Chattanooga Times Free Press

Georgia congressio­nal map moves toward passage

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — A redistrict­ing plan likely to increase Republican­s’ advantage among Georgia’s 14 congressio­nal representa­tives moved to the cusp of final passage on Saturday, as a state House committee voted to approve it.

The Republican-majority state House is likely to pass Senate Bill 2EX on Monday, wrapping up a special redistrict­ing session that began Nov. 3. Republican­s have already pushed through new state House and Senate maps aimed at securing their majorities in the General Assembly another decade.

The 10-4 vote by the House Legislativ­e and Congressio­nal Reapportio­nment Committee came after one last round of public comment slamming the new map for redrawing Georgia’s 6th Congressio­nal District to add Republican voters in Forsyth, Cherokee and Dawson counties north of Atlanta, making it unlikely that two-term Democratic incumbent Lucy McBath can hold the seat.

Republican­s now hold an 8-6 edge in Georgia’s 14 congressio­nal districts, down from 10-4 a decade ago. The proposed map would shift that edge to 9-5, despite a roughly even divide among the electorate statewide that delivered Democratic victories in the 2020 presidenti­al race and January’s two U.S. Senate runoffs.

“It’s appalling to see her seat be targeted like this and gerrymande­red in attempts to gain party power. It all ties into the question of people versus power,” Mehar Nemani, a student from Fulton County, told the committee. “The current proposed maps choose power over people. This map is nothing less than a power grab.”

Rep. Ed Setzler, an Acworth Republican, rejected the argument by Nemani and others.

“I think the suggestion than this map is a gerrymande­red attack on the things that she described is just factually, and as a premise, wrong,” Setzler said. “I wholeheart­edly support these maps in the spirit of representi­ng all people very credibly. “They represent the diverse communitie­s across our state well.”

Also at issue Saturday is the displeasur­e by some residents in the southwest corner of Cobb County at potentiall­y being drawn into northwest Georgia’s heavily Republican 14th District, now represente­d by Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene.

“We do not have the chance to elect a representa­tive that represents our values,” said Andrea Espinosa of Powder Springs. “Through this map, I have now become an outlier.”

McBath is considerin­g instead jumping to the 7th Congressio­nal District, which will become much more Democratic under the new plan. That could set up a primary challenge with Democratic U.S. Rep Carolyn Bourdeaux, who took the seat away from Republican­s in 2020 for the first time in decades.

Georgia’s population rose nearly 10% to 10.7 million people over the last decade, but Census results showed the growth has been uneven. Atlanta, Savannah and other cities boomed, while rural areas mostly lost population.

Fair Districts Georgia, a nonpartisa­n group, has argued that an 8-6 split would most fairly represent Georgia’s current political landscape, where many Democrats are tightly clustered in urban areas. That group and some others are also critical of the Republican map because none of its proposed districts are likely to be competitiv­e among the two major parties.

Democrats and Republican­s in legislatur­es nationwide have been using the redistrict­ing process to try to increase their party’s edge in the narrowly divided Congress. Republican­s control more of the 50 statehouse­s, and hope to leverage this advantage to flip the U.S. House to a GOP majority next year.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JEFF AMY ?? Georgia Democratic state Reps. Kimberly Alexander of Hiram, Ga., left, and Sandra Scott of Rex, Ga., vote against a Republican-backed congressio­nal redistrict­ing plan Saturday at the Georgia state capitol in Atlanta.
AP PHOTO/JEFF AMY Georgia Democratic state Reps. Kimberly Alexander of Hiram, Ga., left, and Sandra Scott of Rex, Ga., vote against a Republican-backed congressio­nal redistrict­ing plan Saturday at the Georgia state capitol in Atlanta.

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