Orlando Sentinel

Florida seeks to end lawsuit after DeSantis’ redistrict­ing plan passes

- By Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — As a new round of legal battling begins about congressio­nal redistrict­ing, the state is asking a federal court to dismiss a lawsuit that has urged judges to draw new district lines.

Attorneys for Secretary of State Laurel Lee filed a motion Friday that said the federal lawsuit, which was filed March 11, is moot. The motion came shortly after Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a congressio­nal redistrict­ing plan that lawmakers passed last week in a special legislativ­e session.

The groups Common Cause Florida and FairDistri­cts Now and individual plaintiffs filed the federal lawsuit last month as DeSantis and lawmakers were at an impasse in the once-a-decade reapportio­nment process. The lawsuit contended that judges should step in to make sure revamped districts are set before this year’s elections, as continuing to use current districts would be unconstitu­tional.

In the four-page motion filed Friday, Lee’s attorneys wrote that the newly passed redistrict­ing plan made those arguments moot.

“Now that Florida’s outmoded congressio­nal districts have been superseded by properly apportione­d congressio­nal districts, there is no longer any controvers­y, and this court cannot provide the plaintiffs and plaintiff-intervenor­s (other plaintiffs who joined the case) the relief they seek,” the motion said.

As of Monday morning, the plaintiffs’ attorneys had not filed a response to the motion, according to an online docket.

Regardless, the redistrict­ing plan that DeSantis signed Friday already faces one legal challenge and could face others.

Groups such as the League of Women Voters of Florida and 12 individual plaintiffs filed a lawsuit in Leon County circuit court Friday contending the congressio­nal map (SB 2-C) fails to comply with state redistrict­ing laws and is improperly designed to favor Republican­s.

DeSantis called last week’s special session after he vetoed a redistrict­ing plan that lawmakers passed. During the special session, the Republican-dominated House and Senate passed a map that DeSantis’ office proposed.

The map is projected to increase the number of Republican congressio­nal seats in Florida from 16 to 20, based on 2020 election results. Also, it would cut the number of districts likely to elect Black Democrats from four to two — a change that spurred a rare protest by Democratic lawmakers that temporaril­y shut down proceeding­s on the House floor Thursday.

In the federal lawsuit filed last month, attorneys for the plaintiffs proposed using a map that the Senate passed in January.

That map, for example, would have generally kept intact a sprawling North Florida district that has elected U.S. Rep. Al Lawson, a Black Democrat.

DeSantis criticized the current configurat­ion of the district, which stretches from Jacksonvil­le to west of Tallahasse­e, as being unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red. The DeSan

tis-backed plan passed last week would condense the district in the Jacksonvil­le area and make it likely to elect a Republican.

Before the special session, a three-judge panel handling the federal lawsuit scheduled a trial to start May 12.

But the court’s order appeared to acknowledg­e that the lawsuit could become moot, saying that for “now, we need to put ourselves in a position to draw a new congressio­nal map if the Florida Legislatur­e and Governor DeSantis fail to agree on one during the special session.”

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