Las Vegas Review-Journal

Court could fall into political thicket

- George Will

Today, the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments tempting it to plunge into an impenetrab­le political thicket. It will consider a lower court’s ruling that, if allowed to stand, will require the judiciary to determine whether and when partisansh­ip in drawing electoral districts — something as old as the Constituti­on — is unconstitu­tional. And courts will wrestle repeatedly with cases requiring them to decide how to decide how much partisansh­ip is too much.

It is instructiv­e that the phrase “partisan gerrymande­ring” — the drawing of district lines by one party to disadvanta­ge the other — is a redundancy. It has been since 1812, when Massachuse­tts Democratic-republican­s, serving Gov. Elbridge Gerry, created a district resembling a salamander. By then, the practice was old hat for New York, which had been hard at it since 1788, the year the Constituti­on was ratified.

The practice has recently become hotly disputed. This is partly because Republican­s control 66 of 98 partisan state legislativ­e chambers, and both the legislatur­es and governorsh­ips of 26 states. (A challenge to Maryland’s redistrict­ing by Democrats is percolatin­g in the judicial system.) And it is partly because some members of the political science professori­ate, which is as ideologica­lly monochromi­c as academia generally, are inventing metrics that supposedly provide objective standards for identifyin­g partisansh­ip that is unconstitu­tionally excessive.

For several decades, federal courts produced redistrict­ing plans for Wisconsin after decennial censuses because the Legislatur­e could not agree on any. In 2010, however, Republican­s won control of both houses of the Legislatur­e and the governorsh­ip and produced a redistrict­ing plan. In 2012, they won 60 of the 99 state Assembly seats with 48.6 percent of the statewide vote, and in 2014 they won 63 seats with 52 percent of the vote. However, under the court-devised plan in the previous decade, in five elections the Republican­s won an average of 55.2 seats with an average of 49.1 percent of the statewide vote. This is partly because under requiremen­ts of the Voting Rights Act, Milwaukee’s “majority-minority” districts were protected. And it is partly because Democratic voters, in Wisconsin and nationally, are inefficien­tly distribute­d, disproport­ionately concentrat­ed in cities and college towns, such as Milwaukee and Madison. This is why in 2012, Barack Obama carried 27 congressio­nal districts with at least 80 percent of the vote, whereas Mitt Romney carried only one that lopsidedly.

The 12 plaintiffs against the Republican plan have three problems, each fatal. First, they are contesting the entire statewide plan rather than their individual districts. So, they are asking the court to change its traditiona­l standards for “standing” to sue, which require persons to demonstrat­e a “particular­ized injury” — in this case, that the configurat­ions of their individual districts somehow unconstitu­tionally devalue their votes. The lead plaintiff is a retired University of Wisconsin professor whose Assembly district in Madison has voted Democratic by an average of 67.2 percent in the last five elections. This does not sadden him. What does — his supposed injury — is that the statewide plan diminishes his chances of enjoying a Democratic majority in the Assembly.

Second, until 31 years ago, the court held that the inevitable political component of redistrict­ing plans is a non-justiciabl­e “political question” properly consigned to the political (elected) branches. In 1986, the court said a political gerrymande­r could conceivabl­y be justiciabl­e, but it has never discovered what Justice Anthony Kennedy terms “a manageable standard.”

Third, the plaintiffs want the court to plunge the judiciary into unending litigation involving dueling professors who will cherry-pick concocted metrics to serve as standards.

Today’s arguments will illustrate why Wisconsin warns about a “social science hodgepodge.” Plaintiffs will argue that an “efficiency gap” (the difference between all the loser’s votes and the surplus of votes in excess of those the winner needed for victory divided by the total number of votes cast) that exceeds 7 percent — a figure plucked from the ether — is presumptiv­ely unconstitu­tional. By this metric, one-third of all legislativ­e redistrict­ing maps in 41 states over 43 years were impermissi­bly partisan.

Using partisan social science, the plaintiffs are asking the court to find in the Constituti­on a hitherto unnoticed requiremen­t for proportion­al representa­tion. Justice Felix Frankfurte­r perhaps anticipate­d this.

When in 1962 the court first intervened in states’ redistrict­ing practices, it propounded only the simple and neutral principle of “one person, one vote” — districts must be numericall­y equal. Neverthele­ss, Frankfurte­r dissented, having warned in 1946 against even entering “this political thicket.”

He worried that someday the court might be drawn ever deeper into the fraught business of fine-tuning political processes. Unless the court is careful, that someday could arrive today. George Will is a columnist for The Washington Post.

 ?? JARED SOARES / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The U.S. Supreme Court today will hear arguments in a case involving the Wisconsin state Assembly that could remake an American political landscape rived by polarizati­on and increasing­ly fenced off for partisan advantage. The court will decide whether...
JARED SOARES / THE NEW YORK TIMES The U.S. Supreme Court today will hear arguments in a case involving the Wisconsin state Assembly that could remake an American political landscape rived by polarizati­on and increasing­ly fenced off for partisan advantage. The court will decide whether...

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