The Week (US)

Legally rigging elections

State legislatur­es are using computer-aided gerrymande­rs to ensure that the dominant party stays in power.

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How does gerrymande­ring work?

Under the Constituti­on, state legislatur­es redraw congressio­nal districts every 10 years to account for census-documented population changes. To ensure equal representa­tion, these districts must be roughly even in population. But since the early 19th century, legislatur­es have often engaged in creative boundary drawing to guarantee that most congressio­nal seats will go to the party in control of the legislatur­e. As a simple example, the party in power can take a district in which the opposition draws 50 percent of the vote and divide it in two, ensuring the minority party will lose both districts. Gerrymande­ring—named after 19th-century Massachuse­tts Gov. Elbridge Gerry—has become far more sophistica­ted and aggressive in recent years, as consultant­s armed with algorithms and voter databases have unleashed a frenzy of partisan mapmaking. In 2012, Democratic candidates for the House received 1.4 million more votes than Republican­s, but the GOP came away with a 17-seat advantage. For the 2022 midterms, only 18 states have finalized their maps thus far, but redrawn districts now virtually guarantee that Republican­s will flip at least five seats.

What states do this?

It’s common practice in the 39 states where state legislatur­es—as opposed to nonpartisa­n commission­s or other bodies—oversee redistrict­ing. The states in which Democrats control the legislatur­es aggressive­ly gerrymande­r; Illinois and Maryland contain some of the most heavily gerrymande­red and misshapen congressio­nal districts in the country. But this year, Republican­s firmly control 20 state legislatur­es, including four of the six states that are gaining congressio­nal seats: Texas, North Carolina, Montana, and Florida. Racial and ethnic minorities, who tend to favor Democrats, contribute­d much of that population growth in these states, but Republican gerrymande­ring will water down their power. Texas owes 95 percent of its 2010–2020 growth to nonwhite and Hispanic groups; only about 40 percent of the state population now is non-Hispanic white. Yet Republican­s’ 2022 map added one majority-white district to the 22 that currently exist while eliminatin­g one of its eight majority-Hispanic districts and its only majority-Black district. Despite Texas’ fast-growing nonwhite population, FiveThirty­Eight.com rates 24 out of the state’s 38 congressio­nal districts as likely

Republican stronghold­s.

Is that legal?

The Voting Rights Act of 1965 bans gerrymande­ring designed to hurt racial and ethnic groups, but it does not prohibit gerrymande­rs for partisan reasons. In 2017, the Supreme Court struck down GOP-controlled North Carolina’s initial

What’s happening this year?

A massive amount of extreme gerrymande­ring. The approved

2022 map for North Carolina, a swing state that went for Trump by less than two percentage points, would give Republican­s 10 of 14 seats. One of the two Democratic-leaning seats that was eliminated has been represente­d since 2004 by G.K. Butterfiel­d, an African-American congressma­n. Voting-rights advocates have filed three lawsuits arguing that the map is so severely gerrymande­red that it violates the principle of one person, one vote. In Wisconsin, another narrowly divided swing state, Democratic Gov. Tony Evers last month vetoed a proposed map that gave the GOP six out of eight House seats. The job of redistrict­ing now falls to Wisconsin’s Supreme Court, where conservati­ve justices hold a majority.

Can the system be fixed?

Yes, in theory, but numerous attempts at reform have failed. In 2018, 75 percent of voters in Ohio supported amendments to the state constituti­on that require the legislatur­e to get some bipartisan support for its redistrict­ing map. Republican­s commandeer­ed the process anyway, leaving Democrats with just two seats out of 15. Reformers often call for putting redistrict­ing in the hands of an independen­t or bipartisan commission; 13 states currently do this. But sometimes, the results are no less skewed: The latest proposed map in California, which draws its maps via independen­t commission, gives Democrats 75 percent of the congressio­nal seats despite their having just 59 percent of statewide votes. In the Democrats’ proposed Freedom to Vote Act, partisan gerrymande­ring would be banned nationwide. But that bill has been stymied by a likely Republican filibuster in the Senate. Without support from the Republican and Democratic incumbents who benefit from gerrymande­ring, efforts to ban it will probably go nowhere. “In this crazy system,” said New York Public Interest Research Group executive director Blair Horner, “partisan considerat­ion often rules.”

The New York Times. 2011 map, which heavily favored Republican­s, based on strong evidence the legislatur­e intended to minimize the influence of Black voters. Republican­s responded by drawing an even more politicall­y skewed map, which led to another lawsuit. In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority ruled in 2019 that regulating partisan gerrymande­ring was “beyond the reach of the federal courts.” The ruling enables lawmakers to insist that gerrymande­red maps that dilute the power of minorities do so as an unintentio­nal byproduct of drawing lines for partisan advantage.

 ?? ?? A hearing in the Georgia legislatur­e on redistrict­ing
A hearing in the Georgia legislatur­e on redistrict­ing

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