The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Judges to hear map challenge

Redrawn districts still in contention

- By MARK SCOLFORO

A request by eight GOP congressme­n in Pennsylvan­ia to halt the use of a new congressio­nal district map in this year’s elections was placed in the hands of three Republican-appointed federal judges Friday.

The panel, named pursuant to a federal law governing constituti­onal challenges to congressio­nal reapportio­nment, consists of Judge Christophe­r Conner, a Pennsylvan­ia-based district judge; Judge Jerome Simandle, a senior district judge from New Jersey; and Judge Kent Jordan, a circuit judge who was formerly a district judge in Delaware.

Conner and Jordan were chosen for the federal bench by President George W. Bush, while Simandle was nominated by President George H.W. Bush.

The lawsuit filed Thursday in Harrisburg against state elections officials seeks an injunction against the map produced Monday by the Democratic majority on the state Supreme Court.

A lawyer who works for Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf on Friday wrote to Conner on behalf of the elections officials, noting that the two senior Republican leaders in the Legislatur­e have a request for a stay of the new map pending before the U.S. Supreme Court.

Deputy General Counsel Thomas Howell asked Conner to defer action on the congressme­n’s

lawsuit until that request has been resolved.

Howell claimed that the lawsuit against Wolf’s acting secretary of state and the head of the Bureau of Commission­s, Elections and Legislatio­n has “significan­t hurdles” and is “rife with legal and factual errors.”

The congressme­n, joined by two GOP state senators, have asked the federal court to require the use of a 2011 congressio­nal district map, drafted by Republican­s, for this year’s primary and general elections. They argue the map the state justices announced Monday is biased in favor of Democrats, and they did not give lawmakers sufficient time to produce their own replacemen­t

map.

In the parallel case, House Speaker Mike Turzai and Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati on Wednesday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to put the new map on hold, arguing state justices oversteppe­d their authority. On Thursday the leaders went back to the state Supreme Court to ask it to delay the map.

Wolf and other parties have been given until noon Monday to weigh in.

The 2011 map is widely considered among the nation’s most gerrymande­red, and has helped Republican­s maintain a 13-5 edge in the congressio­nal delegation for three elections.

A majority on the state Supreme Court ruled in January that the 2011 map violated the state constituti­on’s guarantee of free and equal elections.

Democrats have about 800,000 more registered voters in Pennsylvan­ia, but Republican President Donald Trump narrowly defeated Hillary Clinton in the state during the 2016 election.

Democrats are hopeful that new Pennsylvan­ia congressio­nal districts will help them flip enough Republican seats to retake majority control of the U.S. House this year. Six Pennsylvan­ia congressma­n elected in 2016 are not running again, an unusually large number.

Pennsylvan­ia congressio­nal candidates can begin collecting signatures to get on the May 15 primary ballot starting Tuesday. Wolf’s office has said he is working to implement the courtdrawn map for this year’s elections.

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