Chattanooga Times Free Press

MAINTAININ­G LEGISLATIV­E CONTROL

Republican­s didn’t lose big in 2020 – they held onto statehouse­s and the power to influence future elections

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Election Day delivered a presidenti­al victory for the Democratic Party and narrowed the partisan split in the U.S. House and Senate. But it was neverthele­ss a victory for Republican­s in the battle every decade to draw state and congressio­nal districts that favor their party.

Beginning in 2021, states will begin redrawing electoral boundaries for U.S. House districts and state legislativ­e districts, using the results of the 2020 census to determine the partisan compositio­n of Congress and statehouse­s through 2030.

Despite national Democratic success, the results of state legislativ­e elections put Republican­s in place to be the long-term winners of the election of 2020.

LEGISLATIV­E CONTROL IS KEY

In most states, the legislatur­e is responsibl­e for drawing congressio­nal district boundaries, and it is common that the majority party draws the lines to give the advantage to its party members, a practice called gerrymande­ring.

In most of these states, the governor can veto legislativ­e maps, but it’s common to have a governor from the same party as dominates the legislatur­e.

In the 2010 elections, Republican­s gained unified control of 17 of the 30 legislatur­es that then had sole district map-making responsibi­lity. And only two of those states, Minnesota and Missouri, had Democratic governors. All those legislatur­es, which collective­ly redrew 190 congressio­nal districts, helped produce a congressio­nal map that has been widely regarded as a pro-Republican gerrymande­r.

Republican-controlled legislatur­es in North Carolina and Pennsylvan­ia, for example, produced maps that ultimately awarded Republican­s with two-thirds of their state’s congressio­nal seats despite the party capturing less than 50% of the statewide vote in the next federal election. These and similarly gerrymande­red state maps helped the Republican Party maintain their 2010 majority in the House of Representa­tives, although Democratic candidates won a higher number of votes nationwide in 2012.

GOP TO DOMINATE REDISTRICT­ING

Republican­s continue to dominate statehouse­s in the wake of the 2020 state legislativ­e elections. Democrats had hoped to flip partisan control of at least one legislativ­e chamber in states like North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan, Minnesota and Texas, where they could exert greater control over the upcoming redistrict­ing process. But they didn’t flip any legislativ­e chambers in their favor — and lost control of both chambers of the New Hampshire statehouse.

In the 2021 legislativ­e season, Republican­s will have unified control of 20 of the 28 legislatur­es that retain map-making responsibi­lity. Democrats will control just seven. Power will be split only in Minnesota, where Republican­s hold the majority in the Senate and Democrats control the House.

In seven states, Democrats will control the process, which will give them a smaller effect on the national congressio­nal results. As a result of their greater control over district lines, Republican­s may be advantaged in the 2022 House elections. But there are some forces that could counter the possibilit­y of pro-Republican gerrymande­ring — including the states that have taken map-making power away from their partisan legislator­s.

THE FUTURE OF REDISTRICT­ING

In 2018, popular referenda in Colorado, Michigan and Utah created redistrict­ing commission­s that are independen­t from the legislatur­es. And in November 2020, Virginia voters overwhelmi­ngly approved a ballot measure to amend the Constituti­on to create a bipartisan redistrict­ing commission composed of state legislator­s and citizens.

In addition, Democratic governors in states where Republican­s control both legislativ­e chambers, such as Kentucky, Louisiana, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia, may veto plans that contain egregious partisan gerrymande­rs — which would likely throw map-making responsibi­lity to the state courts.

There are also forces pushing to preserve more partisan redistrict­ing processes. On Nov. 3, Missouri voters narrowly approved a provision that takes redistrict­ing out of the hands of a nonpartisa­n demographe­r and places it instead in the hands of a political commission appointed by the governor.

The measure also says districts will be drawn according to the rule of “one person, one vote” — which some believe may mean Missouri will draw its districts not based on total population, but only on the number of eligible voters. That highlights a growing controvers­y about whether to count noncitizen­s and others who are ineligible to vote, rather than the total population, for the purposes of creating electoral districts. Using total population is the current method, followed since the nation’s founding.

People seeking to battle partisan gerrymande­ring can no longer seek help from federal courts, which are barred from taking those cases by a 2019 Supreme Court decision that declared federal courts couldn’t review claims of partisan gerrymande­ring.

Republican­s may be poised to launch another round of partisan gerrymande­red districts that will last another decade, but 2020 is not 2010. Fewer states will have legislator­s draw district lines. Democratic governors may keep Republican-dominated legislatur­es in check. Grassroots movements and activist groups battling against partisan gerrymande­ring have attracted high-profile support, such as from Eric Holder, a former U.S. attorney general in the Obama administra­tion.

Opposition to redistrict­ing reforms — and specifical­ly the adoption of redistrict­ing commission­s — may also intensify, illustrate­d by the adoption of Amendment 3 in Missouri and challenges to Michigan’s new redistrict­ing commission. How these opposing forces will play out over the next decade is an open question, but we are certain they will combine to keep issues of partisan gerrymande­ring in the spotlight for the foreseeabl­e future.

Robin E. Best is associate professor of political science at Binghamton University, State University of New York. Steve Lem is professor of political science and public administra­tion at Kutztown University of Pennsylvan­ia.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

 ?? STAFF ILLUSTRATI­ON FROM AP FILE PHOTO/ERIK SCHELZIG ?? A Tennessee senator points to a map of redrawn judicial districts during a 2013 news conference in Nashville. The GOP, with its majority rule, has long employed the tactic of drawing congressio­nal district boundaries to favor Republican­s, and the recent election will give it the power to continue the practice.
STAFF ILLUSTRATI­ON FROM AP FILE PHOTO/ERIK SCHELZIG A Tennessee senator points to a map of redrawn judicial districts during a 2013 news conference in Nashville. The GOP, with its majority rule, has long employed the tactic of drawing congressio­nal district boundaries to favor Republican­s, and the recent election will give it the power to continue the practice.
 ??  ?? Robin E. Best
Robin E. Best
 ??  ?? Steve Lem
Steve Lem

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