Nonseverability is a legal argument that provisions of a statute or constitutional amendment cannot be separated — if one portion is found unconstitutional, the rest must be struck down too. In redistricting, Gov. DeSantis invoked nonseverability to argue that because Florida's Fair Districts Amendments included minority-protection provisions that may conflict with the federal Equal Protection Clause after Louisiana v. Callais (2026), the entire anti-partisan-gerrymandering ban is invalid — not just the VRA-mirroring provisions.