The Palm Beach Post

High court must give us fair districts

- DELRAY BEACH Editors note: U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch, D-Boca Raton, represents Florida’s Congressio­nal District 22. Liza McClenagha­n is the board chairwoman of Common Cause Florida.

“The fact is, gerrymande­ring has become a national scandal.” That was true when President Ronald Reagan said it in a 1987 speech to the Republican Governors Club.

And now, 30 years later, the electoral map drawing process in America is even more shameful as craven political operatives use computers to generate partisan political results.

Today’s electoral mapmaking tactics have denied voters competitiv­e elections and produced safe seats and extreme candidates and officehold­ers who have refused to compromise. Gerrymande­ring continues to foster a paralyzed and dysfunctio­nal Congress that can’t tackle the big problems facing America.

Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in a case, Gill v. Whitford, to determine whether hyperparti­san gerrymande­ring by the Wisconsin legislatur­e violated the U.S. Constituti­on.

Gerrymande­ring is the practice of politician­s drawing their own district lines to enable an easier re-election. The court will be weighing whether those who drew the maps in Wisconsin baked in such an extreme partisan advantage that voters’ preference­s wouldn’t matter. This is a conflict of interest that must end.

Gerrymande­ring undermines the American values of democracy; of government by the people, not the politician­s. High-tech gerrymande­ring enables partisan politician­s to rig the process by cherry-picking their voters. The modern tactics are so advanced that elections are often decided behind closed doors by sitting elected officials. In this case, the Supreme Court must say no to gerrymande­ring so that voters can choose their elected officials, instead of the other way around.

Gill v. Whitford could have a significan­t impact in Florida. In spite of the fact that Florida is a “purple state” — with narrow advantages in both registered party affiliatio­n and presidenti­al outcomes in recent elections — U.S. House races do not reflect that competitiv­eness. For instance, last year only two out of 27 seats were decided by fewer than 10 percentage points.

In our state, residents have been demanding fairness in the redistrict­ing process for years. In 2010, Florida voters overwhelmi­ngly approved constituti­onal amendments to reduce partisan advantages in the redistrict­ing process and strengthen the connection between voters and their representa­tives.

Unfortunat­ely, even after Floridians spoke out loudly, the state Legislatur­e continued to draw partisan maps that were rejected by the courts. Floridians must continue to hold their legislator­s accountabl­e for delivering district maps without the need for court orders.

Gerrymande­ring often leads to partisan gridlock by drawing artificial­ly uncompetit­ive districts that empower the fringes of both parties. Doing so reduces the incentive to build consensus among members of opposing parties. As a result, government often cannot develop comprehens­ive solutions to help improve the lives of everyday Floridians.

The Supreme Court has the opportunit­y to end this national scandal once and for all.

TED DEUTCH AND LIZA MCCLENAGHA­N,

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