The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

California­ns: Block gerrymande­ring

Redistrict­ing board says Georgians would benefit in letting citizens decide.

- By Mark Niesse mark.niesse@ajc.com

Voters in Georgia would benefit from a more accountabl­e and democratic government if they’re given the power to draw the state’s electoral maps, according to members of Califor

nia’s independen­t redistrict­ing board who are visiting Georgia this weekend.

They’re bringing a message

that government should be run by the people, not by politician­s who draw districts to ensure their re-election.

The members of the California Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission say Georgians could benefit from a system that empha

sizes representa­tion over political parties’ efforts to preserve their power. They’re speaking in Atlanta, Athens, Macon and Savannah on a trip funded by a Harvard University grant to support the replicatio­n of California’s redistrict­ing process.

But change would be much harder in Georgia than in California, where voters signed a petition to put the initiative creating an independen­t board on the ballot in 2008.

Unlike California, Georgia doesn’t have that kind of direct

democracy. The only ways for Georgia to enact a similar system would be for the General Assembly to cede its redistrict­ing power or for the courts to rule that redistrict­ing for partisan purposes is unconstitu­tional.

Proposals to remove partisansh­ip from Georgia’s redistrict­ing process haven’t gone far. A state House committee held a hearing on the issue this year

but declined to vote on it. “California has successful­ly been able to end partisan gerrymande­ring and actually been able to turn it back over to the peo

ple,” said Jodie Filkins Webber, the Republican chairwoman of the commission and an Orange County attorney. “It’s about opening up public participat­ion regardless of what your party affiliatio­n is.”

About 51 percent of Georgia voters supported President Donald Trump in the 2016 election, but Republican­s control nearly two-thirds of the General Assembly and every statewide office.

Gabino Aguirre, a Democratic member of the California commission, said citizen-run redistrict­ing increased voters’ trust in government and resulted in fewer candidates who appealed to their political party rather than their constituen­ts.

“It seems to work to eliminate gridlock,” said Aguirre, a retired high school principal. “What we find is that the level of participat­ion in government has gone up.”

The California Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission has 14 members: five Democrats, five Republican­s and four commission­ers from neither party.

The commission heard from thousands of voters in 2011 before approving state and congressio­nal maps that gave no weight to protecting incumbent legislator­s. Instead, the commission made maps based on factors such as geographic compactnes­s, grouping communitie­s together and protecting minorities’ voting rights.

Just this week, the U.S. Supreme Court decided two redistrict­ing cases by ruling against Democrats in Wisconsin and Republican­s in Maryland. The court didn’t address whether partisan gerrymande­ring is constituti­onal.

But another case involving North Carolina’s districts could soon reach the Supreme Court. In that case, a federal court ruled that the state’s congressio­nal districts violate the Constituti­on’s guarantees of equal protection and freedom of speech. Republican­s control 10 of North Carolina’s 13 districts even though overall, GOP candidates running for Congress won just 53 percent of the vote in 2016.

“It makes a mockery of the electoral process,” said Emmet Bondurant, an Atlanta attorney representi­ng the North Carolina plaintiffs.

“It contribute­s to the extreme partisansh­ip that you have in Congress and in the state legislatur­e since there’s no reason to reach across the aisle when the district is rigged in your favor.”

The California redistrict­ing commission­ers said Georgia’s Republican majority in the General Assembly should create an independen­t redistrict­ing process before it loses power at some point in the future, when Democrats could then gerrymande­r seats in their favor.

“The public took charge of the process (in California), and the politician­s hated it.

But they’ve come to accept it because that’s what the public said they wanted,” said Stan Forbes, a California commission­er without a party affiliatio­n who owns an independen­t bookstore. “It gives the public an outcome that’s much fairer.”

The California Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission is visiting Georgia through a $100,000 grant awarded last year by the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard. The commission­ers are also visiting several other states.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Atlanta lawyer Emmet Bondurant (left), of Bondurant Mixson & Elmore LLP, and members of the California Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission — Stan Forbes (from left), Jodie Filkins Webber and Gabino Aguirre — discuss the possibilit­y of new redistrict­ing methods in Georgia at Bondurant offices Thursday.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Atlanta lawyer Emmet Bondurant (left), of Bondurant Mixson & Elmore LLP, and members of the California Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission — Stan Forbes (from left), Jodie Filkins Webber and Gabino Aguirre — discuss the possibilit­y of new redistrict­ing methods in Georgia at Bondurant offices Thursday.

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