The Guardian (USA)

Wisconsin lawmakers adopt new legislativ­e maps that could undo gerrymande­ring

- Alice Herman in Madison, Wisconsin

Wisconsin lawmakers voted on Tuesday to adopt legislativ­e maps drawn by the Democratic governor, Tony Evers – inching the state closer to undoing the extreme gerrymande­r that has ensured Republican control of the state for more than a decade.

Thepair of votes in the Republican­dominateds­tate assembly and state senate are a sign that the years-long battle over Wisconsin’s legislativ­e maps may be finally drawing to a close, giving Democrats a chance to win control of the state legislatur­e in upcoming elections for the first time since 2012.

The vote is the result of a December

ruling from the Wisconsin supreme court that the current state assembly and senate maps are unconstitu­tional, ordering the state to adopt new legislativ­e maps before the 2024 election – and setting a mid-March deadline. Republican and Democratic lawmakers, the governor and multiple third-party groups submitted revised maps to the court for considerat­ion, and in a 1 February report, consultant­s hired by the court to review them said that the GOPdrawn maps maintained the partisan gerrymande­r and “do not deserve further considerat­ion”.

The maps submitted by Democrats retained a Republican advantage, the consultant­s found, but to a much-reduced degree.

Democrats in both chambers overwhelmi­ngly voted against the bill after afailed attemptsen­d it back to committee for review, alleging that because the bill would not go into effect until fall 2024, it was designed to protect Republican­s such as assembly speaker Robin Vos, who is currently facing a recall attempt.

“We should let the supreme court continue to do its job to put in place a fair map in just a couple weeks,” said Democratic senator Mark Spreitzer.

The maps still need to be signed by Evers to go into effect. Evers previously signaled he would sign the legislatio­n if it came to his desk

A Marquette University researcher, John Johnson, found that Evers’ maps still give Republican­s a slight edge at retaining their legislativ­e majorities, but by a much narrower margin than the current maps.

By accepting Evers’ maps, Republican­s avoid rolling the dice on a courtdrawn map that could be less favorable to them.

“The court will likely pick one of the other three maps,” said the Republican senator Devin LeMahieu. “We’re going to end this sham litigation and pass the governor’s map.”

This fight was set in motion when liberal judge Janet Protasiewi­cz won an April 2023 state supreme court race, giving liberals a majority on the court for the first time in more than a decade. Protasiewi­cz had telegraphe­d her views of the Republican gerrymande­r during the election, calling the maps “rigged”.

Republican legislator­s spent months threatenin­g to impeach her if she didn’t recuse herself from the case, but dropped the issue after consulting with former Wisconsin supreme court justices who recommende­d against pursuing impeachmen­t.

Wisconsin’s current legislativ­e maps, drawn by Republican­s, are among the most gerrymande­red in the country. The GOP in Wisconsin has strong majorities in both houses of the state legislatur­e, holding nearly twice as many seats as Democrats in the assembly and senate even though statewide races are often decided by razor-thin margins. These new maps will erase much of that partisan advantage.

 ?? Photograph: Scott Bauer/AP ?? More than 100 opponents of the Republican redistrict­ing plans vow to fight the maps at a rally ahead of a joint legislativ­e committee hearing at the Wisconsin state capitol in Madison, Wisconsin, Oct. 28, 2021.
Photograph: Scott Bauer/AP More than 100 opponents of the Republican redistrict­ing plans vow to fight the maps at a rally ahead of a joint legislativ­e committee hearing at the Wisconsin state capitol in Madison, Wisconsin, Oct. 28, 2021.

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