State Republicans approve House map that flips at least three seats
Republicans in North Carolina approved a heavily gerrymandered congressional map Wednesday that is likely to knock out about half of the Democrats representing the state in the House of Representatives. It could result in as much as an 11-3 advantage for Republicans.
The state House, controlled by a Republican supermajority, voted for the new lines a day after the state Senate approved them. Gov. Roy Cooper of North Carolina, a Democrat, cannot veto redistricting legislation.
The map creates 10 solidly Republican districts, three solidly Democratic districts and one competitive district. Currently, under the lines drawn by a court for the 2022 election, each party holds seven seats.
The new lines ensure Republican dominance in a state that, while leaning red, is closely divided. President Donald Trump won it by just over 1 percentage point in 2020, and Republicans won the last two Senate elections by 2 and 3 points.
The Democratic incumbents who have been essentially drawn off the map are Reps. Jeff Jackson in the Charlotte area, Kathy Manning in the Greensboro area and Wiley Nickel in the Raleigh area. A seat held by a fourth Democrat, Rep. Don Davis, is expected to be competitive.
“If either of these maps become final, it means I'm toast in Congress,” Jackson said in a video on X, formerly known as Twitter, last week after the release of two draft maps, one of which became the final product. “This is the majority party in the state Legislature in North Carolina basically saying, `We want another member of our party in Congress, so we're going to redraw the map to take out Jeff.'”
On Thursday, he announced that he would run for attorney general of North Carolina “to fight political corruption,” a label he applied to the gerrymandered maps.
Nickel, who won a close race last year, was also defiant.
“I don't want to give these maps credibility by announcing a run in any of these gerrymandered districts,” he said on X. “The maps are an extreme partisan gerrymander by Republican legislators that totally screw North Carolina voters. It's time to sue the bastards.”
Republicans openly acknowledged the advantage they were drawing for themselves. “There's no doubt that the congressional map that's before you today has a lean towards Republicans,” state Rep. Destin Hall, the chair of the redistricting committee, said on the floor, while adding that legislators had “complied with the law in every way.” (Hall did not immediately respond to a request for comment.)
Kareem Crayton, the senior director for voting and representation at the Brennan Center for Justice, said the map was “among the most radical examples of gerrymandering that we've seen certainly this cycle.”
The new map and the events that led to it illustrate both the power of gerrymandering to render voters' preferences electorally irrelevant, and the extent to which control of the House is being determined by courts' interpretation of what lines are permissible.
North Carolina has long been one of the most gerrymandered states in the country, as well as the subject of years of legal battles.