The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

REDISTRICT­ING FIGHT TURNS TO STATES

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. >> Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled federal courts aren’t the place to settle partisan gerrymande­ring disputes, opponents of North Carolina’s district maps are putting their hopes in state courts.

An election reform group, the state Democratic Party and voters will go to court in two weeks to try to persuade state judges that Republican-drawn General Assembly districts discrimina­te against Democrats based on their political beliefs and voting history.

What’s different in this case is that the plaintiffs — some of whom sued in federal court over the state’s congressio­nal map, which ended with Thursday’s 5-4 Supreme Court decision against them — argue the House and Senate boundaries violate the state constituti­on, not the U.S. Constituti­on.

“We are confident that justice will prevail in the North Carolina courts,” said Bob Phillips with the North Carolina office of Common Cause, which is a plaintiff in both matters. “And we will continue to work with state lawmakers to reform our broken redistrict­ing system that has left far too many without a voice in Raleigh.”?

Voting-rights advocates across the country have vowed to turn to state litigation after Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in the opinion addressing North Carolina and Maryland cases that federal courts have no authority to determine whether partisan gerrymande­ring is unconstitu­tional.

Addressing complaints of partisan gerrymande­ring in state courts has already succeeded in Pennsylvan­ia, where last year the state Supreme Court struck down congressio­nal districts based on language in

the Pennsylvan­ia constituti­on that is similar to North Carolina’s. That ruling led to the court redrawing congressio­nal lines. Democrats picked up four additional seats in 2018.

The pending partisan gerrymande­ring case filed in Wake County court marks at least the eighth lawsuit challengin­g North Carolina maps on the basis of racial and partisan bias since the current round of redistrict­ing began in 2011. The lawsuits resulted in redrawing congressio­nal lines in 2016 and legislativ­e districts in 2017 — both to address racial bias. The state has spent millions of taxpayer dollars defending the maps.

Unlike the conservati­ve majority on the U.S. Supreme Court, the state Supreme Court that would hear the appeal of the trial court’s decision has six registered Democrats and one Republican.

“My guess is that the North Carolina court — given its compositio­n — will think differentl­y than the U.S. Supreme Court,” said Guy-Uriel Charles, a Duke University redistrict­ing expert and co-director of the Duke Law Center on Law, Race and Politics.

In previous decades, the state’s Democrats drew maps favoring their candidates that also ended up in court. U.S. Supreme Court rulings in the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s plowed new ground on the limits of shaping boundaries to achieve more representa­tion by candidates supported by black voters.

But litigation by political rivals and civil rights groups went into high gear against Republican­s who controlled the mapmaking after winning legislativ­e majorities in 2010. There was a national effort by the GOP to win statehouse­s and set the course for district lines.

North Carolina maps drawn in 2011 helped legislator­s create veto-proof majorities at the General Assembly, allowing them to advance their agenda on taxes, abortion and the environmen­t. Republican­s ultimately held 10 of North Carolina’s 13 seats in Congress.

The North Carolina House’s chief mapmaker this decade has called on the plaintiffs in state court to withdraw their case because of Thursday’s ruling. Those suing have no plans to withdraw.

“The U.S. Supreme Court just reaffirmed that redistrict­ing is an issue that should be worked on here by elected legislator­s, not decided in court,” state Rep. David Lewis said.

Roberts’ opinion, however, doesn’t say state judges are prevented from adjudicati­ng these matters. “Provisions in state statutes and state constituti­ons can provide standards and guidance for state courts to apply,” he wrote.

Plaintiffs in the North Carolina case are equipped with what they allege is damming informatio­n from longtime GOP redistrict­ing consultant Thomas Hofeller, who died last year. Their attorneys have said the records, subpoenaed from Hofeller’s estranged daughter, will show Republican lawmakers misled judges about how and when legislativ­e maps are drawn.

