Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by published opinion. Judge WILKINS wrote the opinion, in which Judge WILLIAMS and Judge GEORGE ROSS ANDERSON joined.
Honiss W. Cane, Jr. and others
I.
Worcester County is a predominantly rural county on the southeastern shore of Maryland bordering Delaware and Virginia. According to the 1990 Census, the County’s total population is 35,028, of which 7,448 (or 21.26%) are African-American. The voting age population of the County is 27,331, of which 5,237 (or 19.16%) are African-American. The County’s African-American population is concentrated in the communities of Pocomoke, Stockton, Snow Hill, and Berlin.
The Board is composed of five commissioners and serves as the legislative and executive body of the County. When this action was filed in November 1992, County law provided that the commissioners of the Board be elected at large under a residency district system. The County was divided into four residency districts, and four commissioners were required to reside in the residency district corresponding to the Board seat for which they were elected. The fifth member was a commissioner-at-large, who was required to be a resident of the County but was not required to reside in any particular district.
In May 1993, after this action was filed but before the first hearing was held, the Board passed Bill 93-6, which amended the voting scheme for electing commissioners to the Board. The revised plan maintained the at-large electoral scheme, but divided the County into five residency districts, eliminating the commissioner-at-large position and establishing a fifth designated post. The legislative findings accompanying Bill 93-6 indicate that the Board determined that a fifth population center had developed and that this change in population patterns warranted the creation of the fifth residency district.
After conducting a bench trial on the merits, the district court issued a memorandum opinion dated January 7, 1994, containing its findings of fact and conclusions of law. Cane v. Worcester County, Md.,
Plaintiffs submitted two proposed remedial plans and moved for the district court to adopt one of them. The first plan proposed by Plaintiffs, Plan A, provided for a single-member district system composed of five dis-
The district court concluded that the County’s current plan, embodied in Bill 93-6, was legally unacceptable because it failed to remedy the established § 2 violation. Cane v. Worcester County, Md.,
II.
Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act prohibits any “qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure ... which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color” or membership in a language minority group. 42 U.S.C.A. § 1973(a). A denial or abridgement of the right to vote in violation of § 2 is established when:
[Biased on the totality of circumstances, it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or election ... are not equally open to participation by members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a) of this section in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice. The extent to which members of a protected class have been elected to office in the State or political subdivision is one circumstance which may be considered: Provided, That nothing in this section establishes a right to have members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in the population.
42 U.S.C.A. § 1973(b).
In order to prove that the use of a multimember district dilutes their votes in violation of § 2, members of a protected minority group must establish three “necessary preconditions.”’ Thornburg v. Gingles,
A.
In its analysis of the first Gingles precondition, the district court reviewed two alternative single-member district plans submitted by Plaintiffs. Cane,
With respect to the second Gingles precondition, the district court first noted that the two statistical methods used by the parties’ experts to' evaluate voting behavior in Worcester County failed to produce reliable statistical evidence because of the lack of available data and a truncated analysis caused by the small number of districts and lack of a majority African-American district. Id. at 1087-88. The court then proceeded to review the results of both endogenous and exogenous elections, concluding that African-Americans exhibited a significant degree of political cohesion when consideration was given to the race, political party, and experience of individual candidates. See id. at 1087-89. Further, the evidence showed that in towns in Worcester County that had converted
In its analysis of the third and final Gin-gles precondition, the district court first reviewed the results of the two County commissioner elections in which the minority-preferred candidate was an African-American. Id. In each of these elections, the minority-preferred candidate received only a small percentage of the white vote. Id. A review of exogenous elections demonstrated similar voting patterns: The minority-preferred candidates in both national and local elections generally received a small percentage of the vote from white voters in Worcester County. Id. at 1089-90.
The court concluded that this evidence of white bloc voting was legally significant due to the structure of the scheme for electing commissioners to the Board. Id. at 1090. Under the at-large residency district system, minority candidates were required to run one-on-one, countywide against individual white candidates. Even taking into consideration the white crossover vote, which averaged 19 percent, the court found that the at-large electoral system debased the value of African-American political strength because the combined African-American and white-crossover vote would be unable to elect an African-American candidate. This conclusion was supported by evidence that in the history of Worcester County an African-American candidate has never won a countywide, head-to-head contest against a white candidate. Id.
Once it found that the three Gingles preconditions were satisfied, the district court reviewed other factors in determining whether, under a totality of circumstances, the system of electing commissioners to the Board violated § 2. Id. at 1090-91. The court specifically noted that African-Americans were denied the right to vote in Maryland until 1870 and that in the early 1900s the State employed voting prerequisites that enhanced the opportunity for discrimination against African-Americans. Id. at 1091. Taking into consideration these factors and those discussed above, the court concluded that “under the totality of the circumstances, the current system for election to the Worcester County Commission interacts with past and present discrimination to deprive African-Americans of Worcester County the same ‘opportunity [as] other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice.’ ” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting 42 U.S.C.A. § 1973(b)).
B.
Having carefully reviewed the record, we are unable to conclude that the district court was clearly erroneous in finding that the use of an at-large residency district system for electing commissioners to the Board impermissibly diluted the votes of African-Americans.
III.
Once a violation of § 2 of the Voting Rights Act has been established, a district court should give the appropriate legislative body the first opportunity to devise a remedial plan. McGhee v. Granville County, N.C.,
A.
