"This Legal Sidebar is the third in a six-part series that discusses the Supreme Court’s political question
doctrine, which instructs that federal courts should forbear from resolving questions when doing so would
require the judiciary to make policy decisions, exercise discretion beyond its competency, or encroach on
powers the Constitution vests in the legislative or executive branches. By limiting the range of cases
federal courts can consider, the political question doctrine is intended to maintain the separation of
powers and recognize the roles of the legislative and executive branches in interpreting the Constitution.
Understanding the political question doctrine may assist Members of Congress in recognizing when
actions of Congress or the executive branch would not be subject to judicial review. For additional
background on this topic and citations to relevant sources, please see the Constitution of the UnitedStates, Analysis and Interpretation.
The Supreme Court began to develop its modern application of the political question doctrine in the 1939
case Coleman v. Miller. In Coleman, the Court addressed the Kansas legislature’s recent approval of the
proposed Child Labor Amendment to the Constitution, which had been submitted to the states for
ratification 13 years prior. Members of the Kansas legislature who had voted against the amendment
petitioned for a writ of mandamus, seeking to revoke the approval. They raised certain procedural
challenges to the ratification and argued that the passage of time had rendered Kansas’s approval of the
amendment invalid. The opinion of the Court, authored by Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, affirmed
an opinion from the Supreme Court of Kansas denying the plaintiffs' petition. Chief Justice Hughes’s
opinion explained that the “efficacy of ratifications by state legislature . . . should be regarded as a
political question pertaining to the political departments.” The Court further clarified, citing Luther, that it
was a question solely for Congress, and not for the courts, whether an amendment had been adopted
within a “reasonable time.”
It was against this background that the Court decided Colegrove v. Green in 1946. By that time,
movement of populations from rural to urban areas had led to severe “malapportionment” in state
legislatures. Throughout the country, state legislative districts were drawn such that voters in rural areas
had disproportionate power compared to their urban counterparts. State governments, made up of the
representatives of those rural voters, were unwilling to fix this problem. As a result, voters in
underrepresented districts turned to the courts and the Constitution for a remedy. In Colegrove, a sevenmember Court was presented with a constitutional challenge to an Illinois districting arrangement where plaintiffs were members of districts with much larger populations than other districts. The challenge was
based in part on the Guarantee Clause, as well as on the Fourteenth Amendment. A plurality of three
Justices joined an opinion by Justice Frankfurter, concluding that the Court lacked jurisdiction in light of
the “peculiarly political nature” of the case. The plurality noted that under Article I, Section 4, of the
Constitution, “The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for . . . Representative, shall be
prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or
alter such Regulations.” Citing that provision, the plurality concluded that the authority to regulate state
districting rested “exclusively” with Congress and that courts had no authority to enter this political
thicket. The Colegrove plurality’s view of the political question doctrine, as the Supreme Court later
recognized, “left pervasive malapportionment unchecked.”.."
Supreme Court Political Doctrine
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