The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Challenge of GOP maps moving quickly

- By Michael Rubinkam

As the U.S. Supreme Court considers a case that could change how political maps are drawn nationwide, a new lawsuit aimed at reshaping Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal districts before the 2018 midterm election is speeding toward trial.

The federal lawsuit, filed earlier this month, alleges that majority Republican­s in the state Legislatur­e drew congressio­nal maps that give the GOP an unconstitu­tional partisan advantage at election time. Republican­s won 13 of

18 congressio­nal seats in the 2014 and 2016 elections despite earning a little over 50 percent of the vote.

Senior Judge Michael Baylson, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush, has signaled he wants to proceed quickly, scheduling trial for Dec. 5.

Pennsylvan­ia is considered to be a heavily gerrymande­red state. Its congressio­nal maps show one of “the most extreme levels of partisan bias” in the nation, according to a 2017 study published by the Brennan Center at New York University School of Law. The Brennan Center opposes gerrymande­ring, the manipulati­on of legislativ­e boundaries for the benefit of one political party over the other.

Republican­s say their congressio­nal maps are lawful.

Even if the plaintiffs prevail, it’s unclear whether the case and any appeals would be decided in time for the spring primary. The judge in a separate state-court challenge to the GOP’s maps said this month it’s unlikely that case would impact next year’s elections.

The federal lawsuit, filed on behalf of five Pennsylvan­ia voters, makes an unusual legal argument. It cites the Elections Clause of the U.S. Constituti­on, which empowers state legislatur­es to set the “times, places and manner” of elections for House and Senate. The suit argues that Republican­s who controlled the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e after the 2010 census exceeded their authority under the Elections Clause by packing Democrats into as few districts as possible, concentrat­ing and limiting the impact of their vote.

The GOP redistrict­ing plan “has achieved its intended effect and made more likely the election of Republican candidates to Congress,” the suit said.

The defendants are Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and state elections officials. It’s not clear how Wolf’s lawyers will respond to the suit or whether they would offer any defense of the Republican maps.

“Governor Wolf has been a strong opponent of gerrymande­ring, as it is detrimenta­l to the democratic process, and he has been a proponent of reforms that would reduce partisansh­ip in how districts are drawn,” said his spokesman, J.J. Abbott. “We are currently evaluating our approach to this specific case.”

GOP leaders in the House and Senate plan to join the case, and are expected to mount a vigorous defense.

“Congressio­nal maps are done via law, we are integral to the legislativ­e process and we believe the maps are constituti­onal,” said House Republican spokesman Stephen Miskin.

At least one other lawsuit has cited the Elections Clause to take issue with a congressio­nal map. Republican voters in Maryland say Democrats used an illegal partisan gerrymande­r following the 2010 census to flip a congressio­nal seat from Republican to Democratic control.

That case is on hold, however, while the Supreme Court considers a gerrymande­ring challenge from Wisconsin.

The nation’s highest court — which has never thrown out a legislativ­e map because it is too partisan — must decide whether legislativ­e boundaries that seek to maximize one political party’s power can violate the constituti­onal rights of voters from the other party.

Michael Morley, a Barry University law professor who filed a friend-of-thecourt brief defending the Wisconsin GOP’s political maps, took a dim view of the Pennsylvan­ia lawsuit’s prospects.

If the Supreme Court decides to “articulate a test for political gerrymande­ring, then that standard can be applied to this case,” he said via email.

If the court “instead reaffirms that there are no ‘judicially manageable standards’ for identifyin­g the existence of a political gerrymande­r, however, I think the plaintiffs here will lose regardless of the fact they mentioned the Elections Clause,” he said.

It’s not clear how Wolf’s lawyers will respond to the suit or whether they would offer any defense of the Republican maps.

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