Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Inaction by courts on voting map raises concern

- By Liz Navratil and Holly Otterbein

Harrisburg Bureau

HARRISBURG — With Tuesday’s deadline for filing nominating petitions imminent, prospectiv­e candidates waiting for courts to take action on Pennsylvan­ia’s radically reconfigur­ed congressio­nal map learned Friday that the wait will continue.

By day’s end Friday, neither the U.S. Supreme Court nor the U.S. District Court here had decided whether to grant requests from Republican lawmakers who want them to overturn the new congressio­nal map put in place by the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court, which ruled that lines drawn in 2011 represente­d an unconstitu­tional partisan gerrymande­r favoring Republican­s.

Members of both parties and outside experts appeared to be at a loss to explain the courts’ inaction. The delay, at least on the U.S. Supreme Court side, is “quite unusual,” said Richard L. Hasen, a law and political science professor at the University of California, Irvine.

Candidates have until 5 p.m. Tuesday to file paperwork with at least 1,000 signatures supporting their runs for office in the May 15 primary. The paperwork must be precise and include the specific districts the candidates are seeking to represent.

As of Friday evening, 12 candidates had filed petitions — nine Republican­s and three Democrats — and a flurry of other filings is expected early next week.

Republican­s say the lack of a decision this close to the deadline leaves candidates in limbo and exacerbate­s an already chaotic situation.

“There’s a lot of confusion among both candidates and

voters,” said Chris Martin, a spokesman for the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee, which works to elect GOP members to the House. “I think for the most part, most of them are getting signatures for the new districts because, until we have a decision ... that’s just the assumption they have to operate under.”

A last-minute switch could have major implicatio­ns for the election. Some Republican­s fear that a change could make them vulnerable to petition challenges that could knock them out of the election. A change also could cause some candidates to drop out of a race and — if deadlines are extended — prompt others to enter it.

One Democrat, state Rep. Greg Vitali of Delaware County, also expressed concern about the lack of clarity on the map. He flipped back and forth on whether to run for Congress or his state seat before deciding to run for both, a move that angered some other potential candidates. “Even to this day, there is still not certainty as to what those lines will be,” he said earlier this week.

Members of both parties and outside experts seem to be looking anywhere they can for hints about what the courts might do.

“The common wisdom seems to be that somebody is writing a dissent from a court order and, given the timing, the more time that passes, the less likely it is that the court grants the stay, and that’s because everybody’s reliance on the lower court order is increasing,” Mr. Hasen said.

But, he added, “You can never say never.”

Privately, some Democrats wonder whether Republican­s have resigned themselves to the new map — although publicly many GOP members still hold out hope it will be overturned.

State Rep. Rick Saccone, a Republican who lost a special election this week in Western Pennsylvan­ia’s 18th Congressio­nal District, already has announced that he will run in the map’s new 14th Congressio­nal District south of Pittsburgh.

“There’s been no confusion,” said Adam Bonin, an attorney representi­ng several Democratic candidates. “All understand what their boundaries are and what the district numbers are, and everyone is looking forward to filing their petitions on Monday and Tuesday.”

Republican­s have said repeatedly that they worry the new map will cause chaos during an important election cycle. Their opponents frequently argue that voters have nearly two months until the primary election to familiariz­e themselves with candidates and district boundaries before the race.

The Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court in January tossed out the previous congressio­nal map on the ground that it had been drawn to favor Republican­s, violating the state constituti­on. It gave lawmakers and the governor’s office deadlines for submitting and reviewing a new map. When those deadlines passed, the Supreme Court, with assistance from an outside expert, imposed a new one.

Experts have said they expect the map imposed by the state Supreme Court still would give Republican­s a slight edge but would create more districts that favor Democrats and more districts that are competitiv­e for both major parties.

Republican lawmakers have filed two legal challenges to the map, both arguing that the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court oversteppe­d its bounds and violated the Elections Clause of the U.S. Constituti­on, which gives state legislatur­es power over elections.

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