The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Redistrict­ing decision gives Dems a boost

- By Bill Barrow and Mark Scolforo

PITTSBURGH » Pennsylvan­ia already figured prominentl­y in Democrats’ attempt to win back control of the U.S. House. A decision this week in a long-running redistrict­ing case is set to give those efforts a boost.

The U.S. Supreme Court declined to intervene after the state’s high court declared unconstitu­tional Pennsylvan­ia’s existing House map, which had been heavily gerrymande­red by Republican­s. A reshuffled map is expected to make several districts friendlier for Democratic candidates in November.

Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and the leaders of the Republican-run Legislatur­e face a court-ordered Friday deadline to find a compromise approach to drawing the new boundaries.

“It’s still early in the process ... but I’m very encouraged by what this decision could mean for the people of Pennsylvan­ia,” said Rep. Ben Ray Lujan of New Mexico, who heads Democrats’ House campaign arm.

Before the redistrict­ing decision, Democrats had zeroed in on six Pennsylvan­ia congressio­nal districts out of 91 they are targeting nationwide. Only California and New York have more top targets for House Democrats.

The scramble to redraw districts for this year’s elections in Pennsylvan­ia is a preview of redistrict­ing dominoes in several states that could alter the balance on Capitol Hill in the coming years.

The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule later this year on partisan gerrymande­ring cases in Wisconsin and Maryland. A decision against maps that are overtly political, overwhelmi­ngly favoring one party over another, ultimately could force congressio­nal districts to be redrawn elsewhere, including battlegrou­nd states such as Michigan, North Carolina and Virginia.

Unlike in Pennsylvan­ia, potential changes in those states are unlikely to affect elections this year.

The hustle to redraw the state’s congressio­nal maps has left candidates such as Democrat Chrissy Houlahan wondering what district they’ll ultimately represent if they win. The former Naval officer wants to unseat Republican Rep. Ryan Costello in the Philadelph­ia suburbs. The state’s 6th Congressio­nal District appears on a map roughly shaped as a boomerang.

Costello won 57 percent of the vote in 2016, but Democrat Hillary Clinton outpaced President Donald Trump in the district.

“It’s going to be strange for me the next few weeks,” Houlahan said of waiting on new boundaries. But she called the ruling “a win for democracy” and said it won’t affect her approach, focusing on health care, jobs and education.

The new maps will not affect a March 13 special election in southwest Pennsylvan­ia, where state Rep. Rick Saccone and Democrat Conor Lamb are vying to replace Republican Tim Murphy, who resigned amid a sex scandal. But the winner in the 18th Congressio­nal District could still find himself in a redesigned district running for re-election in November.

“You could have a new congressma­n drawn out of his district completely,” said Republican strategist Bob Branstette­r, who is advising Saccone.

The current boundaries resulted from Republican­s who controlled the Legislatur­e and governor’s office breaking decades of geographic precedent when drawing boundaries after the 2010 census. They shifted whole counties and cities into different districts and produced contorted boundaries in an effort to protect a Republican advantage in the congressio­nal delegation.

Some of the districts were so oddly shaped to benefit Republican­s that they drew derisive descriptio­ns: Goofy Kicking Donald Duck; a malnourish­ed hammerhead shark winding through six counties; the state of Florida, with a longer panhandle.

The maps had the desired effect. Republican­s hold a 13-5 advantage in congressio­nal seats in a state where Democrats have 800,000 more registered voters and hold all but one statewide elected office. In 2016, President Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton by less than 1 percentage point out of more than 6 million votes cast.

Competitio­n also has suffered under the Republican­drawn maps. With the three previous House maps after the Census in 1980, 1990 and 2000, between two and six Pennsylvan­ia congressio­nal seats changed party hands during a given decade. Since the 2012 elections, when the new boundaries went into effect, none has.

An Associated Press analysis published last June found Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s won about three more congressio­nal seats in the 2016 election than would have been expected based on the party’s overall share of the vote. That ranked second nationally behind Texas and slightly ahead North Carolina and Michigan. Overall, the AP analysis found Republican­s won as many as 22 additional U.S. House seats over what would have been expected based on the average congressio­nal vote share across the country.

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