The Denver Post

Colorado map rare Dem win

- By James Anderson

Colorado Republican­s cried foul when, after the last U.S. Census in 2010, the state Supreme Court approved a Democratic-drawn map reapportio­ning the state’s 65 House seats.

GOP leaders, including then-party chair Ryan Call, argued the new map packed Republican legislator­s into individual districts, diminishin­g their clout, especially in the metropolit­an Denver area.

Democrats went on to capture the Colorado House in the 2012 elections. They have held it ever since.

“Democrats are absolutely benefiting from the current maps, and there’s no question they won’t continue if the process doesn’t change,” Call said. “Republican­s have not shown themselves to be good at legal challenges. Hats off to the Democratic litigators.”

Colorado was one of just eight U.S. states with a Democratic advantage in its lower house districts in the 2016 election, according to an Associated Press analysis. The study is based on a formula that compares the statewide average share of each party’s vote in the districts with the statewide percentage of seats it wins.

Calculatin­g partisan advantage will take on new importance when the U.S. Supreme Court considers whether Wisconsin’s state Assembly district maps violate Democratic voters’ constituti­onal rights. How the court rules could influence congressio­nal redistrict­ing and legislativ­e reapportio­nment nationwide after the 2020 Census.

In Colorado, Democrats won 57 percent of state House seats in November even though Republican­s won 50.4 percent of the statewide vote. Democrats won 37 of 65 House seats, theoretica­lly five more than would be expected based on their statewide vote share.

Roughly 20 percent of seats up for election had just one major party candidate — seven for Republican­s and six for Democrats.

The AP excluded state senate chambers from its state data because not all seats were up for election last year.

Democratic Sen. Matt Jones was a House representa­tive appointed to the 2011 legislativ­e reapportio­nment committee. He insists the panel delivered a record number of competitiv­e House districts where both major parties had close to a 50-50 chance of winning.

“Truly, about a third of the seats are competitiv­e, and that is the best you can do,” Jones said.

Jones argued the courts’ insistence on keeping county boundaries intact interfered with other mandates that included keeping whole so-called “communitie­s of interest.” One example he cited is the scenic Roaring Fork Valley that stretches roughly 40 miles from Aspen to Glenwood Springs. It cuts through three counties — and has three House seats, two held by Democrats.

“A favorite thing to do is to cry foul and say ‘gerrymande­r’ very loud,” Jones said. “We met the criteria the Supreme Court required us to meet.”

Call said he hoped the Wisconsin case could prompt changes in how Colorado goes about drawing its legislativ­e districts — though those changes would require longshot amendments to the state Constituti­on and to statute.

He’d like to see nonpartisa­n legislativ­e staff draft initial maps and a supermajor­ity consensus required by redistrict­ing and reapportio­nment panels. Currently, the 11-person reapportio­nment panel consists of party leaders in both legislativ­e chambers, three gubernator­ial appointees and four by the Supreme Court chief justice. The Constituti­on allows a majority of six members from a single party. According to the AP analysis, Colorado’s Republican congressio­nal candidates won 51 percent of the statewide vote in November to maintain their 4-3 margin. The analysis suggests there was a slight Republican advantage in the 2016 election produced by the redistrict­ing in 2011 of the state’s seven seats.

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