Home / Series / Landmark Cases / Aired Order / Season 1 / Episode 10

1962 Baker v. Carr

Case Decided: March 26, 1962 Baker v. Carr (1962) established the right of federal courts to review redistricting issues, which had previously been termed "political questions" outside the courts' jurisdiction. The Court’s willingness to address legislative reapportionment in this Tennessee case paved the way for the “one man, one vote” standard of American representative democracy. The early 1900s saw both population increases and rapid urban migration in America. In Tennessee, while people flocked to cities like Memphis, the legislative districts stayed the same. Although more people were voting in urban areas, they still had the same amount of political representation as rural districts with significantly fewer residents. In 1960, roughly two-thirds of Tennessee’s representatives were being elected by one-third of the state’s population. A group of urban voters including Memphis resident Charles Baker sued Tennessee Secretary of State Joseph Carr for more equal representation. In a 6-2 decision, Justice William Brennan wrote for the majority that the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause was valid grounds to bring a reapportionment lawsuit. This decision opened the floodgates for similar lawsuits that redrew election maps around the country.

English
  • Originally Aired December 7, 2015
  • Runtime 90 minutes
  • Content Rating United States of America TV-G
  • Network C-Span
  • Notes Is the series finale
  • Created July 18, 2020 by
    Administrator admin
  • Modified February 23, 2024 by
    PolarGeek admin