Stabroek News

U.S. top court takes up politicall­y charged electoral map disputes

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court is giving itself another chance to make a definitive ruling on the legality of the long-establishe­d but oftencriti­cized political practice called partisan gerrymande­ring in which state legislator­s draw electoral districts with the intent of entrenchin­g their party in power.

The high court, which failed to resolve the issue last year, yesterday agreed to hear constituti­onal challenges to electoral maps drawn by Republican­s in North Carolina and by Democrats in Maryland. The court will hear arguments in both cases in March, with rulings due by the end of June that could have enduring political consequenc­es nationwide.

Critics have said partisan gerrymande­ring is becoming more extreme with the use of precision computer modeling to the point that it has begun to warp democracy in certain states by subverting the will of voters.

The high court has struggled over what to do about this practice in which boundaries of legislativ­e districts are reconfigur­ed by state lawmakers with the aim of making them friendly territory on Election Day for candidates in the party in power at the expense of opposing candidates.

The justices in June 2018 failed to issue definitive rulings in cases from Wisconsin and Maryland that election reformers had hoped would prompt the high court to crack down on partisan gerrymande­ring.

In the North Carolina case, Democratic voters accused the state’s Republican-led legislatur­e of drawing U.S. House of Representa­tives districts in 2016 in a way that disadvanta­ged Democratic candidates in violation of the constituti­onal guarantee of equal protection under the law. A lower court sided with the Democratic voters.

“Partisan gerrymande­ring in North Carolina has become so pervasive that the outcome of many elections is decided before a single vote is cast,” said Janet Hoy, co-president of the League of Women Voters of North Carolina, which challenged the state’s map.

In the Maryland case, Republican voters accused Democratic legislator­s of violating their free speech rights under the Constituti­on’s First Amendment by redrawing boundaries of one particular U.S. House district to hinder Republican chances of winning. Democratic legislator­s in 2011 removed Republican-leaning areas and added Democratic-leaning areas to the district, which had been held by a Republican congressma­n but has been won by Democrats in every election since.

Democrat David Trone won the seat in November’s election.

After the Supreme Court in June sidesteppe­d a ruling on the merits of the case, a three-judge panel threw out the district in November as violating the constituti­onal rights of voters.

“It is our view that Supreme Court review is needed to provide guidance to the legislatur­e in future redistrict­ing,” said Raquel Coombs, a spokeswoma­n for Democratic Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh. Gerrymande­ring is a practice dating back two centuries in the United States. While the Supreme Court has ruled against gerrymande­ring intended to harm the electoral clout of racial minorities, it has never curbed gerrymande­ring done purely for partisan advantage. A definitive ruling could reverberat­e through American elections for decades by either endorsing the practice or curbing it.

The court has repeatedly failed to devise a practical standard for judges to use to resolve claims of partisan gerrymande­ring and, in resolving the new cases, it could decide that one does not exist. The Supreme Court in November agreed to hear in the coming months another gerrymande­ring case, one based on allegation­s that Virginia Republican­s unlawfully diluted the clout of black voters when drawing state House of Delegates districts.

The compositio­n of the high court, which has a 5- conservati­ve majority, has changed since its last gerrymande­ring decisions. Conservati­ve Justice Anthony Kennedy, who sometimes sided with the liberal justices in major cases, retired and was replaced by President Donald Trump’s appointee Brett Kavanaugh in October.

In a 2004 gerrymande­ring case, Kennedy wrote a concurring opinion that left the door open for courts to intervene if a “workable” standard for identifyin­g and measuring impermissi­ble gerrymande­ring could be devised. It remains to be seen what Kavanaugh will do with the issue.

Legislativ­e districts across the country are redrawn to reflect population changes contained in the nationwide census conducted by the federal government every decade.

This redistrict­ing in most states is carried out by the party in power, though some states assign the task to independen­t commission­s to ensure fairness. Gerrymande­ring typically involves packing voters who tend to favor a particular party into a small number of districts to diminish their statewide voting power while dispersing others in districts in numbers too small to be a majority.

Democrats have said partisan gerrymande­ring by Republican­s in several states helped Trump’s fellow Republican­s maintain control of the House and various state legislatur­es for much of the decade, although Democrats seized a majority in the House in the November elections and made inroads in state legislatur­es.

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Brett Kavanaugh

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