Imperial Valley Press

Judge: California county’s redistrict­ing diluted Latino vote

- BY SUDHIN THANAWALA

SAN FRANCISCO — Election districts for the board of supervisor­s in a Central California county illegally dilute the voting power of Latinos and deprive them of an opportunit­y to elect candidates of their choice, a federal judge said Friday.

U.S. District Judge Dale Drozd struck down Kern County’s 2011 redistrict­ing plan, saying it was not “equally open to participat­ion by Latino voters.”

The ruling came in a lawsuit by the Los Angeles-based Mexican American Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund against the Central California county. An email after hours to the county’s attorney, Mark Nations, was not immediatel­y returned.

MALDEF argued that the boundary between two districts in the county broke up a large Latino community in violation of the federal Voting Rights Act.

“Today’s decision should stand as a warning to other counties in California, a number of which also failed to comply with the Voting Rights Act during the last round of redistrict­ing,” Thomas A. Saenz, president and general counsel of MALDEF said in a statement. “The growing Latino community is entitled to representa­tion, and drawing lines to protect incumbents risks costly litigation to secure an eventual remedy to protect voters’ rights.”

Lawsuits challengin­g voting districts in California are unusual. The Obama administra­tion aggressive­ly pursued lawsuits over minority voting rights in Texas and North Carolina, but was criticized for not taking similar action in California. Los Angeles County, where roughly half of the 10 million residents are Latino, has also faced criticism that its political boundaries unfairly reduce the clout of Latino voters.

Drozd’s ruling came after an 11-day trial in December that included testimony from Kern County residents, demographe­rs and political scientists and historians. The judge said the plaintiffs had shown that the Latino community in Kern County was su ciently numerous and geographic­ally compact to constitute the majority in a second supervisor­ial district, and that the majority in Kern County votes su ciently as a bloc to usually defeat Latino-preferred candidates.

 ?? PHOTO/CASEY CHRISTIE/THE BAKERSFIEL­D CALIFORNIA­N ?? In this Nov. 2, 2004 file photo, clerk Michelle Gridley (right) assists Bunky Durham as he prepares to cast his ballot at Villa De Oro Recreation Center Club House in Bakersfiel­d. A federal judge has struck down a redistrict­ing plan for electing...
PHOTO/CASEY CHRISTIE/THE BAKERSFIEL­D CALIFORNIA­N In this Nov. 2, 2004 file photo, clerk Michelle Gridley (right) assists Bunky Durham as he prepares to cast his ballot at Villa De Oro Recreation Center Club House in Bakersfiel­d. A federal judge has struck down a redistrict­ing plan for electing...

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