After determining that the reapportionment plan for the State Senate and House of Representatives, passed by the Mississippi Legislature in January 1971, failed to comply with the Equal Protection Clause because of a total variance of 26% between the largest and the smallest senatorial district (a determination that was not appealed),
1
the District Court fashioned its own plan for
*550
the quadrennial elections for both Houses scheduled for 1971, and these elections were held under the court’s plan.
Connor
v.
Johnson,
Appellants rely on our recent cases invalidating congressional redistricting statutes that contained total variations of 5.97%,
Kirkpatrick
v.
Preisler,
But conceding,
arguendo,
that the District Court’s plan does not precisely square with Fourteenth Amendment requirements, it does not necessarily follow that the 1971 elections must be invalidated and new elections ordered.
Mann
v.
Davis,
The prospective validity of the plan for the 1975 elections, absent legislative action, poses different issues, but we need not decide those questions at the present time. Under the District Court plan, approximately one-fifth of the seats in both Houses were filled by at-large elections from temporary countywide districts in 1971.
3
The District Court retained jurisdiction over these three counties and ordered that a Special Master be appointed in January 1972 to “take testimony and make findings as to whether the Counties of Hinds, Harrison, and Jackson may feasibly be divided into districts of substantially equal numbers in population for the elections of 1975 and 1979.”
So ordered.
Notes
A three-judge court has twice previously voided apportionment plans enacted by the Mississippi Legislature because they embodied impermissible population variances.
Connor
v.
Johnson,
There are 52 seats in the State Senate and 122 seats in the State House of Representatives. According to the 1970 census, Mississippi has a population of 2,216,912, making the ideal single-member Senate district one containing 42,633 persons and the ideal single-member House district one containing 18,171 persons. Under the court’s plan, Senate district 29 (46,719 persons, one Senator) is 9.6% underrepresented, and district 19 (77,320 persons, two Senators) is 9.3% overrepresented. House district 18 (32,772 persons, two Representatives) is 9.8% overrepresented, and House district 3 (59,912 persons, three Representatives) is 9.9% underrepresented.
Legislators elected from temporary multi-member districts:
Senators Representatives
Hinds County. 5 12
Harrison County. 3 7
Jackson County. 2 6*
10 25
*With George County.
Thus, 10 out of 52 Senators (19%) and 25 out of 122 Representatives (21%) were elected from temporary multi-member districts in 1971.
Meanwhile, it is possible that the state legislature will adopt a plan of its own. During the course of this litigation, the District Court has emphasized that “the exercise of this unavoidable judicial duty [drafting an apportionment plan] cannot,
does not, and will not in any way tie the hands of the Legislature at any time
to adopt and enact any plan of its own for the reapportionment of its membership so long as it complies with Constitutional requirements.”
Connor
v.
Johnson,
