Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge: N.M. lines not gerrymande­red

Congressio­nal map dilutes GOP votes but not a violation, he rules

- MORGAN LEE

SANTA FE, N.M. — New congressio­nal boundaries approved by Democrats that divided up a politicall­y conservati­ve oil-producing region in New Mexico don’t violate the state constituti­on, a judge ruled in an order published Friday.

Judge Fred Van Soelen wrote that the redistrict­ing plan enacted by Democratic state lawmakers in 2021 succeeded in substantia­lly diluting votes of their political opponents, but that the changes fell short of “egregious” gerrymande­ring.

“Because ‘entrenchme­nt’ is the touchstone of an egregious partisan gerrymande­r which the New Mexico Constituti­on prohibits, the court finds that the congressio­nal redistrict­ing map enacted under Senate Bill 1 does not violate the plaintiff’s equal protection rights,” the judge wrote.

An attorney for the state Republican Party indicated that the decision will be appealed to the New Mexico Supreme Court. A final decision could influence which party represents a congressio­nal swing district along the U.S. border with Mexico where partisan control has flipped three times in three elections.

Under the map that’s being challenged, Democratic U.S. Rep. Gabe Vasquez in 2022 ousted a first-term Republican incumbent by a competitiv­e 0.7% margin of victory. New Mexico’s 2nd District is one of about a dozen that are in the spotlight nationally as Republican­s campaign to keep their slim U.S. House majority in 2024.

Carter Harrison, an attorney for the state GOP, highlighte­d the judge’s conclusion that the predominan­t purpose of New Mexico’s redistrict­ing plan was to entrench Democratic Party in power by diluting votes.

“The court ultimately determined that the closeness of the 2022 election in Congressio­nal District 2 — an election where an incumbent Republican and longtime officehold­er and candidate in the region lost her election to a Democratic challenger, in a midterm election where Democrats held the White House and lost substantia­l ground nationally — precludes a finding that this gerrymande­r rises to unconstitu­tional levels,” Harrison said in an email Friday. “We respectful­ly disagree. … We’re proud of this position, which we believe should be vindicated on appeal.”

Democrats hold every statewide elected office in New Mexico and its three congressio­nal seats.

Leading Democratic state senators said they “respect and appreciate” the judge’s decision and that their redistrict­ing plan creates “three competitiv­e urban/rural congressio­nal districts.”

“We believe and continue to believe that competitio­n in elections is healthy,” said the message from legislator­s including Senate President Pro Tem Mimi Stewart of Albuquerqu­e and Majority Leader Peter Wirth of Santa Fe.

During trial last week at a Lovington courthouse in an oil-producing region near the Texas state line, the Republican Party argued that Democrats cut Republican lawmakers out of deliberati­ons as they divvied up a conservati­ve stronghold among three congressio­nal districts that all favor Democrats. An attorney for the Democratic-led Legislatur­e argued that the 2nd District is still competitiv­e.

Van Soelen ruled against the Republican Party but also rebuffed arguments from Democrats that their map was welcomed in a conservati­ve stronghold. He said the Democratic-led Legislatur­e provided no evidence to back up its assertions that the oil industry would benefit from a map that divvies up the industry in the southeaste­rn corner of the state to provide “multiple voices at the federal level.”

Republican legislator­s, including a retired oil-pipeline manager, testified at trial that the new congressio­nal map would limit the industry’s influence.

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