Question
As a result of the Supreme Court decision in Baker v. Carr, courts can require states to
keep voting districts the same even if the population changes.
change the number of voting districts within the state.
appoint government officials if voting districts are unfair.
redraw voting districts that are roughly equal in population.
keep voting districts the same even if the population changes.
change the number of voting districts within the state.
appoint government officials if voting districts are unfair.
redraw voting districts that are roughly equal in population.
Answers
GPT-5 mini
Redraw voting districts that are roughly equal in population.
Baker v. Carr allowed federal courts to review and decide redistricting cases under the Equal Protection Clause, leading to enforcement of "one person, one vote" and requiring population-equal districts.
Baker v. Carr allowed federal courts to review and decide redistricting cases under the Equal Protection Clause, leading to enforcement of "one person, one vote" and requiring population-equal districts.