The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

High court takes up second dispute over gerrymande­rs

Md. Democrats remapped to add district, GOP says.

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court has already heard a major case about political line-drawing that has the potential to reshape American politics. Now, before even deciding that one, the court is taking up another similar case.

The arguments justices will hear Wednesday in the second case, a Republican challenge to a Democratic-leaning congressio­nal district in Maryland, could offer fresh clues to what they are thinking about partisan gerrymande­ring, an increasing­ly hot topic before courts.

Decisions in the Maryland case and the earlier one from Wisconsin are expected by late June.

The arguments come nearly six months after the court heard a dispute over Wisconsin legislativ­e districts that Democrats claim were drawn to maximize Republican control in a state that is closely divided between the parties.

The Supreme Court has never thrown out electoral districts on partisan grounds and it’s not clear the justices will do so now. But supporters of limits on partisansh­ip in redistrict­ing are encouraged that the justices are considerin­g two cases.

“In taking these two cases, the Supreme Court wants to say something about partisan gerrymande­ring. It’s clear the Supreme Court is not walking away from the issue,” said Michael Li, senior counsel at the New York University law school’s Brennan Center for Justice.

The justices’ involvemen­t in partisan redistrict­ing reflects a period of unusual activity in the courts on this topic. Over the past 16 months, courts struck down political districtin­g plans drawn by Republican­s in North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin. Federal judges threw out a state legislativ­e map in Wisconsin and a congressio­nal plan in North Carolina. In Pennsylvan­ia, the state Supreme Court invalidate­d the state’s congressio­nal districts and replaced them with a courtdrawn plan.

When the Supreme Court heard Wisconsin’s appeal,

the court appeared to be split along familiar lines. Four liberal justices seemed inclined to strike down the legislativ­e map and four conservati­ves appeared more favorable to it. That left Justice Anthony Kennedy seemingly in control of the outcome.

A relatively quick resolution of the case also appeared likely, based on the way the court handled the case. A lower court had earlier struck down the districts and ordered new ones drawn. The justices blocked the drawing of a new map last summer, but set the case for arguments in the first week of its new term in October.

Then in December, the court said it would hear the case about Maryland’s 6th congressio­nal district, but provided no further explanatio­n about why it was adding a second redistrict­ing case.

Democrats who controlled redistrict­ing in Maryland in 2011 made a conscious decision to try to increase the party’s control of congressio­nal districts from 6-2 to 7-1, said Michael Kimberly, the lawyer representi­ng the Republican challenger­s.

They took a district that had been centered in rural, Republican-leaning northweste­rn Maryland, where a longtime Republican incumbent won by 28 percentage points in 2010 and turned it into a district that took in some Democratic Washington, D.C., suburbs and elected a Democrat who won by 21 percentage points in 2012.

The change violated the First Amendment rights of the Republican voters, Kimberly said.

Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh, a Democrat, said in defending the district that it is competitiv­e for both parties. In 2014, a

friendlier year for Republican candidates, Democratic Rep. John Delaney’s victory margin dropped to less than 2 points, though it rose again in 2016.

In some ways, the Wisconsin and Maryland cases complement each other. In Wisconsin, the justices have a broad theory about partisan line-drawing. The lower court that ruled for the Democratic challenger­s concluded that the districtin­g plans were drawn to discrimina­te against Democrats, the Republican­s’ advantage would endure even in the face of a strong Democratic showing at the polls and the plans could not be explained by other, non-partisan reasons.

In Maryland, the single-district approach looks a lot like the way civil rights groups try to prove that race played too large a role in the drawing of districts. It would be both a more limited approach than the Wisconsin case, but also feel more familiar to justices who have decided many claims of racial bias in redistrict­ing.

With two cases before them, the justices now have one in which each party is complainin­g about the other.

That could be significan­t based on Chief Justice John Roberts’ stated distaste for putting the court’s credibilit­y at stake in politicall­y charged cases.

“We’ll have to decide in every case whether the Democrats win or the Republican­s win,” Roberts said in the Wisconsin arguments.

Another possibilit­y is that the justices could already have decided that there’s a procedural problem in the Wisconsin case, limiting their ability to address the merits of the Democratic voters’ claim.

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