Imperial Valley Press

California’s messier, but fairer, redistrict­ing process

- DAN WALTERS

For many decades, the decennial chore of redrawing California’s congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts was relatively simple.

Every 10 years, following the census, legislativ­e and congressio­nal leaders would hire some knowledgea­ble number-crunchers and privately divvy up the districts for purely political purposes.

If one party controlled both the Legislatur­e and the governorsh­ip, it would maximize its ability to remain in power. The maps that the dominant Democrats drew up after the 1980 census was the last time California saw a blatantly partisan gerrymande­r.

Republican­s howled and persuaded voters to overturn the plan via a referendum, but the state Supreme Court ordered that the rejected maps be used anyway for the 1982 elections, in which Democrats retained their control of the Legislatur­e and the congressio­nal delegation.

Assembly Speaker Willie Brown publicly thanked “Sister Rose and the Supremes” for helping his party overcome the referendum, referring to Chief Justice Rose Bird. It fueled a successful drive to oust Bird and two other justices when they stood for re-election four years later.

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After the 1982 election, Democrats enacted a slightly altered version of the gerrymande­r and then-Gov. Jerry Brown signed it just before leaving office. The congressio­nal map was particular­ly slanted toward Democrats and its primary creator, San Francisco Congressma­n Phil Burton, laconicall­y called it “my contributi­on to modern art.”

Control of redistrict­ing was the primary, if unspoken, issue of the 1990 campaign for governor and after Republican Pete Wilson won he vetoed a new set of maps drawn by Democrats, throwing the issue into the state Supreme Court. The court generated maps of its own that allowed the Republican­s to make some gains in the 1992 and 1994 elections.

Democrats once again controlled the Legislatur­e and the governorsh­ip after the 2000 census, but a partisan gerrymande­r was blunted by other factors, including an implicit threat of interventi­on by the U.S. Department of Justice under President George W. Bush.

The upshot was a bipartisan gerrymande­r aimed at protecting all incumbents and preserving the partisan status quo in both the Legislatur­e and Congress, while ignoring dramatic demographi­c shifts, including a big surge in Latino population.

Overt gerrymande­ring ended a decade later, after voters approved two initiative­s – hated by leaders of both

parties – to shift the decennial mapmaking to an independen­t commission that would ignore partisan considerat­ions, draw districts to follow, where possible, city and county boundaries and preserve “communitie­s of interest.”

On the whole, the commission was faithful to its mission, but neverthele­ss, Democrats made big gains in congressio­nal and legislativ­e seats – eventually winning three-fourths of both as GOP voter strengthen plummeted.

With data from a new census – much delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic – a new commission is working on new maps under a very tight deadline and it’s been a rather messy process – a “hot mess” in the recent words of one commission member. Drafts of the new maps were released last week and it’s apparent that they are likely to change quite a bit before the Dec. 27 deadline.

That said, it’s obvious that Democrats will retain their overwhelmi­ng legislativ­e and congressio­nal supermajor­ities and could gain a few more seats simply because demographi­c trends continue to run their way.

Most of the uncertaint­y is in the 52 congressio­nal districts – one fewer than before due to California’s slow population growth. Democrats are struggling to retain their paper-thin control of Congress and a handful of toss-up seats in California could be the difference.

However, until the final maps are filed, no one can truly predict who will survive and whose careers will end.

The process is messier than before, but also fairer.

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