Texarkana Gazette

Supreme Court overturns ruling in Michigan gerrymande­ring case

- By Todd Spangler

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday morning officially overturned a ruling that had called for nearly three dozen congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts in Michigan to be redrawn because they unfairly helped one political party.

The decision — which vacated an earlier ruling made by a three-judge panel by the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati — had been widely expected since the Supreme Court decided in June that it would allow state courts to decide questions about political boundary lines rather than ruling on them itself.

“Partisan gerrymande­ring claims present political questions beyond the reach of the federal courts,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in that decision involving cases brought regarding political boundary lines drawn in Maryland and North Carolina.

At the time of the decision, Republican­s in Lansing had appealed an April ruling in the Sixth Circuit which had ordered the governor and Legislatur­e to redraw 34 districts — nine congressio­nal, 10 state Senate and 15 state House districts — by Aug. 1 or it would do it for them.

The panel issued a 146-page opinion saying that Republican­s who drew and enacted new political boundaries after the 2010 Census did so in a way that either packed Democratic voters into districts or diluted their numbers in other districts in such as way as to be unconstitu­tional.

The Supreme Court decision in the Maryland and North Carolina cases — which both parties complained of gerrymande­ring, which is the practice of drawing district lines in such a way as to help one political party or another — effectivel­y ensured that the Michigan decision would be vacated, however.

That decision split the court 5-4 as Roberts, along with conservati­ve Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, found that no test has yet been proposed which is precise and politicall­y neutral enough to indicate when “political gerrymande­ring has gone too far.”

Liberal Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagen voted against.

Because of the decision, Michigan’s political lines will remain in place at least until 2022, when a bipartisan commission created by a statewide referendum last year is expected to take over the process of drawing those boundaries.

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