Khaleej Times

US top court declines to curb electoral map manipulati­on

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washington — The US Supreme Court on Monday dealt a setback to election reformers by declining to use high-profile cases from Wisconsin and Maryland to curb the ability of state lawmakers to draw electoral districts purely for partisan advantage.

Sidesteppi­ng major rulings, the nine justices decided both cases on narrow legal grounds and put off perhaps until their next term, which begins in October, a more definitive ruling on the contentiou­s practice known as partisan gerrymande­ring.

In one decision, the court handed a victory to Wisconsin Republican­s who drew state electoral districts that helped entrench their party in power by throwing out on a 9-0 vote a lower court ruling that the districts deprived Democratic voters of their constituti­onal rights including equal protection under the law.

The Supreme Court found that the Democratic voters who sued to

block the Republican-drawn electoral map lacked legal standing to bring the case because they challenged it on a statewide basis rather than focusing on individual legislativ­e districts.

The ruling makes it harder for plaintiffs to challenge maps statewide but does not close the door on such lawsuits. To do so from now on, voters in each district of a state will need to show that their own voting clout has been diluted.

In the Maryland case, the court in an unsigned opinion decided not to immediatel­y block a Democratic-drawn US House of Representa­tives district challenged by Republican voters but allowed the case to proceed. Election reformers in both parties had hoped the justices would rein in the intensifie­d use of partisan gerrymande­ring, a practice in which the party that controls a state legislatur­e uses the process of redrawing electoral districts after the US census every decade to tighten its grip on power by diluting the influence of voters.

Opponents have said partisan gerrymande­ring has begun to warp American democracy by muffling large segments of the electorate, violating voters’ constituti­onal rights. Democrats in particular have accused Republican­s of escalating partisan gerrymande­ring this decade, helping President Donald Trump’s party maintain control of the US House of Representa­tives and state legislatur­es.

Critics of gerrymande­ring have said it has become ever more extreme through the use of precise voter data and computeriz­ed modeling to devise electoral maps.

The justices could soon take up another case involving a challenge to Republican-drawn congressio­nal districts in North Carolina that could give them another chance in their next term to issue a broader ruling on partisan gerrymande­ring.

Writing for the court in the Wisconsin case, Chief Justice John Roberts said electoral maps on a statewide basis cannot be challenged as a whole. “In this case the remedy that is proper and sufficient lies in the revision of the boundaries of the individual’s own district,” Roberts said. —

Supreme Court missed an opportunit­y today to lay down a firm marker as to when partisan gerrymande­ring is so extreme that it violates the constituti­onal rights of voters. But the court permitted lawsuits against unfair maps to continue Dale Ho, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union.

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