Los Angeles Times

Still waiting for a gerrymande­r fix

The high court is uniquely positioned to resolve this. It must act soon.

- Thomas P. Wolf is counsel for the Democracy Program at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law. Wendy R. Weiser is director of the Democracy Program.

THE SUPREME Court once again passed up a historic opportunit­y to finally put some limits on partisan gerrymande­ring. In a pair of cases from Wisconsin and Maryland, the court declined to take on the big question: When does gerrymande­ring, the drawing of districts to benefit the political party in control, go so far as to be illegal?

The result is disappoint­ing but not devastatin­g: The cases will continue, and the court has left open several paths to rein in gerrymande­ring. For the sake of our democracy, the court needs to act soon.

There are good reasons to be optimistic. The justices did not throw the cases out of court, or say partisan gerrymande­ring is legal. Either or both would have been easy options if the court didn’t ultimately want to tackle the big issue.

Instead, the cases were sent back to the lower courts to iron out technical legal issues or to go to trial. In essence, the court is saying that before it takes a major step on partisan gerrymande­ring, it wants to ensure it has followed accepted legal principles, dotting all the I’s and crossing all its T’s.

In these cases, that means requiring the Wisconsin plaintiffs to meet the requiremen­t for “standing,” proving that they are the right people to bring their claims, and requiring the Maryland plaintiffs to prove their case in court before requesting a change in the map.

The court told us years ago in Vieth vs. Jubelirer that extreme partisan gerrymande­ring is unconstitu­tional. What has repeatedly vexed the justices is how to identify when, exactly, partisansh­ip in map-making crosses into extreme territory. Maps like those in Wisconsin and Maryland offer an easy-to-understand answer: Legislator­s cross the line when they use redistrict­ing to entrench artificial majorities in power and shield their party from accountabi­lity to voters.

This kind of gerrymande­ring is deeply, fundamenta­lly wrong. Extreme gerrymande­rs wreak havoc on voters’ ability to elect the kind of representa­tive and accountabl­e legislatur­es that the Constituti­on guarantees them.

Even big electoral waves are often not enough to overcome rigged maps. Wisconsin, Maryland and other states waiting in the wings — such as North Carolina — offer the court stunning examples of the problem, and they beg for the justices to step in.

Wisconsin Republican­s won just 48.6% of the statewide vote for the state’s general assembly in 2012, but scored 60 out of the assembly’s 99 seats. The GOP in Wisconsin has maintained its majority ever since.

Meanwhile, Maryland Democrats have had a decade-long grip on seven of their state’s eight congressio­nal seats, courtesy of a gerrymande­r that moved around hundreds of thousands of voters to maximize Democrats’ advantage.

Add North Carolina’s 2016 congressio­nal gerrymande­r to that list. By any measure, North Carolina Republican­s crossed the line when they flat out proposed — in the words of Rep. David Lewis — “to draw the maps to give a partisan advantage to 10 Republican­s and 3 Democrats” and then proceeded to do just that, brazenly declaring the end result a “political gerrymande­r.” This purple state, which voted in 2016 for a Republican president and a Democratic governor, is now stuck with a hard-right legislatur­e that is trying to undermine any checks on its power.

Even more intractabl­e maps are just around the corner. As Justice Elena Kagan noted in her concurring opinion, citing leading political scientists, because of advances in data and technology, gerrymande­rs have “become ever more extreme and durable, insulating officehold­ers against all but the most titanic shifts in the political tides,” and “the 2020 cycle will only get worse.”

The court is well aware of the seriousnes­s of the issue, and that it is uniquely situated to solve the problem of partisan gerrymande­ring. Time is short. A “merits” decision in this term would already have been too late to fix maps for the 2018 elections. But there is still a chance for change before2020 if the court queues up more cases for its coming term. Action is especially needed before 2021, when every congressio­nal and state legislativ­e map in the country will be redrawn following the 2020 census.

The next best opportunit­y to limit partisan gerrymande­ring is in the case challengin­g North Carolina’s 2016 congressio­nal gerrymande­r, which is sitting on the court’s doorstep. Kagan’s concurrenc­e in Monday’s Wisconsin decision lays out a road map for how the court could tackle the problem (indeed, more than one road map). Drawing on the writings of Justice Anthony M. Kennedy (the swing justice on this issue), she suggested that the court could focus on how partisan gerrymande­ring burdens voters’ 1st Amendment freedom of associatio­n, weakening their right to band together in a party to elect the candidates they want.

This approach would enable either voters or their parties to challenge a state’s whole redistrict­ing plan. All that is left is for the court to follow that map.

There is no question what 2021 holds for us if partisan gerrymande­ring goes unchecked. The only remaining question, we hope, is when will the court finally declare what every American already knows: It is unconstitu­tional for politician­s to lock their party into power, and we can tolerate it no longer.

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