Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Democrats could tighten grip on California political control

- By Michael R. Blood

LOS ANGELES >> Republican­s have a lock on power in Congress and the White House. But far across the country in California, the party of Reagan is seeing yet another threat to its fraying relevance.

Democrats who control every statewide office and command the Legislatur­e are pushing changes in two of the state’s largest counties that could leave California even more tightly in a Democratic vice.

At issue in Los Angeles and San Diego counties is who draws the boundaries that determine what voters are included in what districts when electing powerful county supervisor­s — a decision that has broad implicatio­ns on Election Day.

The moves are being compared to fights over political power in Texas and North Carolina, where court battles are playing out over the legality of election district boundaries that critics say have been drawn to favor Republican candidates.

“Local government is the next big partisan battlefiel­d” in California, said Thad Kousser, a political science professor at the University of California, San Diego. “It’s the only place where the Democrats can still gain seats, and it’s really the only place the Republican Party is focused on rebuilding its ranks.”

Democrats say the changes would recognize diversity and promote transparen­cy in the arcane process known as redistrict­ing. But Republican­s fear Democrats are looking to tilt the scales in the nonpartisa­n county races, which could spread in the state that is home to one in eight Americans.

A bill in the Legislatur­e would change the way district boundaries are drawn for the Board of Supervisor­s in San Diego County, home to more than 3 million people. Republican­s now control a majority of the five seats, though Democrats hold a nearly seven-point registrati­on edge in the county.

The bill would scrap a panel of retired judges who now draw the district lines in favor of a commission with 14 members whose political party affiliatio­ns would reflect registrati­on in the county. The change presumably would create a panel with a Democratic hue.

“It’s basically a power grab,” says Alan Clayton, a redistrict­ing consultant and Democrat long involved in efforts to increase Hispanic voting representa­tion.

To the north, Los Angeles County is suing the state to stop a law passed in October that would establish a similar citizens’ commission in the nation’s most populous county, home to 10 million people.

The lawsuit accuses the state of usurping local control and replacing it with an “unfair and excessivel­y partisan” system that would discrimina­te against independen­t voters and violate the California constituti­on.

The lawsuit predicts that 70 percent of the commission would be Democrats under the law that “will ensure, by design, that commission­ers are predominan­tly members of the Democratic Party.”

Currently, a committee makes recommenda­tions on district lines to the Board of Supervisor­s.

Republican­s were widely successful in 2010 elections across the U.S., including statehouse races. They used that muscle in many states to reshape congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts and maximize the clout of conservati­ve voters.

It’s been a different story in California, where the GOP has been in decline for years. Nearly three decades have passed since a Republican — — George H.W. Bush — carried the state in a presidenti­al election.

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