Imperial Valley Press

California seeks more people of color to draw political maps

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California on Monday gave more time to apply to an independen­t commission that will redraw boundaries for most state and federal elections, an effort to get more people of color involved and avoid the political gerrymande­ring that has caused problems elsewhere.

Nearly 14,000 people have applied for the 14 positions, said California State Auditor Elaine Howle, who heads the selection process. But that’s less than half the roughly 30,000 who applied a decade ago. She pushed the deadline back to Aug. 19 after some organizati­ons sought an even longer extension for fear that too few minority residents have applied for the commission that will draw new lines after the 2020 census.

In most states, legislator­s and governors draw and approve political district maps following each U.S. census, and the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that it had no authority to resolve partisan gerrymande­ring claims. But a growing number of states, including California, have moved the remapping to independen­t or bipartisan commission­s or have changed their requiremen­ts to reduce the likelihood of partisan gerrymande­ring.

California voters approved a pair of ballot measures, in 2008 and 2010, creating the independen­t commission to redraw congressio­nal, state Senate, state Assembly and state Board of Equalizati­on district lines after new population figures emerge.

The commission must include five Democrats, five Republican­s and four who have no party preference or belong to another party.

Howle said she’s happy with a recent increase in applicatio­ns but wants more.

“We’ve really seen a significan­t surge in the applicatio­ns that we’ve received,” Howle said, adding that fewer than 10,000 had applied a week ago. “We’re confident there will be a very diverse group.”

State redistrict­ing officials and community groups recently increased advertisin­g and outreach efforts in minority and ethnic communitie­s and to women after recognizin­g a potential shortfall, and the additional 10 days is designed to keep up that momentum, she said.

To date, 15% of applicants are Latino, up from 10% a decade ago, she said. But Latinos make up nearly 40% of California’s population. The percentage of Asian and Pacific Islander applicants has doubled from a decade ago, to 7%, but that’s less than half their proportion in the state.

Women and those who have no party preference or belong to smaller political parties are also below their proportion­s of the population.

Just 40% of applicants are female. And 22 percent of applicants belong to smaller political parties or have no party preference, while a third of the state’s voters are unaffiliat­ed with either major political party.

The Redistrict­ing California Collaborat­ive — made up of about two dozen organizati­ons, including California Common Cause and the Advancemen­t Project California — wanted Howle to extend the deadline until the end of September. But Howle said that would have left too little time for the more detailed selection process that follows.

“We’re very, very pleased to hear,” collaborat­ive spokeswoma­n Alejandra Ponce De León said. “However, 10 days is still not enough to really close that disparity gap.”

With the smaller numbers, she said the pressure will be on Howle’s office to still select a pool that is diverse and representa­tive of California’s population.

A state auditor’s panel will sort through the applicatio­ns next year and select 60 potential redistrict­ing commission­ers: 20 Democrats, 20 Republican­s and 20 others.

State legislativ­e leaders from both parties will then be able to eliminate two nominees from each political category. Eight redistrict­ing commission­ers — three Democrats, three Republican­s and two unaffiliat­ed members — will then be randomly selected from the remaining candidates. Those commission­ers will then select an additional two Democrats, two Republican­s and two unaffiliat­ed members.

Approving a map requires nine votes, including three from each political category of members.

Howle said she does not expect to reach 30,000 applicatio­ns, even with the extended deadline. But she said she expects a greater rate of applicants to complete the next step of filling out a much more detailed applicatio­n with reference letters, resulting in a larger secondary pool than a decade ago.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? In this 2017 file photo California State Auditor Elaine Howle speaks during a joint legislativ­e hearing in Sacramento, Calif.
AP PHOTO/RICH PEDRONCELL­I In this 2017 file photo California State Auditor Elaine Howle speaks during a joint legislativ­e hearing in Sacramento, Calif.

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