTION

COUNT ONE
H. 4493’s violations of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
U.S. Const. amend. XIV; 42 U.S.C §1983
(Racial Gerrymandering)

247. Plaintiffs reallege and reincorporate by reference all prior paragraphs of this

Complaint and the paragraphs in the counts below as though fully set forth herein.

248. The Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution provides in relevant part:

“No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of

citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property,

without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of

the laws.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 2.

249. Under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S.

Constitution, racial classifications are prohibited unless narrowly tailored to serve a compelling

state interest.

250. Race was the predominant factor in the creation of Challenged State House

Districts adopted in H. 4493.

251. Race predominated over traditional redistricting principles such as maintaining

communities of interest, respecting county and municipal boundaries, having compact districts,

and protecting incumbents.

252. The use of race as the predominant factor with respect to of the Challenged State

House Districts in H. 4493 is not narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest, including

compliance with the VRA.

253. Thus, H. 4493 violates Plaintiffs’ rights under the Equal Protection Clause of the

Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.


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254. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law other than the judicial relief sought

here. The failure to temporarily and permanently enjoin enforcement of H. 4493 will irreparably

harm Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.

COUNT TWO
H. 4493’s violations of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution
U.S. Const. amends. XIV and XV; 42 U.S.C §1983
(Intentional Discrimination)

255. The relevant allegations contained in the preceding paragraphs are alleged as if

fully set forth herein.

256. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and the Fifteenth

Amendments of the U.S. Constitution forbids states from enacting laws for which a racially

discriminatory intent or purpose is a motivating factor.

257. The facts alleged herein reveal that the Challenged State House Districts in H.

4493 were adopted, at least in part, with a racially discriminatory intent to discriminate against

Black voters in violation of the U.S. Constitution.

258. H. 4493 will have a discriminatory impact on Black South Carolinians—a fact

that was foreseeable when Defendants drafted and passed the Challenged State House Districts

adopted in H. 4493. Elected officials in South Carolina have limited the influence of Black

voters through the purposeful cracking and packing of Black voters.

259. Moreover, other circumstantial evidence raises a strong inference of a

discriminatory purpose motivating the enactment of H. 4493, such as: South Carolina’s well-

documented history and ongoing record of discrimination against Black South Carolinians in

redistricting, particularly state legislative redistricting, and other voting practices; and the

sequences of events and flawed and non-transparent process which resulted in the enactment of

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H. 4493, including the disregard for constitutionally-compliant alternative maps offered by the

public and amendments offered by legislative members.

260. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law other than the judicial relief sought in

this case. The failure to enjoin the conduct of elections under H. 4493 and ordering of remedial

maps will irreparably harm Plaintiffs by subjecting them to intentionally racially discriminatory

districts for the next decade.

COUNT THREE
S. 865’s violations of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
U.S. Const. amend. XIV; 42 U.S.C §1983
(Racial Gerrymandering)

261. Plaintiffs reallege and reincorporate by reference all prior paragraphs of this

Complaint and the paragraphs in the counts below as though fully set forth herein.

262. The Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution provides in relevant part:

“No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of

citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property,

without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of

the laws.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 2.

263. Under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S.

Constitution, racial classifications are prohibited unless narrowly tailored to serve a compelling

state interest.

264. Race was the predominant factor in the creation of CDs 1, 2, and 5.

265. Race predominated over traditional redistricting principles such as maintaining

communities of interest, respecting county and municipal boundaries, and having compact

districts.

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266. The use of race as the predominant factor concerning CDs 1, 2 and 5 is not

narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest, including compliance with the VRA.

267. Thus, S. 865 violates Plaintiffs’ rights under the Equal Protection Clause of the

Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

268. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law other than the judicial relief sought here.

The failure to temporarily and permanently enjoin enforcement of S. 865 will irreparably harm

Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.

COUNT FOUR
S. 865’s violations of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution
U.S. Const. amends. XIV and XV; 42 U.S.C §1983
(Intentional Discrimination)

269. The relevant allegations contained in the preceding paragraphs are alleged as if

fully set forth herein.

270. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and the Fifteenth

Amendments of the U.S. Constitution forbid states from enacting laws for which a racially

discriminatory intent or purpose is a motivating factor.

271. The facts alleged herein reveal that the Challenged Congressional Districts were

adopted, at least in part, with a racially discriminatory intent to discriminate against Black voters

in violation of the U.S. Constitution.

272. S. 865 will have a discriminatory impact on Black South Carolinians—a fact that

was foreseeable when Defendants drafted and passed the Challenged Congressional Districts.

Elected officials in South Carolina have limited Black voters’ ability to elect or even influence

elections through the purposeful cracking and packing of Black voters.

273. Moreover, other circumstantial evidence raises a strong inference of a

discriminatory purpose motivating the enactment of S. 865, such as: South Carolina’s well-
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documented history and ongoing record of discrimination against Black South Carolinians in

redistricting, particularly state legislative redistricting, and other voting practices; and the

sequences of events and flawed and non-transparent process which resulted in the enactment of

S. 865, including the disregard for constitutionally-compliant alternative maps offered by the

public and amendments offered by legislative members.

274. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law other than the judicial relief sought in

this case. The failure to enjoin the conduct of elections under S. 865 and ordering of remedial

maps will irreparably harm Plaintiffs by subjecting them to intentionally racially discriminatory

districts for the next decade.

RELIEF REQUESTED

WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs respectfully requests that this Court:

i. Declare the Challenged State House Districts adopted in H. 4493 to be

unconstitutional as violating the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution

as racially gerrymandered districts;

ii. Declare the Challenged Congressional Districts adopted in S. 865 to be

unconstitutional as violating the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution

as racially gerrymandered districts;

iii. Declare the Challenged State House Districts adopted in H. 4493 to be

unconstitutional as violating the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the

U.S. Constitution as passed with discriminatory intent as a motivating factor;

iv. Declare the Challenged Congressional Districts adopted in S. 865 to be

unconstitutional as violating the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the

U.S. Constitution as passed with discriminatory intent as a motivating factor;

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v. Preliminary and permanently enjoin Defendants and their agents from calling,

holding, supervising or certifying any elections under H. 4493 and S. 865 until a

constitutionally and VRA-complaint remedial plan is adopted for the 2022

elections;

vi. Order expedited hearings and briefing, consider evidence, and take any other

action necessary for the Court to order a VRA-complaint for new South Carolina

state House and Congressional districts;

vii. Set an immediate and reasonable deadline for Defendants to adopt and enact a

congressional redistricting plan that (1) does not dilute, cancel out, or minimize

the voting strength of Black South Carolinian voters or subject them to

intentionally discriminatory districts, and (2) does not violate the VRA, federal

and state constitutions, and other applicable law;

viii. Order new redistricting maps if Defendants fail to adopt maps that conforms with

this Court’s judgment;

ix. Order changes to any relevant 2022 election-related deadlines to allow the

adoption of congressional and state legislative maps that conform with this

Court’s judgment;

x. Retain jurisdiction over this matter until Defendants enact compliant maps by this

Court’s deadline;

xi. Retain jurisdiction over this matter for such a period it deems appropriate and

require Defendants to submit future congressional and state legislative

redistricting plans for preclearance review from this court or the U.S. Attorney

General under Section 3(c) of the VRA, 52 U.S.C. § 10302(c);

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xii. Award Plaintiffs’ attorneys’ fees and costs in this action; and

xiii. Grant such other and further relief as this Court deems just and proper in the

circumstances.

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Dated: February 10, 2022 Respectfully submitted,

Leah C. Aden** /s/ Christopher J. Bryant


Stuart Naifeh** Christopher J. Bryant, Fed. ID 12538
Raymond Audain** Boroughs Bryant, LLC
John S. Cusick** 1122 Lady St., Ste. 208
NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. Columbia, SC 29201
40 Rector St, 5th Fl. Tel.: (843) 779-5444
NY, NY 10006 chris@boroughsbryant.com
Tel.: (212) 965-7715
laden@naacpldf.org Somil B. Trivedi**
Patricia Yan**
Antonio L. Ingram II** American Civil Liberties Union Foundation
NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. 915 15th St., NW
700 14th St, Ste. 600 Washington, DC 20005
Washington, D.C. 20005 Tel.: (202) 457-0800
Tel.: (202) 682-1300 strivedi@aclu.org
aingram@naacpldf.org
Allen Chaney, Fed. ID 13181
Adriel I. Cepeda Derieux** American Civil Liberties Union
Samantha Osaki** of South Carolina
Sophia Lin Lakin* Charleston, SC 29413-0998
American Civil Liberties Union Foundation Tel.: (843) 282-7953
125 Broad Street, 18th Floor Fax: (843) 720-1428
New York, NY 10004 achaney@aclusc.org
Tel.: (212) 549-2500
acepedaderieux@aclu.org Janette M. Louard*
Anthony P. Ashton*
John A. Freedman** Anna Kathryn Barnes*
Elisabeth S. Theodore* NAACP OFFICE OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL
Gina M. Colarusso* 4805 Mount Hope Drive
John “Jay” B. Swanson* Baltimore, MD 21215
John Mark Hindley** Tel: (410) 580-5777
ARNOLD & PORTER KAYE SCHOLER LLP jlouard@naacpnet.org
601 Massachusetts Ave., N.W. aashton@naacpnet.org
Washington, D.C. 20001 abarnes@naacpnet.org
Tel: (202) 942-5000
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
Jeffrey A. Fuisz**
Paula Ramer** * Motion for admission Pro Hac Vice forthcoming
Jonathan I. Levine* ** Admitted Pro Hac Vice
Theresa M. House*
ARNOLD & PORTER KAYE SCHOLER LLP
250 West 55th Street
New York, NY 10019
Tel: (212) 836-8000
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Sarah Gryll**
ARNOLD & PORTER KAYE SCHOLER LLP
70 West Madison Street, Suite 4200
Chicago, IL 60602-4231
Tel: (312) 583-2300

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