Los Angeles Times

Justices might revisit political mapping

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — North Carolina may be a swing state in presidenti­al politics, with polls showing Hillary Clinton now leading Donald Trump.

But there’s no question who will win most of the state’s 13 U.S. House seats in November.

“It’s virtually certain that Republican­s will hold their 10-to-3 advantage, regardless of what happens in the presidenti­al race,” said David Wasserman, an analyst with the nonpartisa­n Cook Political Report. “The districts are simply far too polarized.”

That electoral lock may prompt the Supreme Court to take a new look at the old question of whether extreme partisan gerrymande­ring unconstitu­tionally denies voters an equal chance to have their voices heard.

Lawyers for North Carolina and Wisconsin are challengin­g GOP-drawn electoral maps that ensure Republican­s win a majority of seats in Congress or the state house, even when a majority of voters statewide lean in favor of Democrats.

And they are reasonably confident the justices will take up one or both of the

cases in the term ahead.

“We think there are five justices interested in devising a legal standard to stop partisan gerrymande­ring,” said Gerry Hebert, executive director of the Campaign Legal Center, a public interest group that advocates for voting rights and fair elections. He said rigged races are “a significan­t reason for the hyperparti­sanship and political gridlock we currently see in state and federal politics.”

Repeatedly in past decades, the justices have said they were troubled by partisan gerrymande­ring, but stopped short of finding a plan unconstitu­tional.

Justice Anthony M. Kennedy cast the fifth vote in 2004 to reject a gerrymande­ring claim from Pennsylvan­ia, but said a state would cross the line if one party freely admitted it drew the districts to deny the other party’s “right to fair and effective representa­tion.” He also warned of the “threat” posed by computer programs that make it easier for lawmakers to draw district lines to rig outcomes. If the courts don’t intervene, he wrote then, “the temptation to use partisan favoritism in districtin­g in an unconstitu­tional manner will grow.”

In the North Carolina case, lawyers say they have the evidence Kennedy is looking for.

When GOP lawmakers redrew the state’s congressio­nal map in 2011, they moved more black voters into two districts that had elected black Democrats and gave Republican­s safe majorities in 10 of the 13 districts. In February, however, a three-judge panel called the plan a “racial gerrymande­r” and ordered changes.

Republican leaders met in Raleigh to quickly redraw the lines, this time saying they would not use race, but instead, party affiliatio­n. The result was the same 10-3 advantage, and they acknowledg­ed their aim was to lock that in.

“We want to make clear,” said state Rep. David Lewis, that “we are going to use political data … to gain a partisan advantage on the map” and maintain “our partisan advantage.” There is “nothing wrong with political gerrymande­ring.… It is not illegal,” noted state Sen. Bob Rucho, a fellow Republican.

In early August, lawyers for the North Carolina Democrats seized on those comments in an appeal to the Supreme Court and urged the justices to decide on partisan gerrymande­ring this fall, when they review the racial gerrymande­ring case from North Carolina in McCrory vs. Harris.

Two days later, Common Cause filed a separate suit before a new three-judge panel in North Carolina asking it to strike down the state’s congressio­nal plan. “If there was ever a time for the courts to take a look at this, this is it,” said Bob Phillips, executive director of Common Cause North Carolina. “This is a competitiv­e state, where [President] Obama won narrowly in 2008, and [Mitt] Romney won narrowly in 2012. But the congressio­nal delegation does not reflect that.”

Lewis and Rucho, the authors of the redistrict­ing plan, slammed the lawsuit as “just the latest in a long line of attempts by far-left groups to use the federal court system to take away the rights of North Carolina voters.”

In 2012, 51% of North Carolina voters cast House ballots for a Democrat, yet Republican­s won nine of the 13 seats to Congress. One Democratic incumbent narrowly won in a Republican­leaning district, but stepped aside in 2014 when it became clear that he would not win.

