Bush v. Vera (1996) is the Supreme Court case that struck down Texas congressional districts drawn after the 1990 census because race was the predominant factor in drawing the lines, violating the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
After the 1990 census, Texas gained three new congressional districts. The state legislature drew several of them as majority-minority districts, using detailed racial data to sort voters block by block. The result was some bizarrely shaped districts where race, not geography or community, clearly drove the map.
In Bush v. Vera (1996), the Supreme Court struck those districts down. The Court applied strict scrutiny, the toughest standard of judicial review, because race was the predominant factor in the redistricting plan. Here's the twist that makes this case interesting for AP Gov: the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment usually shows up protecting minority voters, but in Bush v. Vera it limited how far states can go in using race to draw districts, even when the goal is increasing minority representation. Race can be a consideration in redistricting, but it can't be the driving one.
This case sits in Unit 3 (Civil Liberties and Civil Rights), Topic 3.10, supporting learning objective AP Gov 3.10.A on how constitutional provisions, especially the Equal Protection Clause, have shaped the fight over civil rights. Bush v. Vera shows that equal protection cuts both ways. The same clause that powered Brown v. Board and the civil rights movement also blocks states from making race the dominant factor in drawing political maps. It's also a bridge case. Redistricting and gerrymandering live in Unit 2 (Congress) and connect to representation in Unit 5, so this one term lets you link civil rights doctrine to the mechanics of congressional elections. That cross-unit reach is exactly why the College Board keeps using it on SCOTUS comparison FRQs.
Keep studying AP® Gov Unit 3
Shaw v. Reno (Unit 2)
Shaw v. Reno (1993) is the required case that set the rule; Bush v. Vera is the follow-up that applied it. Shaw said racial gerrymanders can be challenged under the Equal Protection Clause, and three years later Bush v. Vera used that logic to actually strike down Texas's districts. The 2025 SCOTUS Comparison FRQ paired these two cases directly.
Political Representation (Unit 3)
Majority-minority districts were designed to boost minority representation in Congress. Bush v. Vera marks the constitutional ceiling on that strategy, asking how far a state can engineer representation by race before it violates the very clause meant to guarantee equality.
Brown v. Board of Education (Unit 3)
Both cases run on the Equal Protection Clause, but in opposite directions. Brown used it to dismantle race-based segregation; Bush v. Vera used it to dismantle race-based district lines. Together they show the Court treating nearly any government sorting by race as constitutionally suspect.
Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Unit 3)
Congress's civil rights legislation, along with the Voting Rights Act, pushed states to protect minority voting power, which is why Texas drew majority-minority districts in the first place. Bush v. Vera shows the tension between complying with those laws and obeying the Equal Protection Clause.
Bush v. Vera is not one of the 15 required SCOTUS cases, which means it shows up as the non-required case in the SCOTUS Comparison FRQ. The 2025 exam did exactly this, asking you to identify the constitutional clause behind both Shaw v. Reno and Bush v. Vera (the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment) and then compare the facts and reasoning of the two cases. A 2015 short-answer question also gave the Texas redistricting facts and asked about the decision's implications. Your job on these questions is concrete: name the Equal Protection Clause, explain that race was the predominant factor in the Texas map, and connect the holding to the precedent from Shaw v. Reno. You don't need to memorize the case details cold, since the FRQ provides the facts, but you do need to recognize the equal protection logic and link it to a required case.
These cases are easy to blur together because both involve racial gerrymandering and the Equal Protection Clause. The difference is the role each plays. Shaw v. Reno (North Carolina) established that voters can challenge a district as a racial gerrymander when its shape is so bizarre it can only be explained by race. Bush v. Vera (Texas) applied that precedent and actually struck districts down, clarifying that strict scrutiny kicks in whenever race is the predominant factor in drawing lines. For the exam, remember that Shaw is the required case you must know in depth, while Bush v. Vera is the comparison case the FRQ will describe for you.
Bush v. Vera (1996) struck down Texas congressional districts because race was the predominant factor in drawing them, violating the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The case applied strict scrutiny to racial gerrymandering, building directly on the precedent set in Shaw v. Reno (1993).
Race can be one factor among many in redistricting, but it cannot be the dominant one, even when the goal is creating majority-minority districts.
The case came out of the 1990 census, which gave Texas three new congressional seats and triggered the disputed redistricting.
On the exam, Bush v. Vera appears as the non-required case in SCOTUS Comparison FRQs, where you connect it to Shaw v. Reno through their shared equal protection reasoning.
In 1996, the Supreme Court struck down several Texas congressional districts drawn after the 1990 census because race was the predominant factor in their design. The Court held this violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
No, it's not one of the 15 required cases. It appears as the non-required case in SCOTUS Comparison FRQs, like in 2025 when it was paired with Shaw v. Reno, so the exam gives you the facts and asks you to compare it to a required case.
Shaw v. Reno (1993) established that racial gerrymanders can be challenged under the Equal Protection Clause; Bush v. Vera (1996) applied that rule and struck down Texas districts where race predominated. Shaw set the precedent, Vera enforced it, and Shaw is the one you must know in depth.
No. States can still consider race and create majority-minority districts. The case banned making race the predominant factor over traditional districting principles like compactness and community boundaries. When race dominates, the plan must survive strict scrutiny.
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. That's the exact answer the 2025 SCOTUS Comparison FRQ asked for when comparing Bush v. Vera with Shaw v. Reno.
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