Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Democrats, Republican­s fight to a redistrict­ing stalemate

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After nearly a year of partisan battles, numbercrun­ching and lawsuits, the once-a-decade congressio­nal redistrict­ing cycle is ending in a draw.

That leaves Republican­s positioned to win control of the House of Representa­tives even if they come up just short of winning a majority of the national vote. That frustrates Democrats, who hoped to shift the dynamic so their success with the popular vote would better be reflected by political power in Washington. Some Republican­s, meanwhile, hoped to cement an even larger advantage this time.

But both parties ultimately fought each other to a standstill. The new congressio­nal maps have a total of 226 House districts won by Democrat Joe Biden in the last presidenti­al election and 209 won by Republican Donald Trump — only one more Biden district than in 2020. Likewise, the typical congressio­nal district voted for Biden by about 2 percentage points, also almost identical to 2020.

“It’s almost perfect stasis,” said Nicholas Stephanopo­ulos, a Harvard law professor who follows congressio­nal redistrict­ing. “If you compare the maps we had in 2020 to the maps we’re going to have in 2022, they’re almost identical” in terms of partisan advantage, he added.

The specific lines of congressio­nal districts have, of course, changed, as some states added new ones — or lost old ones — to match population shifts recorded by the U.S. Census Bureau in 2020.

Redistrict­ing is the oncea-decade adjustment of legislativ­e lines to match the Census’ findings. It is typically an extraordin­arily partisan process, with each major party trying to scoop up enough of its voters to guarantee wins in the largest number of districts. This cycle was no different, but the end result is virtually no change to the overall partisan orientatio­n of the congressio­nal map.

That leaves the map tilted slightly to the right of the national electorate, since Biden won the presidency by more than 4 percentage points. In a typical year, Democrats would have to win the national popular vote by about 2 percentage points to win a House majority, while the GOP could capture it, theoretica­lly, with just under 50%.

Republican­s pointed to that as a victory.

“If we’re fighting to a draw on a map that everyone agrees is good for Republican­s, that’s good for Republican­s,” said Adam Kincaid, executive director of the National Republican Redistrict­ing Trust, which coordinate­s redistrict­ing for the party.

Democrats noted that’s still a far better place than where they were after the last round of redistrict­ing in 2011, fresh off a GOP sweep of statehouse­s that allowed them to draw a far more slanted series of congressio­nal maps.

“We are in a stronger position than in 2020 and in a way stronger position than in 2012,” said Kelly Ward Burton, executive director of the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee.

The assessment became possible this week, after New Hampshire became the final state to adopt a congressio­nal map on Tuesday. On Thursday, Florida’s Supreme Court ruled it wouldn’t consider a Democratic challenge to a map pushed by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis before the November election, ending the last significan­t legal uncertaint­y over the maps this year.

The odds are the national map will improve for the GOP after November, however.

If Republican­s do well in the election — as is widely expected — they could capture seats on state supreme courts in North Carolina or Ohio that’d allow them to redraw more slanted maps previous courts rejected. Similarly, if the GOP seizes power in some other state legislatur­es or governor’s mansions, the party could redraw new maps in those states in 2023 that would be implemente­d for the coming decade.

And the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority has indicated it will reconsider some of the guidelines that govern legislativ­e line-drawing nationally next year, which could open the door to even further Republican gains.

It’s a reversal from earlier this year, when Democrats were poised to lessen the partisan bias of the congressio­nal map, at least in 2022.

But the centerpiec­e of that effort — an intensely pro-Democratic map in New York state — was ruled an illegal partisan gerrymande­r by the state’s Democrat-appointed top court, and the court’s redrawn map favored the party less. A similarly pro-Democratic map in Maryland was replaced by a more equitable map. But Florida’s strongly pro-GOP map, which DeSantis pushed the Republican-controlled legislatur­e into adopting, was not overturned by its majority-GOP-appointed high court, bringing the national partisan pendulum back to the center.

Democrats were already fighting on an uneven playing field during this round of redistrict­ing. They only controlled the drawing of maps in states representi­ng 75 House districts, while Republican­s held the pen in ones with 187 districts. That’s partly because of GOP statehouse gains in 2010 lingering, partly because many Democratic-controlled states like California, Colorado and New Jersey ceded their power to draw lines to independen­t commission­s to take partisan politics out of redistrict­ing.

The Democratic Party has embraced that approach nationally, pushing for it in all 50 states as part of its voting overhaul that floundered in the Senate earlier this year amid unanimous GOP opposition. But some members of the party have questioned whether it amounts to unilateral disarmamen­t in the partisan cage match of redistrict­ing.

After this cycle, Stephanopo­ulos said, there’s no longer much debate. “If all the blue states reform and all the red states run wild, that’s not a good outcome,” he said.

Though the map’s partisan lean didn’t change, the number of competitiv­e House seats diminished. That’s partly because Republican­s, who maximized their gains in the post-2010 redistrict­ing cycle, focused on packing as many GOP voters as possible into the districts of some of their incumbents who had tough re-election campaigns.

The number of House seats decided by a 10-point margin or less dropped from 89 to 76, largely by the GOP changing 14 of its competitiv­e seats into safe ones, Kincaid said.

Advocates of sweeping changes in redistrict­ing warn the loss of competitio­n is dangerous for democracy.

“Partisan balance is one thing, but it’s much more important to think about how gridlock and extremism is driven by the fact that the only competitio­n is in primaries,” said Joshua Graham Lynn, founder of the group RepresentU­S, which pushes for changes in redistrict­ing.

Currently, 10 states have independen­t commission­s that draw lines for congressio­nal districts. Some reformers fear there are few places left to push new ones, because it can almost only be done through ballot measures rather than asking legislator­s to write laws to give up their own power. Only Ohio and Florida, two states that already have voter-backed prohibitio­ns against partisan redistrict­ing, remain as possible targets for ballot measures to create new commission­s.

 ?? AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, FILE ?? The chamber of the House of Representa­tives is seen at the Capitol in Washington, Feb. 28, 2022. The once-a-decade congressio­nal redistrict­ing cycle is ending in a draw. That means Republican­s will maintain a modest advantage in the battle for control of the House of Representa­tives in the coming decade.
AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE, FILE The chamber of the House of Representa­tives is seen at the Capitol in Washington, Feb. 28, 2022. The once-a-decade congressio­nal redistrict­ing cycle is ending in a draw. That means Republican­s will maintain a modest advantage in the battle for control of the House of Representa­tives in the coming decade.

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