The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Candidacie­s hang in the balance

Gerrymande­ring case sows doubt in big year for House races

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG » Lots of people want to run for Congress in Pennsylvan­ia this year, but they may not yet know which district they live in.

The prospect that the state Supreme Court could decide a highprofil­e gerrymande­ring case by ordering new boundaries for Pennsylvan­ia’s 18 congressio­nal districts, including one that has been described as looking like “Goofy kicking Donald Duck,” is sowing uncertaint­y barely a month before candidates begin circulatin­g petitions.

Primary fields could be jampacked, driven by Democrats’ anti-Trump fervor and a rush to fill the most open seats in Pennsylvan­ia in decades.

More than 60 people, including 14 sitting U.S. House members, are either committed to running or are kicking the tires on a run, even as district boundaries could get a major overhaul.

“It’s on everybody’s mind, because it leaves big questions of how’s this going to work out,” said Elizabeth Moro, a Democrat and first-time candidate from southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia who wants to challenge Republican U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan.

For comparison, there were 41 U.S. House candidates, including 16 incumbents, on Pennsylvan­ia’s primary ballots in 2016.

On Wednesday, the state Supreme Court — which has a 5-2 Democratic majority — will hear arguments in the 7-month-old case urging the court to throw out Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal districts as an unconstitu­tional gerrymande­r that unfairly favors Republican­s.

To be sure, Republican­s who controlled the Legislatur­e and governor’s office following the 2010 census broke decades of geographic­al precedent when re-

drawing the map.

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. They succeeded, securing 13 of 18 seats in a state where registered Democratic voters outnumber Republican­s 5 to 4.

In Republican U.S. Rep. Lou Barletta’s 11th District in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, Republican­s cut out Scranton and Wilkes-Barre and sent the district plunging more than 75 miles into south-central Pennsylvan­ia.

Now, Steve Bloom, a Republican state representa­tive from the Carlisle area, is campaignin­g to succeed Barletta, who is running instead for U.S. Senate. Bloom faces the possibilit­y that, in a few weeks, he may no longer live in the district, even as he campaigns 100 miles from his home.

“All I can do is keep my head down and keep working hard,” Bloom said.

On Feb. 13, candidates can start circulatin­g petitions to get on the primary ballot. The paperwork is due March 6 and the primary election is May 15.

In court filings, the plaintiffs — a group of Democratic voters — asked the state Supreme Court to redraw district boundaries if the Legislatur­e and governor cannot do it within a two-week window.

The defendants — Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson, and House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny — argue that the justices shouldn’t create a standard to determine when partisan bias in mapmaking goes too far, particular­ly when the U.S. Supreme Court could soon resolve similar cases from other states.

In any case, the defense team would “pursue all possible avenues” to appeal an adverse ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court, a defense lawyer, Robert Tucker, said.

In last month’s fact-finding trial, a top state elections official testified that the primary election can still be held May 15 if a new map is in place before Feb. 21. The period to circulate petitions could be postponed and compressed to March 6-20, the official, Jonathan Marks, testified.

As an alternativ­e, a primary could be held as late as July 31 to provide until early April to install a new map, Marks said.

Democrats figure that Pennsylvan­ia’s map can’t get any worse, and seem willing to live with any inconvenie­nce from a courtorder­ed redrawing. Candidates aren’t required to live in the district, but the resulting accusation­s of carpet-bagging can be a political liability.

“Regardless of how it would change my district, I would be for it,” said U.S. Rep. Mike Doyle, a Pittsburgh Democrat. The stakes are high. Democrats nationally need at least two-dozen pick-ups in November’s election to retake control of the U.S. House, and Pennsylvan­ia could provide some of those.

Democrats have a shot at picking off at least one of the four Pennsylvan­ia seats where a Republican incumbent isn’t running again, and are targeting several closely divided districts in southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia, including Meehan’s 7th District.

It is perhaps Pennsylvan­ia’s most contorted district — plaintiffs call it the “Goofy kicking Donald Duck” district — and Moro knows that redrawing it could put her Chadds Ford home in a different district.

“That’s part of the deal,” Moro said. “Better representa­tion for the people, and we’ll figure out what we do with our races.”

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