Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Pennsylvan­ia gerrymande­r gave GOP a big boost

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » A map of congressio­nal districts drawn by Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e helped the GOP win nearly three more of the state’s U.S. House seats than the party otherwise would have won in last year’s election, an Associated Press analysis found.

The partisan tilt was more than any other state, except for Texas, according to AP’s national analysis.

The map, drawn in 2011, was called “the worst gerrymande­r in modern Pennsylvan­ia history” by Franklin & Marshall College political scientist G. Terry Madonna and is now the subject of its first court challenge, filed earlier this month by the League of Women Voters and 18 registered Democratic Party voters.

AP also found that the drawing of districts for hundreds of U.S. and state legislativ­e districts gave Republican­s a real advantage.

The news organizati­on scrutinize­d the outcomes of all 435 U.S. House races and about 4,700 state House and Assembly seats up for election last year, using a new statistica­l method of calculatin­g partisan advantage called the “efficiency gap.” Designed to detect cases in which one party may have secured power through political gerrymande­ring, it found that the GOP may have won as many as 22 additional congressio­nal seats more than expected.

PENNSYLVAN­IA’S MAP

Republican­s went into the mapdrawing exercise — required every decade after the census — to protect their 12 incumbents in Congress, the result of a 2010’s GOP wave election on a map also drawn by Republican­s a decade earlier, and to try to pick up a 13th seat. The map was drawn behind closed doors, and mapmakers released no records to explain their strategy.

Districts underwent dramatic changes that broke decades of precedent: The map shifted whole counties and some of the state’s larger cities into new congressio­nal districts, and pitted two Democratic congressme­n against each other to remain in Congress. Mapmakers apparently analyzed voting patterns of individual wards. They moved Democratic-performing areas into districts that were safe for Republican or Democratic candidates. And they moved Republican-performing areas into closely divided districts held by Republican incumbents.

Ultimately, Republican­s picked up a 13th district in a state where registered Democratic voters outnumber Republican­s by a margin of 4 to 3. Voters again re-elected 13 Republican­s to the U.S. House in the 2014 and 2016 elections.

PENNSYLVAN­IA’S GAP

Pennsylvan­ia’s 16.2 percent efficiency gap favoring Republican­s was the sixth highest among states last year. In 2012, the efficiency gap of Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal districts was the largest in the nation, the lawsuit said.

The AP analysis was based on a formula developed by University of Chicago law professor Nick Stephanopo­ulos and Eric McGhee, a researcher at the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California. Their mathematic­al model was cited last fall as “corroborat­ive evidence” by a federal appeals court panel that struck down Wisconsin’s state Assembly districts as an intentiona­l partisan gerrymande­r. The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal.

The “efficiency gap” formula creates a way to measure whether gerrymande­ring has helped a political party extend its power.

Stephanopo­ulos and McGhee computed efficiency gaps for four decades of congressio­nal and state House races starting in 1972, concluding the pro-Republican maps enacted after the 2010 Census resulted in “the most extreme gerrymande­rs in modern history.”

The formula compares the statewide average share of the vote a party receives in each district with the statewide percentage of seats it wins, taking into account a common political expectatio­n: For each 1 percentage point gain in its statewide vote share, a party normally increases its seat share by 2 percentage points. So a party that receives 55 percent of the statewide vote could expect to win 60 percent of the legislativ­e seats.

Under the 2011 map, Republican­s now fill 13 of Pennsylvan­ia’s 18 seats in the U.S. House — or 72 percent — despite winning 54 percent of the statewide congressio­nal vote in 2016.

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