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Supreme Court police officers walk on the plaza in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, April 28, 2015.
Supreme Court police officers walk on the plaza in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday, April 28, 2015.
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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed Tuesday to hear an important case about whether states must count only those who are eligible to vote, rather than the total population, when drawing electoral districts for their legislatures.

The case from Texas could be significant for states with large immigrant populations, including Latinos who are children or not citizens. The plaintiffs claim that redrawing electoral districts based on the population of citizens and noncitizens alike violates the constitutional requirement of one person, one vote.

The challengers claim that taking account of total population can lead to vast differences in the number of voters in particular districts.

The Project on Fair Representation is funding the lawsuit filed by two Texas residents. The group opposes racial and ethnic classifications and has been behind Supreme Court challenges to affirmative action and the federal Voting Rights Act. The case, Evenwel vs. Abbott, 14-940, will be argued in the fall.

The court’s 1964 ruling in Reynolds vs. Sims established the one person, one vote principle and means that a state’s legislative districts must have roughly the same number of people. But the court has never determined whether the state must count everyone, just eligible voters or have some leeway to choose.

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