While North Carolina may be an extreme case, it is in line with the national trend. Competitiv­e House races are rare, because districts are drawn to favor Republican­s or Democrats. In 2014, the average margin of victory for a House candidate was 35.8%, according to Ballotpedi­a, a nonpartisa­n almanac of election data.

Pennsylvan­ia, which has voted Democratic in national elections but has a Republican-controlled Legislatur­e, regularly sends 13 Republican­s and five Democrats to the U.S. House. Ohio, another tossup state, sends 12 Republican­s to the House, along with four Democrats.

Virginia, which twice voted for Obama and has two Democratic senators and a Democratic governor, has been sending eight Republican­s and three Democrats to Congress. On the other side of the Potomac River, Maryland leans Democratic, and its Democratic-controlled Legislatur­e drew districts that gave its candidates seven of eight seats in the House.

The Wisconsin case focuses on the state house and the electoral map drawn when Republican­s took full control in 2011. A year later, 51% of voters cast ballots for Democrats, yet Republican­s won a supermajor­ity of 60 of 99 seats in the Assembly.

“Wisconsin has the most extreme partisan map in the United States,” Hebert said.

In May, a three-judge panel heard arguments on whether the plan is unconstitu­tional, and a ruling is expected shortly. If the judges uphold the plan, the challenger­s say they will file an appeal directly with the Supreme Court.

Unlike other federal cases, election and voting cases are heard by threejudge panels, and their rulings go directly to the Supreme Court, where the justices are required to either affirm or reverse the decision.

Gerrymande­ring has a long history: In 1812, a Boston newspaper drew a cartoon depicting a salamander-shaped district that favored Gov. Elbridge Gerry’s Democratic-Republican Party, and thereafter such odd-looking districts were dubbed “gerry-manders.”

But these days, an electoral district map can be drawn with neat lines that nonetheles­s effectivel­y ensure one party will win a supermajor­ity of seats in Congress or the state house for the next decade.

Ideally, mapmakers give their party’s candidates districts with 55% to 60% of their favored voters, while giving the other party’s candidates fewer districts that include 70% to 80% of their likely voters.

University of Chicago Law professor Nicholas Stephanopo­ulos and Eric McGhee of the Public Policy Institute of California devised a formula for measuring an electoral map’s efficiency in winning seats. The Wisconsin Assembly plan stood out because Republican­s did not lose a single seat from their 60-seat supermajor­ity in 2012, even though most voters cast ballots for Democrats.

“That’s exactly what was planned,” Stephanopo­ulos said. “This is all about partisan advantage. You don’t need squiggly lines or weird shapes. You tell the computer: Give me the greatest number of seats. You give all of your candidates a small but reliable margin of victory so the seats won’t flip.”

Stephanopo­ulos and McGhee used the “efficiency” formula to track state-by-state legislativ­e races back to 1972. In the 1970s and ’80s, gerrymande­rs tended to favor Democrats slightly, with California and Illinois among the worst offenders, they said. After the censuses of 1990 and 2000, the election maps tended to favor Republican­s slightly.

This decade is different, Stephanopo­ulos said. “Now the advantages are much larger, and they are very pro-Republican,” he said. “We now see very extreme gerrymande­rs that skew the makeup of Congress and the state legislatur­es.”

The lawmakers in charge, like those in North Carolina and Wisconsin, believe the high court has given them a green light to draw maps for political advantage, he said.

Stephanopo­ulos hopes the justices will intervene. “I think it would be a very positive developmen­t for democracy if the court puts a limit on gerrymande­rs,” he said.

 ?? Corey Lowenstein News & Observer ?? NORTH CAROLINA state Sen. Bob Rucho, a Republican in a state where voters have leaned Democratic, defends political gerrymande­ring as “not illegal.”
Corey Lowenstein News & Observer NORTH CAROLINA state Sen. Bob Rucho, a Republican in a state where voters have leaned Democratic, defends political gerrymande­ring as “not illegal.”

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