The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Report: Democrats would need huge wave of voters to win back U.S. House

- By David A. Lieb

A report released Monday suggests Democrats might have to temper their enthusiasm about climbing back to power during this year’s midterm elections.

To win a majority in the U.S. House of Representa­tives, Democrats would need a tremendous electoral wave not seen in more than 40 years to overcome Republican advantages from gerrymande­red districts in key states, according to an analysis from the Brennan Center for Justice.

The report projects that Democrats would need to win the national popular vote for congressio­nal districts by a nearly 11 percentage point margin over Republican­s to gain more than the roughly two dozen seats they need to flip control of the Republican-led chamber.

That would take more than the typical Democratic wave that history suggests would occur for the party out of power during a midterm election.

“It would be the equivalent of a tsunami,” said Michael Li, a senior counsel who heads up redistrict­ing work for the center, which is based at New York University School of Law. “Democrats would have to win larger than any sort of recent midterm wave — almost double what they got in 2006 — in order to win a narrow majority.”

The Brennan Center opposes what it calls “extreme gerrymande­ring” in which political parties draw legislativ­e districts that virtually ensure they will hold on to power.

The center has filed a court brief in a case to be heard Wednesday by the U.S. Supreme Court supporting a lawsuit by Republican­s alleging that Maryland’s former Democratic governor

and legislatur­e unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red a congressio­nal district to their advantage.

It also has filed court briefs supporting Democratic lawsuits alleging unconstitu­tional partisan gerrymande­ring by Republican­s in states such as Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia.

The center’s analysis notes that Democrats gained 31 seats when they won the national congressio­nal vote by 5.4 percentage points in 2006. Yet under the current districts, which were redrawn after

the 2010 Census under GOP control of many state capitols, a similar national victory margin in the November election is projected to net Democrats only about a dozen new seats.

The report projects that a 10 percentage point national margin would gain 21 seats for Democrats — still shy of the 23 or 24 needed to claim a House majority. An 11-point margin is projected to gain 28 seats for Democrats, but they haven’t achieved such a large midterm victory since a nearly 14 point margin gained them 49 seats in 1974.

“Even a strong blue wave would crash against a wall of gerrymande­red maps,” the Brennan Center report says.

The analysis is based on an assumption that as a political party increases its share of the statewide vote, it will see a similar percentage increase in most congressio­nal districts. The report does not account for particular factors at play this year in each district, such as whether incumbents are retiring or whether voter demographi­cs have shifted.

Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who is chairman of the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee, said in a statement that the Brennan Center report “makes clear that Republican gerrymande­ring has undermined the voting power of Americans

and threatens our democracy.”

Matt Walter, president of the Republican State Leadership Committee, dismissed it as part of a liberal narrative to diminish previous Republican victories and boost Democratic chances.

“As called for by the Constituti­on, map-drawing is a political process left to the authority of state legislatur­es,

and this so-called study is another attempt by Democrats to undermine that process and replace it with liberal courts, or cherry-picked experts from liberal faculty rooms to draw maps that rig the system for Democrats,” Walter said in a statement.

The report says that for Democrats to achieve an 11 percentage point national

victory margin, they would need to increase their vote share by at least 7 percentage points over their 2016 totals in about a dozen states where Republican­s generally had fared well, including Texas and Ohio.

Democrats also would need more modest gains in traditiona­l Democratic stronghold­s such as California and Illinois.

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