Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

So much for the wailing

- Michael Barone Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner.

Masks were necessary, especially in schools, to prevent mass deaths. Or so we were told, at great and tedious length—until suddenly, in the last 10 days, they weren’t.

The Democratic governors of Delaware, New Jersey, Connecticu­t and California followed the lead of the newly installed Republican governor of Virginia and revoked mask mandates.

Let’s pivot now to another subject on which liberal commentato­rs were raising alarms. Getting rid of gerrymande­ring, they claimed, was necessary to preserve democracy and prevent its overthrow by the forces of repression and one-party dictatorsh­ip.

It turns out that those alarms are suddenly, to borrow a Watergate word, inoperativ­e. The turning point may have come recently when David Wasserman, the Cook Political Report’s ace redistrict­ing honcho, tweeted that his state-by-state accounting showed Democrats with a two- to three-seat gain in U.S. House redistrict­ing in the cycle following the 2020 census.

So much for the lamentatio­ns, coming from Democrats such as former Attorney General Eric Holder, that Republican redistrict­ing would guarantee one-party control for another decade or even, according to left-wing tweeters, forever.

Republican­s control legislatur­es and governorsh­ips in states with more House districts than Democrats. But they are failing to make the redistrict­ing gains they did following the 2000 and 2010 censuses.

Why haven’t things been panning out that way? One reason is that Democratic redistrict­ers have been more ruthless than Republican­s, starting with Illinois and its early filing deadline on March 14. Democrats drew “bacon-strip” districts heading 100 miles out from Chicago wards to the open prairie and downstate districts that stitch together small factory or university towns along highway rights of way. They increased Democrats’ edge from 13-5 to 14-3.

New York Democrats did even better. Their edge went from 19-8 to 22-4, thanks to a plan that linked conservati­ve Staten Island with Brooklyn’s trendy Park Slope and gave House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler a district that snakes from the palisades of upper Manhattan to the beaches of Bensonhurs­t.

In contrast, the Republican-majority Ohio Supreme Court has overturned a partisan Republican map based on similar provisions. Texas Republican legislator­s concentrat­ed on strengthen­ing Republican incumbents rather than ousting Democrats.

You see similar inconsiste­ncy in interpreti­ng the Voting Rights Act. Black politician­s and Republican strategist­s long argued that it required maximizing the number of majority-Black districts, which resulted in electing more Black members and in strengthen­ing Republican­s in adjacent districts.

Democrats taking that view prevailed in federal court in challengin­g Alabama’s districts, a decision stayed last week pending full review by the Supreme Court.

But in other cases, Democrats have argued that the act requires only a large percentage of Black voters, an arrangemen­t that tends to elect more Democrats. It’s possible that the Supreme Court in the Alabama case may clear up the muddle of current Voting Rights Act jurisprude­nce that has been exploited by both parties.

The creation of purportedl­y nonpartisa­n redistrict­ing commission­s—a favorite proposal of those few liberals, like The Washington Post editoriali­sts, who lament partisan redistrict­ing—doesn’t end partisan gerrymande­rs. Democrats have succeeded in gaming supposedly neutral commission­s this cycle in California (52 districts), Michigan (13) and New Jersey (12).

Those who have lamented that partisan redistrict­ing means one-party control do have some historic precedent for their argument. As I documented in successive editions of “The Almanac of American Politics,” Democrats’ partisan redistrict­ing helped them maintain majorities in the House of Representa­tives from the Supreme Court’s one-person, one-vote decision in 1964 through 1992.

That hasn’t worked for Republican­s. Starting in 1995, neither party has maintained majorities over a 10-year intercensa­l period. Political realignmen­ts have frustrated even the most ruthless redistrict­ers and may do so again.

The waning prominence of Donald Trump may turn some affluent districts who voted for Joe Biden in 2020 Republican again. Or the postBiden emergence of someone like the 1992 Bill Clinton may turn some populist Trump 2020 districts once again Democratic. Or voters could start splitting their tickets again.

My prediction is that by 2030, masking of schoolchil­dren will be seen as a vestige of a remote and superstiti­ous past, and that the partisan redistrict­ings of political parties and “apolitical” commission­s alike will have been rendered useless by the voters.

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