The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

New maps sent to court in gerrymande­ring case

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » New proposals to redraw Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal districts rolled in Thursday in a high-stakes gerrymande­ring case, meeting a court-ordered deadline to submit maps of boundaries for the state Supreme Court to consider adopting for this year’s election.

Pennsylvan­ia’s House Democrats and Senate Democrats each submitted a plan Thursday, as did a group of Republican activists who intervened in the case. The registered Democratic voters who sued successful­ly to invalidate the current map planned to submit a map and Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf may also. Each can submit as many suggested maps as they like.

The midnight deadline gives justices four more days to impose new boundaries under a timeline the divided court set to keep May’s primary election on schedule.

Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal map — drawn by Republican­s to get Republican­s elected — is widely viewed as among the nation’s most gerrymande­red. Upending it could boost Democrats nationally in their quest to capture control of the U.S. House and dramatical­ly change the state’s predominan­tly Republican, all-male delegation. Meanwhile, sitting congressme­n, dozens of would-be candidates and millions of voters could find themselves in different districts.

Republican lawmakers say they will swiftly ask federal judges to block a new map, and contend that the Democratic-majority court had no power to invalidate the congressio­nal boundaries or draw new ones.

The court will be advised by Stanford University law professor Nathan Persily, who has assisted judges drawing districts in North Carolina, New York, Connecticu­t, Georgia and Maryland. The justices could pick a submitted map, or rely on Persily to draw one.

Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican Senate majority leader, Jake Corman, on Thursday warned anew that the tight timeline would create chaos in Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal primaries, and the court-ordered process would unconstitu­tionally usurp the role of the governor and Legislatur­e.

“We’re going to have a Stanford professor come into Pennsylvan­ia,” Corman said. “He’s going to act as the prosecutor by presenting the evidence, he’s going to act as the juror by evaluating the evidence and he’s solely going to act as a judge by ultimately ruling on the evidence and produce a map, one person, to the court for the people of Pennsylvan­ia to live under.”

Corman also attacked Wolf for backing the court, saying Wolf’s “loyalties to the Democrat National Committee and making Nancy Pelosi the speaker of the House is more important than his loyalties to the Pennsylvan­ia Constituti­on.”

Leaders of the state Legislatur­e’s huge Republican majorities submitted a map Friday, although Wolf rejected it, saying it was as gerrymande­red as the 6-year-old map it would replace.

That map, crafted by Republican­s who controlled the Legislatur­e and governor’s office after the 2010 census, succeeded in its aim: Republican­s won 13 of 18 seats in three straight elections, even though Pennsylvan­ia’s statewide elections are often closely divided and registered Democratic voters outnumber Republican­s.

In drawing it, Republican­s broke decades of precedent and created bizarrely shaped districts in what Franklin and Marshall College political scientist G. Terry Madonna called “the worst gerrymande­r in modern Pennsylvan­ia history.”

The court threw it out last month, saying it unconstitu­tionally put partisan interests above other line-drawing criteria, such as eliminatin­g municipal and county divisions and keeping districts compact.

The revised map Republican­s submitted reduced splits and ironed out some of the most contorted boundaries. It also kept nearly 70 percent of residents — and every congressma­n — in their old districts in what Republican­s called an effort to minimize disruption, although it shifted key Democratic challenger­s into new districts and Wolf criticized it as keeping “nearly 70 percent of residents in districts the court found unconstitu­tional.”

The court gave no direction to protect incumbent lawmakers or to keep previous districts largely intact. Meanwhile, the NAACP wrote to Wolf and top lawmakers last week to warn against redrawing two Philadelph­ia-based districts to “disenfranc­hise the vast and robust communitie­s of color.”

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