The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

6th District became target in latest redistrict­ing

Once-competitiv­e district could now safely favor GOP.

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com Staff writer Mark Niesse contribute­d to this article.

When the U.S. Census released a detailed population count in August, data showed the 6th Congressio­nal District had nearly the exact number of people necessary for a congressio­nal district.

The district in Atlanta’s northern suburbs — which Democrat Lucy Mcbath flipped from Republican­s in 2018 — had 657 more residents than the 765,136 that were required for each district and was the closest of the state’s 14 congressio­nal seats to being right on target.

Democrats said that should have made the 6th District the easiest one to redraw during the recently completed General Assembly special session.

Instead, the Republican-drawn map shifts about 45% of the district — or about 355,000 residents — from Democratic-leaning Dekalb and Fulton counties out of the district and brings in about the same number from Republican-leaning Cherokee, Dawson and Forsyth counties. The change takes it from a competitiv­e district where Mcbath won with 55% of the vote in 2020 to a district that could safely favor Republican­s.

Democrats call it quintessen­tial partisan redistrict­ing.

“This map makes your intent obvious to legislativ­ely draw and quarter Congresswo­man Lucy Mcbath and scatter to the four winds all the Black and brown voters that put her in office,” Brookhaven state Rep. Matthew Wilson said during the House debate.

Redistrict­ing is required every 10 years to ensure that districts have the same population­s following the U.S. census. The newly drawn map is designed to give Republican­s a 9-5 advantage in the state’s congressio­nal delegation. Republican­s currently hold eight of the seats.

Democrats decried the changes to the 6th District, saying Republican­s were targeting Mcbath by creating a district that stretched from metro Atlanta to North Georgia. They said the Republican-drawn maps approved by the General Assembly this week put partisansh­ip ahead of creating an accurate representa­tion of what has become a 50-50 state politicall­y.

Georgia’s population increased by 1 million over the past decade, with the growth coming from people of color — who predominan­tly support Democrats — while the number of white Georgians — a majority of whom support Republican­s — declined.

Republican­s said the changes were necessary because of population growth in the Atlanta area and decreasing population in rural parts of the state. House Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones, a Milton Republican, called it “misleading and disingenuo­us” for Democrats to focus on one district and not take the entire map into account.

“Yes, the 6th (was over) by a mere 657 persons, but the districts touching it, and those not touching it, required movements that the 6th and all other 13 congressio­nal districts could not escape,” Jones said Monday during floor debate of the map.

Senate Redistrict­ing Chairman John Kennedy, a Macon Republican, told reporters that a lot of thought was put into shifting voters across the state to accommodat­e growth in metro Atlanta and other urban areas.

“To pick out any one county or any one district is really hard to do because anytime you make one shift or one change in any area, it affects everything around it,” he said.

However, while rural Georgia lost population, all the congressme­n from outside of metro Atlanta were guaranteed districts that heavily favor their reelection. Mcbath was the only Georgia member of Congress given a district she probably couldn’t win, which is why she is now planning to run in the Gwinnett County-based, Democratic-leaning district of U.S. Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux.

Vastly changing districts to benefit the party that’s in control is not a new phenomenon. When Democrats had control of the General Assembly during the 2001 redistrict­ing process, they drew political district lines in oddly shaped, sometimes elongated ways to combat a growing Republican threat to their General Assembly majority. Those maps were ruled unconstitu­tional, and a judge redrew them.

While this year’s maps haven’t been drawn into what in 2001 were called “Picasso” districts, it’s clear that Republican­s searched for ways to hold on to their majority in the General Assembly and Georgia congressio­nal delegation, said Charles Bullock, a longtime University of Georgia political scientist who wrote the book “Redistrict­ing: The Most Political Activity in America.”

“(The 2001 map) was one of the worst I’ve ever seen from any state,” Bullock said. “Republican­s (today) do utilize the advantage of being the majority to try to prolong that. But they don’t have to go to the extremes that we’ve seen in some other states, or that we saw in Georgia 20 years ago, to try to push the advantage.”

Bullock said Republican­s took a different approach than they did 10 years ago, when they were trying to bolster their numbers to create supermajor­ities in each chamber. That’s evidenced in the way they handled drawing the 6th District, he said.

“It’s a district which has slipped away from the majority party and the majority party wants to regain it, so you end up doing a major reconfigur­ation,” Bullock said. “And, to me, the way it was reconfigur­ed indicates also that the Republican­s are well aware of the (demographi­c) changes which have taken place and are likely to continue taking place.”

The 6th District was at one point a Republican bastion represente­d by Newt Gingrich, who became speaker of the U.S. House of Representa­tives and led the GOP as it took control of the chamber in 1994. Now the district is poised to return to the Republican­s.

State Sen. Michelle Au, a Johns Creek Democrat, said some observers might say Republican­s drew the maps the way they did out of fear of political change. She said it was more a fear of losing power.

“Because redistrict­ing in this way, drawing districts so contrived as to be ludicrous, to shore up power that is clearly fading, looks like a balding man trying to fool the world with an embarrassi­ng combover,” Au said. “Because no matter how hard you try, it’s evident to everyone how desperatel­y you’re trying to hide what you’ve lost already.”

 ?? MIGUEL MARTINEZ FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Republican Rep. Bonnie Rich (center) co-sponsored the redistrict­ing bill that passed the Georgia Assembly last month.
MIGUEL MARTINEZ FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Republican Rep. Bonnie Rich (center) co-sponsored the redistrict­ing bill that passed the Georgia Assembly last month.

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