Houston Chronicle

Parts of redistrict­ing plan struck down

Court orders nine legislativ­e districts to be redrawn due to discrimina­tion

- By Mike Ward, Andrea Zelinski and Allie Morris

AUSTIN — A threejudge federal court panel in San Antonio on Thursday struck down portions of the state’s redistrict­ing plan for state House districts and ordered state lawmakers to redraw nine legislativ­e districts due to “intentiona­l discrimina­tion” by race.

The unanimous decision marked the third setback for state officials in two weeks in votingrigh­ts cases, after a Thursday decision tossed out a new law softening Texas’ strict voter-identifica­tion requiremen­ts and another last week invalidati­ng several congressio­nal district boundaries.

In a statement, Attorney General Ken Paxton said he was disappoint­ed by the decision and vowed to appeal.

In an 83-page decision for the judges’ panel, U.S. District Judge Xavier Rodriguez gave Paxton three days to advise him whether the Legislatur­e will address the correction­s and, if not, he set a Sept. 6 hearing to consider remedies for the violations. Redrawing boundaries in the nine legislativ­e districts could end up affecting other districts, too.

The court panel found “intentiona­l discrimina­tion” in the way the Legislatur­e drew boundary lines in two House districts (HD 54 and 55) in Bell County, in Central Texas; three districts in Dallas (HD 103, 104 and 105); two districts in Nueces County (HD 32 and 34), and two in Tarrant County (HD 90 and 93).

The judges’ panel ruled that contested House district boundaries in Harris County, Fort Bend County and Bexar County “require no further changes.” It also left intact other House district boundaries across Texas.

The decision also said that no changes are required in Midland and Ector counties because the Mexican American Legislativ­e Council, one of the plaintiffs in the case,

“lacks standing to pursue its claims” in those counties.

The decision said some of boundaries adopted in 2013 intentiona­lly overemphas­ized race and that others diluted Latino voting strength.

“The Legislatur­e in 2013 purposeful­ly maintained the intentiona­l discrimina­tion” in its redistrict­ing plan, the ruling states. “Thus, violations found by this Court … now require a remedy, including specifical­ly in Bell County, Dallas County, Nueces County, and Tarrant County.”

‘Clear victory for GOP’

Echoing the sentiments of other GOP lawmakers, Rep. Jason Villaba, a Republican from Dallas, saw the silver lining for Republican­s.

He said on Twitter, “Court finds that only 5 (Republican House districts) must be addressed in a redraw. @MALCTx requested 10. Clear victory for #GOP.”

Paxton said the state’s House map was adopted by the court in 2012 “and has been in effect for the last three election cycles. A three-judge panel of the U.S. District Court in San Antonio invalidate­d a portion of the map drawn for the Texas House of Representa­tives.”

“The judges held that maps they themselves adopted violate the law,” Paxton said.

Thursday’s decision, if it becomes the subject of lengthy appeals, could complicate upcoming campaigns. Filing by candidates for House seats opens Nov. 11.

The prolonged legal battle over the redistrict­ing maps has cost Texas taxpayers upward of $3.9 million, a sum that doesn’t include any costs incurred since mid-2014, when the total was tallied.

Gov. Greg Abbott, who last week had expressed irritation over the previous court decision against the state in another voting-rights case, had no immediate comment on Thursday’s order. He had defended the 2011 maps in court when he was attorney general.

Gary Bledsoe, president of the Texas NAACP, a plaintiff in the case, said he was glad the court acted “so timely” because the order opens the possibilit­y for for new House districts to be in place by the time candidate filing periods end in December.

“That means there would be a more diverse Texas Legislatur­e, and I think that’s a great thing,” said Bledsoe.

He said he was disappoint­ed, however, that the court turned down changes in Ford Bend and Harris Counties, where he said minorities are underrepre­sented.

Dems applaud decision

Rep. Rafael Anchia, a Dallas Democrat whose district was one of the first identified by the court as racially imbalanced, said voters should be outraged that the state continues to defend its map in court. Anchia is chairman of the Mexican American Legislativ­e Caucus that is a plaintiff in the long-running case.

“It should really bother you that the state is intentiona­lly acting to deny your voting rights,” he said. “Every Texan should be upset.”

State Rep. Helen Giddings, a Dallas Democrat who chairs the Texas Black Legislativ­e Caucus that has opposed the redistrict­ing maps, said the decision affirms that they are discrimina­tory and must be redrawn.

“Once again, the state of Texas has been handed a much needed wake-up call from the federal courts.” she said. “We cannot continue to discrimina­te against minority communitie­s and expect the courts not intervene. … The voter influence of people of color and the effects of their vote should not be diminished.”

Thomas A. Saenz, president and general counsel of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund, another plaintiff in the case, applauded the decision.

“With this final of several rulings on liability in Texas state redistrict­ing in 2011 and 2013, the case now moves to remedy; this is a most welcome developmen­t,” he said.

“The state of Texas needs to move on with fixing permanentl­y the rights violations in which it has regularly — as confirmed by this court’s recent rulings — and continuall­y engaged. The people of Texas need to have confidence that the electoral system in which more and more will participat­e is untainted by intentiona­l discrimina­tion or discrimina­tory effects.”

‘Voters as pawns’

Nina Perales, vice president of litigation for MALDEF and lead counsel for the Texas Latino Redistrict­ing Task Force in the case, said the ruling affirms that Texas “racially gerrymande­red its voting districts and used Latino voters as pawns in doing so.

“With the 2018 election cycle fast approachin­g, it’s time for Texas to stop discrimina­ting against Latino voters and agree to a remedy that will provide equal opportunit­y to all,” she said.

Texas Democratic Party Chair Gilberto Hinojosa called the ruling “an historic victory for the sacred voting rights of all Texans” and urged state officials to quickly remedy the issues.

“Once again, Texas Republican­s didn’t just cheat to win a silly game, they used Jim Crow-era tactics to rig our election system,” Hinojosa said. “Make no mistake, Republican­s have stolen the voice of Texans at the ballot box for years.

Republican Party of Texas Chairman James Dickey disagreed.

“We oppose any identifica­tion of citizens by race, origin, or creed and oppose use of any such identifica­tion for purposes of creating voting districts,” he said. “If lawmakers are forced to redraw these House districts, we ask that they be drawn accordingl­y.”

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