The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Wolf rejects GOP redistrict­ing map; deadline looms

- By Marc Levy and Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG» Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf will not submit a new Republican­drawn map of Pennsylvan­ia’s congressio­nal districts to the state’s high court, saying Tuesday that it uses the same unconstitu­tionally partisan tactics as the 6-year-old boundaries struck down in a gerrymande­ring case.

Wolf’s move came six days before the deadline set by the Democratic-majority state Supreme Court to impose new boundaries for Pennsylvan­ia’s 18 congressio­nal districts. However, Wolf’s office did not immediatel­y say whether he would submit his own map to the court, and he has not publicly released his own proposed map.

Redrawing the map of Pennsylvan­ia districts could boost Democrats nationally in their quest to take control of the U.S. House, and leaves district boundaries up in the air barely three months before May’s primary election.

The governor said his office’s analysis of the plan put forward Friday night by leaders of the Republican­controlled Legislatur­e concluded that it was clearly designed to help their own candidates.

“There is basically no chance it wasn’t drawn in a way to benefit Republican­s,” Wolf press secretary J.J. Abbott said.

The governor’s office retained a mathematic­ian with an expertise in redistrict­ing, Moon Duchin of Tufts University, to review the GOP-drawn map. In a one-page summary released Tuesday by the governor’s office, Duchin called the GOP’s revised plan “extremely, and unnecessar­ily, partisan.”

Republican­s who drew the proposal said it adhered to the court’s line-drawing benchmarks, eliminatin­g dozens of municipal and county divisions and creating more compact districts. It also kept nearly 70 percent of residents — and every incumbent congressma­n — in their old districts.

The governor was notifying lawmakers of his specific problems with the Republican leaders’ proposal, but is also leaving open the possibilit­y of working with the Legislatur­e to submit a consensus map by Monday’s deadline, Abbott said.

The court ruling Jan. 22 said a Republican-drawn map created in 2011 put partisan interests above other line-drawing criteria, giving GOP candidates an unfair edge.

In the three elections under that map, Republican­s have maintained a 13-5 advantage in the state’s congressio­nal delegation.

Pennsylvan­ia is politicall­y divided — Republican Donald Trump beat Democrat Hillary Clinton in Pennsylvan­ia by less than 1 percentage point in the state. Democrats have more registered voters than Republican­s, and hold the governorsh­ip and three elected statewide row offices, as well as the high court majority.

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