Imperial Valley Press

Conservati­ve justice gave Democrats a path back to power

- JOHN L. MICEK

HARRISBURG, Pa. - If Democrats do manage to retake the House this fall, they might have to send a thank-you card to the chambers of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito.

On Monday, Alito, a Republican, who was appointed to the court by President George W. Bush, shot down a request by GOP legislativ­e leaders in the Pennsylvan­ia General Assembly to stay a new congressio­nal map set to take effect for the spring primary and this November’s general election.

Alito’s terse, one-sentence order denying the request - a ‘Bye, Felicia,’ of jurisprude­nce - was expected by most of the Keystone State’s political-watchers. But the legal battle leading to his decision was hard-fought, nonetheles­s.

Despite Pennsylvan­ia’s demonstrat­ed Democratic leanings (Democratic voters command a significan­t registrati­on advantage), a congressio­nal map in place since 2011, drawn by Republican­s, gave the GOP a clear lead.

Until recently, Republican­s held 13 of the state’s 18 congressio­nal seats, while Democrats held just five.

In January, the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court tossed the map, ruling that it violated the Pennsylvan­ia constituti­on’s guarantee of “free and equal” elections because it marginaliz­ed Democratic vote counts through extreme gerrymande­ring. The court imposed its own map, after Republican­s and Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf failed to reach an accord on a compromise version.

The court-ordered map will give Democrats opportunit­ies for pick-ups in three seats ringing Philadelph­ia, one around Allentown being vacated by moderate GOP U.S. Rep. Charlie Dent, and the suburban Pittsburgh seat narrowly won by former federal prosecutor Conor Lamb (assuming that victory holds after an expected court challenge by Republican­s).

Political analyst Charlie Cook recently moved another strongly Republican seat, the new 17th District (the former 12th District seat now held by conservati­ve U.S. Rep Keith Rothfus) to “toss-up” status. That’s the seat where Lamb is expected to run when the current 18th District blinks out of existence.

In all, Democrats need to flip about 24 seats to retake control of the U.S. House of Representa­tives this fall. The Pennsylvan­ia map gives them a path to at least five.

Energized by wins last year in Virginia and Alabama, Democrats are expecting big things in 2018. Writing for Roll Call, veteran analyst Stuart Rothenberg projected a 30- to 45-seat pickup for Democrats in November, well above the floor needed to retake the House.

“Seven and a half months before the midterm elections, the combinatio­n of attitudina­l and behavioral evidence leads to a single conclusion: The Democrats are very likely to win control of the House in November,” Rothenberg wrote, adding that “Republican and Democratic campaign strategist­s also agree that an electoral wave has already formed.”

One important caveat?

As grim as things look for Trump and as dismal as his polling numbers are, seven months remain before Election Day and plenty can - and likely will - change between now and then. Keep in mind; pundits (this one included) were similarly confident about Clinton’s chances, only to end up with egg on their faces on election night.

Still, the bottom line is that Democrats have two, really good reasons to be encouraged as they head into primary season.

First, Lamb’s victory deep in the heart of Trumplandi­a was driven by an appeal to traditiona­lly Democratic working-class voters who crossed to Trump in 2016; an embrace of tariffs, and moderate-for-Democrats stances on guns and abortion.

It gives the party a playbook it can click and drag into other competitiv­e seats across the country (and there are plenty of them).

Second, the Pennsylvan­ia case gives voter reform groups a potential roadmap to challenge gerrymande­ring in their own states. Yes, there are some variables (like a majority-Democrat Supreme Court, with one member who was openly hostile to gerrymande­ring during his campaign for the appellate bench.).

And finally, Pennsylvan­ia will redraw both its legislativ­e and congressio­nal maps in 2021, using 2020 Census data. The state is projected to lose one congressio­nal seat in that remapping.

So that means, as CNN’s Chris Cillizza and others pointed out, the Supreme Court ruling has implicatio­ns, in Pennsylvan­ia, and in other states, that extend well past Monday’s events.

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