Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Pa. high court strikes down congressio­nal district map

- By David G. Savage Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court on Monday struck down the state’s congressio­nal map, which was drawn to give Republican­s a lopsided 13 to 5 majority, a ruling that could shift two or three seats to Democrats this fall.

The decision is the third in a year to strike down a state election map as a partisan gerrymande­r. Unlike the others, however, it cannot be easily blocked or voided by an appeal in federal court because it’s based solely on the state constituti­on.

The justices ordered the map to be redrawn for this year’s congressio­nal races, giving the state Legislatur­e just a few weeks to develop a new map.

In a brief unsigned opinion, the state high court said the 2011 election map “clearly, plainly and palpably” violates the Constituti­on of Pennsylvan­ia, and “its further use in elections for Pennsylvan­ia seats in the U.S. House of Representa­tives ... is hereby enjoined.” The justices in the majority said they would issue a more complete opinion spelling out the reasons for their decision.

Election-law experts said the ruling could have an impact on this-year’s midterm election and the battle for control of the House.

“This is a huge decision. It means the state’s map will be redrawn, and we could see two or three additional Democratic seats,” said Michael Li, a redistrict­ing expert with the Brennan Center in New York. “It also opens a second front in the fight against partisan gerrymande­rs. Many state constituti­ons have stronger provisions for fair elections than the federal constituti­on.”

Democrats would have to capture 24 more House seats in November to take control. In several states, including Pennsylvan­ia, they face district maps designed by Republican lawmakers that aim to ensure the GOP will win most of the seats, even if Democrats win most of the state’s votes.

Although both parties have engaged in partisan gerrymande­rs over the years, Republican­s had many more opportunit­ies to do so when lines were last drawn, after the 2010 Census, because they controlled a majority of state legislatur­es and governorsh­ips at the time.

Two weeks ago, federal judges struck down North Carolina’s congressio­nal map, noting Republican leaders in that state openly admitted they had drawn the district map to try to guarantee sending 10 Republican­s and three Democrats to the House — a goal they achieved.

The U.S. Supreme Court intervened last week and put that ruling on hold. The justices are still weighing a case from Wisconsin, in which federal judges ruled the GOP drew an election map to give its candidates a supermajor­ity in the state Assembly, even when Democrats won a narrow majority of the state’s votes.

The high court will soon hear a case from Maryland where Democrats shifted tens of thousands of voters in a successful effort to defeat a veteran Republican.

The Pennsylvan­ia court’s order gave the GOPcontrol­led General Assembly and Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf until Feb. 15 to agree on a new map. If they fail to agree, the judges said they would take charge of drawing a new map for use in the May 15th primary elections. When the state’s current map was drawn, a Republican was governor, giving the party full control over the process.

Leaders of Common Cause and the League of Women Voters, who brought the suit in Pennsylvan­ia, applauded the ruling as a victory for “voters choosing politician­s rather than politician­s choosing voters.”

“We hope that in drawing this map that legislator­s will utilize the map drawn by experts as a blueprint to restore the vote to hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvan­ians who were essentiall­y disenfranc­hised by the outrageous and unconstitu­tional gerrymande­r,” said Micah C.T. Sims, executive director of Common Cause Pennsylvan­ia.

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 ?? JESSICA KOURKOUNIS/GETTY 2012 ?? Pennsylvan­ia’s Supreme Court ruled that a 2011 congressio­nal district map unfairly tilted elections in the state.
JESSICA KOURKOUNIS/GETTY 2012 Pennsylvan­ia’s Supreme Court ruled that a 2011 congressio­nal district map unfairly tilted elections in the state.

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