The County asserts that the district court erred in concluding that Bill 93-6 was a legally unacceptable plan. A proposed plan is a legally unacceptable remedy if “it violates ... constitutional or statutory voting rights — that is, [if] it fails to meet the same standards applicable to an original challenge of’ an electoral scheme. Id. Bill 93-6 altered the former electoral scheme by eliminating the commissioner-at-large position and creating a fifth residency district. Each of the •five commissioners of the Board were still elected at-large. This amendment of the County’s electoral scheme did not remedy the system’s dilution-by-submergence effect because ' it1 retained at-large voting — the structural cause of the vote dilution. As conceded by the County at oral argument, minority-preferred candidates are no- more likely to win a seat on the Board under the scheme established by Bill 93-6 than they were under the former electoral scheme. Bill 93-6 is not a legally acceptable remedy and the district court properly rejected it.
B.
With respect to the remedy imposed by the district court, the County principally argues that cumulative voting is a radical departure from traditional elections systems, and thus, it may not be judicially imposed to remedy a § 2 violation. Justice Thomas recently suggested that “nothing in our present understanding of the Voting Rights Act places a principled limit on the authority of federal courts that would prevent them from instituting a system of cumulative voting as a
As noted above, we stated in McGhee that if the remedial plan proposed by the appropriate legislative body is legally acceptable, the district court must “accord great deference to legislative judgments about the exact nature and scope of the proposed remedy.”
In reviewing the two plans submitted by Plaintiffs, the district court recognized its obligation “to give great deference to legislative judgments about the nature and scope of the proposed remedy and to reconcile the requirements of the statute with the goals of county political policy.” Cane,
However, the district court failed to give due deference to another legislative judgment set forth in the record. The County clearly expressed a preference for residency requirements that would ensure that the Board members were knowledgeable of and responsive to the diverse interests of the various regions of the County. The legislative findings accompanying Bill 93-6 provided that “[t]he Maryland General Assembly has recognized the desirability of, and Worcester County has for almost two centuries been well served by, having the governing body of the County representative of the distinct southern, central, and northern areas of the County.” Since 1798, the County government has been structured to allow the members of the County’s governing body to “be disbursed as equally as may be throughout the County.” In amending the district system to add a fifth residency district, the Board explained that:
The best interests of the citizens in each of the different areas of the County can be best served by.... retaining the existing four commissioner residence districts with the creation of a new fifth commissioner residence district from a portion of the existing Commissioner District No. 3 so that there shall be one Commissioner from each of the population centers, or surrounding area, who shall be familiar with and knowledgeable of the people, condi*929 tions, needs and concerns of that particular section of the County.
In adopting the cumulative voting plan set forth in Plan B, the district court failed to defer to this expressed legislative preference. It abolished the residency districts, imposing a plan that would permit all five seats on the Board to be filled by individuals living in the same general area of the County. In sum, it failed to adequately defer to the “variety of political judgments about the dynamics of [the] overall electoral process that rightly pertain to the legislative prerogative of’ the County. McGhee,
IV.
When a political subdivision fails to submit a legally acceptable proposed remedy, the appropriate course for the district court to follow is to fashion a remedy that complies with § 2 and effectuates to the greatest extent possible the policy judgments expressed by the County. However, here the district court failed to rule on the legality of the scheme set forth in Bill 93-6 — the electoral system in effect at the time the matter was pending before the court. Therefore, the County was not advised that its current electoral system, Bill 93-6, violated § 2 when it was directed to submit a proposed remedy.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The other named Plaintiffs include Fannie Birckhead, James L. Purnell, Sr., Saunders Marshall, Edward V. DeShields, William Waters, Gabriel L. Purnell, the Worcester County Voting Rights Coalition, and the Worcester County Branch of the NAACP.
. In addition to the County, Plaintiffs brought this action against the members of the Worcester County Board of Commissioners, George M. Hurley, John E. Bloxom, Reginald T. Hancock, Floyd F. Bassett, and Jeanne Lynch, as well as George H. Diyden, Hinson Finney, and Mark Frostrom — members of the Board of Supervisors of Elections for Worcester County.
. The district court summarized Plan A as follows:
A single-member district arrangement with one black majority district.... Under this Plan, the candidates for the five-member Board must be residents of the district from which they seek election, and only those voters who reside within the district are eligible to vote for candidates seeking election from that district. The candidate who receives the most votes in each district is elected to the Commission.
Cane v. Worcester County, Md.,
. The text of Plan B provides:
A cumulative voting plan — an at-large election system in which five Commissioners are elected by all registered voters within the County. Each voter may cast up to five votes in Commission elections, and may cumulate his or her votes for one or more chosen candidates. Winning candidates are the top five vote-get-ters of all Commission candidates vying for office, elected by a simple plurality of votes. The cumulative voting plan applies both to primary elections and generad elections for Worcester County Commission.
.While the opinion of the district court is not clear regarding the treatment of the residency districts, the parties agreed at oral argument that the residency districts were abolished under the cumulative voting plan imposed by the district court.
. With respect to the finding of a § 2 violation by the district court, the County principally contends that Plaintiffs have failed to satisfy the first Gingles precondition of geographical compactness because the creation of a single-member majority African-American district would require district lines to be drawn solely on the basis of race — a practice condemned by the Supreme Court in Shaw v. Reno,-U.S.-,-,
The County asserts that the creation of a majority African-American district would ignore
. As we noted above, Bill 93-6 and the County’s former electoral system are structurally identical for purposes of a § 2 analysis. Therefore, we need not remand the case to allow the district court to find in the first instance that Bill 93-6 violates § 2.
. At oral argument, the County expressed a strong preference for a single-member district plan, assuming the finding of a violation was upheld. It indicated that it had previously failed to express a preference between the two plans submitted by Plaintiffs because it interpreted our decision in Neal v. Harris,