“When Americans hear what those motives are, we believe that the people will soundly reject partisan gerrymande­ring and replace it with much more transparen­t and community-driven processes,” said Kathay Feng, Common Cause’s national redistrict­ing director.

Lawyers for GOP legislator­s said no one lied and suggest Hofeller’s documents may have been obtained in an unethical manner. The three-judge panel presiding over the July 15 trial scheduled a hearing next week to decide whether materials from Hofeller or his daughter can be used.

Should the state Supreme Court ultimately rule against Republican­s, they could be forced to draw new maps and have them ready for the 2020 elections. Democrats already made electoral gains in 2018 that ended the GOP’s veto-proof majorities at the General Assembly.

They need to win only five additional seats in both House and Senate next year to take back full control. House Minority Leader Darren Jackson of Raleigh said he’s confident Democrats can win a majority in his chamber. But he insists that they’ll resist the temptation of taking the reins of drawing maps for partisan advantage for the next 10 years.

Democrats and some Republican­s have pitched the idea for years of giving the job of drawing districts to an outside group. Voters in five other states approved redistrict­ing commission­s in 2018 — another method reformers plan to keep pushing.

“We have made that promise — I have made that promise — to do an independen­t commission,” Jackson said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME ?? In this photo taken Wednesday, July 26, 2017 a lawmaker studies a district map during a joint select committee meeting on redistrict­ing in Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina’s nearly continuous legal battles this decade over how maps for state district boundaries are drawn don’t end with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision refusing to try to recalibrat­e boundaries to repair aggrieved political imbalances.
AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME In this photo taken Wednesday, July 26, 2017 a lawmaker studies a district map during a joint select committee meeting on redistrict­ing in Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina’s nearly continuous legal battles this decade over how maps for state district boundaries are drawn don’t end with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision refusing to try to recalibrat­e boundaries to repair aggrieved political imbalances.
 ?? AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME ?? In this photo taken Wednesday, July 26, 2017 a member of the gallery tries to display her sign while lawmakers convene during a joint select committee meeting on redistrict­ing in Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina’s nearly continuous legal battles this decade over how maps for state district boundaries are drawn don’t end with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision refusing to try to recalibrat­e boundaries to repair aggrieved political imbalances.
AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME In this photo taken Wednesday, July 26, 2017 a member of the gallery tries to display her sign while lawmakers convene during a joint select committee meeting on redistrict­ing in Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina’s nearly continuous legal battles this decade over how maps for state district boundaries are drawn don’t end with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision refusing to try to recalibrat­e boundaries to repair aggrieved political imbalances.
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 ?? AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME ?? In this photo taken Wednesday, July 26, 2017 a lawmaker studies a district map during a joint select committee meeting on redistrict­ing in Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina’s nearly continuous legal battles this decade over how maps for state district boundaries are drawn don’t end with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision refusing to try to recalibrat­e boundaries to repair aggrieved political imbalances.
AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME In this photo taken Wednesday, July 26, 2017 a lawmaker studies a district map during a joint select committee meeting on redistrict­ing in Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina’s nearly continuous legal battles this decade over how maps for state district boundaries are drawn don’t end with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision refusing to try to recalibrat­e boundaries to repair aggrieved political imbalances.
 ?? AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME ?? In this photo taken Wednesday, July 26, 2017 Rep. David Lewis, R-Harnett, standing center, leads lawmakers during a joint select committee meeting on redistrict­ing in Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina’s nearly continuous legal battles this decade over how maps for state district boundaries are drawn don’t end with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision refusing to try to recalibrat­e boundaries to repair aggrieved political imbalances.
AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME In this photo taken Wednesday, July 26, 2017 Rep. David Lewis, R-Harnett, standing center, leads lawmakers during a joint select committee meeting on redistrict­ing in Raleigh, N.C. North Carolina’s nearly continuous legal battles this decade over how maps for state district boundaries are drawn don’t end with a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision refusing to try to recalibrat­e boundaries to repair aggrieved political imbalances.

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