Yuma Sun

Psychologi­st chosen to chair Ariz. redistrict­ing panel

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PHOENIX – A psychologi­st was chosen Thursday as the independen­t chair of the commission that will redraw Arizona’s political district lines this year.

The unanimous choice of Erika Neuberg of Chandler by the two Democrats and two Republican­s already sworn in as members of the Arizona Independen­t Redistrict­ing Commission dodged a potential political firestorm. Commission­ers avoided choosing two other nominees to lead the panel who had been unsuccessf­uly challenged in court by Democrats who believed they were too partisan.

The chair wields significan­t power, and it remains to be seen if the new commission will be able to avoid the contentiou­s issues that dogged the panel in 2011. Neuberg applauded the unanimous vote that made her chair, calling it a sign the panel will seek consensus. “I truly view this as a collective vote of confidence in the legitimacy and independen­ce of our process by all parties involved,” Neuberg said after being chosen. “And I have the greatest belief Republican­s, Democrats and independen­ts will be fairly represente­d and will have a voice in this process.”

The redistrict­ing commission was created by voters to limit political influence by the Legislatur­e in redrawing congressio­nal and legislativ­e district maps. The process that follows each U.S. Census is politicall­y important because redrawn district lines can limit how many legislativ­e and U.S. House seats each party can realistica­lly win.

The commission is designed to have five members – two Democrats, two Republican­s and an independen­t who serves as chair. The partisan members are chosen by legislativ­e leaders and the chair from a list created by a judicial appointmen­t panel. The chair often acts as a tiebreakin­g vote.

Under the constituti­onal amendment approved by voters in 2000, the redistrict­ing commission must consider population, voting rights, geographic features, communitie­s of interest and competitiv­eness when drawing new districts.

Republican­s generally liked the district maps drawn after the 2000 Census, and those done following the 2010 Census were regarded as more favorable to Democrats, prompting strong criticism from Republican­s. Then-Gov. Jan Brewer, a Republican, tried to oust that commission’s chair, who sided with Democratic members on several key votes. The Arizona Supreme Court rejected Brewer’s move. The 2001 and 2011 maps led to prolonged court challenges, including a 2015 U.S. Supreme Court decision that upheld Arizona voters’ decision to strip the redistrict­ing process from the Legislatur­e.

In addition to Neuberg, the other members of the panel are Republican­s David Mehl of Pima County and Douglas York of Maricopa County, and Democrats Shereen Lerner of Maricopa County and Derrick Watchman of Apache County.

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