San Diego Union-Tribune

REDISTRICT­ING COMMISSION DEFENDS NEW STATE MAPS

Panel created 176 districts for state, national offices

- BY DON THOMPSON

Members of the California Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission defended their months of sometimes chaotic work Monday as they handed off the completed maps that, barring successful court challenges, will govern congressio­nal and legislativ­e elections for the next 10 years.

“It was messy. And that’s the beauty of democracy,” said commission chairwoman Isra Ahmad.

The maps they formally presented to California’s top elections official, Secretary of State Shirley Weber,

form new jigsaw puzzles for 52 congressio­nal districts, 40 state Senate districts, 80 Assembly districts and four Board of Equalizati­on districts.

That’s one short of the 53 congressio­nal districts that existed under the previous maps because the population in other states is growing faster, a developmen­t with national implicatio­ns.

The maps reflect California’s growing Latino population.

Twenty-two of the 80 Assembly districts have a Latino citizen voting age population greater than 50 percent, as do 11 of the 40 Senate districts and 16 of the 52 congressio­nal districts.

That’s an increase of six Assembly districts, four Senate districts and six congressio­nal districts.

Yet the commission’s first randomly selected members drew criticism for lacking sufficient Latino representa­tion, recalled commission spokesman Fredy Ceja. Its work was further complicate­d by the coronaviru­s pandemic, which among other things delayed census data intrinsic to drawing the maps.

The redrawn district lines already have prompted a flurry of lawmakers’ retirement announceme­nts, will force others to move into new districts and court new voters, and in some cases will pit incumbents of the same or opposing parties in struggles for their political lives.

“In order to please and honor the desires of some, we knew that we would disappoint others, and for me that was a heartbreak­ing process,” said the Rev. Trena Turner, a Democratic commission­er.

“And it seemed to me that it would be so easy if we had a square state, if we didn’t lose a congressio­nal seat,” she added.

Though much of its work was streamed live and it took hours of public comments, some criticized the commission for lacking transparen­cy. A prominent Republican attorney’s lawsuit alleging conflicts and closed-door meetings was recently denied by the California Supreme Court.

Commission­ers scrambled to tweak draft maps during about 150 live public meetings, backtracke­d in some cases from complaints that draft maps would split cities or communitie­s of interest, or jousted over one later withdrawn congressio­nal district that one expert dubbed the “ribbon of shame.”

“Just because a district looks kind of complicate­d does not mean it’s gerrymande­red,” said Russell Yee, a Republican and the commission’s vice chairman. “Often it’s the most fair, especially given California’s complicate­d geography, demography.”

Sometimes new draft maps weren’t posted online for days, complicati­ng efforts to parse the changes.

“While the process was at times messy, it was an exercise in democracy done in public,” California Common Cause executive director Jonathan Mehta Stein said in a statement.

That met the goal that his organizati­on and others had in 2008 when they persuaded voters to take the redistrict­ing out of the hands of public officials who had a vested interest in the outcome.

This year’s effort, despite criticism, “put the California public in the driver’s seat,” he said, though the groups promised to seek improvemen­ts for the 2031 commission.

California is one of 10 states that empower an independen­t commission to draw lines, rather than judges or partisan lawmakers, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

The 14-member commission was picked during a lengthy process run by the state auditors office. By law it included five registered Republican­s, five registered Democrats and four people registered without a political party.

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