The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Pa. still fails in transparen­t redistrict­ing

- — LNP/Lancaster Online

This year’s round of redistrict­ing — the work of shaping the political maps that help to determine the lawmakers who represent us in Harrisburg and Washington, D.C. — once again “falls to a small group of legislativ­e insiders who work behind closed doors,” Spotlight PA’s Kate Huangpu reported Oct. 28.

This comes despite the fact that this year’s redrawing of the maps “was preceded by an intense push for more public input, as well as a failed effort to take the power out of lawmakers’ hands and give it to an independen­t citizens commission,” Huangpu wrote. And it comes at a moment when state lawmakers have promised, but are not ultimately bound to, greater transparen­cy.

Redistrict­ing is concerned with future elections and what their congressio­nal and state legislatur­e maps will look like. Spotlight PA’s Huangpu examined where that complicate­d process stands in Pennsylvan­ia. “Every 10 years, using updated census informatio­n on where the state has grown or shrunk, Pennsylvan­ia redraws its state and federal districts to better represent its population,” Huangpu explained. “The state’s congressio­nal map is approved through the traditiona­l legislativ­e process, which requires a vote from the Pennsylvan­ia House and Senate and the signature of the governor.”

But the last redistrict­ing cycle in Harrisburg “saw virtually no collaborat­ion between the Republican and Democratic caucus demographe­rs as GOP lawmakers controlled both the legislativ­e and executive branches,” the Spotlight PA article noted. That ultimately led to the state Supreme Court tossing out Pennsylvan­ia’s legislativ­e and congressio­nal maps in 2018, finding they unfairly benefited Republican­s.

This time, the political dynamic in Harrisburg is different. Plus, good-government advocacy groups such as Fair Districts PA have fought (though not always successful­ly) to let the public be involved with the process of drawing and reviewing the maps.

One good thing — from the view of citizens — in this redistrict­ing cycle is that it cannot be fully controlled by one party. As Spotlight PA’s Huangpu explained: “The Republican demography teams again will take the lead on drawing the congressio­nal map, while the

House and Senate State Government committees will serve as the face of the effort — holding hearings for public feedback and accepting criticism. Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf could veto the map, likely sending it to the majority Democratic state Supreme Court. This division of power will require the Republican leaders to collaborat­e with their Democratic counterpar­ts if they hope to pass a map with a margin that supersedes a veto.”

Citizens should play a larger role, too. But that’s not necessaril­y going to be the case in the coming weeks, as Huangpu explains.

The Democrats and Republican­s in Harrisburg each have caucus teams, mostly led by staffers with long experience drawing maps. They are by definition trying to represent the interests of their own party. This can lead to “backroom dealings that preclude public input,” Huangpu wrote, further adding that “no one involved in the congressio­nal or legislativ­e process who spoke to Spotlight PA detailed the exact methodolog­y behind drawing district lines.”

We’ll know soon enough the extent to which the public’s voice is being heard on redistrict­ing. Spotlight PA reports that the preliminar­y maps could be released around Nov. 28. Pennsylvan­ians will then have 30 days to provide feedback to the redistrict­ing panel.

Once the preliminar­y maps are out, the public will be able to quickly assess their fairness because of publicly available mapping software such as Districtr.org and Dave’s Redistrict­ing, said Adam PodowitzTh­omas of the Princeton Gerrymande­ring Project. “I think that means that legislator­s are hopefully less likely to engage in the most extreme abuses, because they know there’s going to be an immediate outcry that happens,” Podowitz-Thomas said.

Fair redistrict­ing shouldn’t have to come down to the public making an outcry in the final weeks of the process, but that seems slightly better than what we’ve seen before in Pennsylvan­ia.

Not good enough, though. Lawmakers must pass reforms that ensure that the next redistrict­ing cycle is required to be fair, transparen­t and nonpartisa­n.

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