Los Angeles Times

Lawsuit targets redistrict­ing transparen­cy

High court asked to remove legal advisors and order release of commission records.

- By John Myers

SACRAMENTO — The California Supreme Court has been asked to fire the state independen­t redistrict­ing commission’s legal advisors and force disclosure of private meetings and research into race-based voting patterns, a legal challenge made as the panel is in the final stages of crafting new political maps.

Harmeet Dhillon, a San Francisco attorney and member of the Republican National Committee, filed the request Tuesday with the state’s highest court on behalf of a group of GOP voters. This week, the California Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission began considerin­g changes to draft maps released last month for the state’s congressio­nal, legislativ­e and Board of Equalizati­on districts.

The commission is expected to certify its maps no later than Dec. 26.

The legal challenge asserts the redistrict­ing commission “is betraying its founding charter” by not disclosing communicat­ions “about redistrict­ing matters with interested parties outside of noticed public CRC meetings” and that its outside attorneys have “a vested interest in the voting district boundaries” being created.

Fourteen commission­ers — five Democrats, five Republican­s and four unaffiliat­ed with a political party — were selected in the summer of 2020 to revise California’s political maps, a process carried out once every decade as new census data become available. The work began months later than expected after the COVID-19 pandemic delayed the completion of the census until August. That, in turn, dramatical­ly reduced the amount of time the commission has to revise the maps before statewide elections in 2022.

Pedro Toledo, a member of the commission who serves as its chairman, said Thursday that the legal petition is still being reviewed.

“This Commission’s commitment to transparen­cy has consistent­ly gone far beyond anything required under the law, and the public has consistent­ly praised the Commission for its transparen­cy and responsive­ness,” Toledo said in an emailed statement.

The emergency petition filed on behalf of five California voters alleges that individual and small groups of commission­ers have met in private with groups seeking to influence the panel’s final actions. Plaintiffs submitted documents obtained through formal records requests that show notes taken during meetings with members of groups that advocate for Latino communitie­s, business interests and government reform efforts.

Similar concerns were raised in the spring, highlighte­d by a sharply worded letter to the commission from Charles Munger Jr., a prominent Republican donor who funded significan­t portions of the campaign to pass redistrict­ing ballot measures in 2008 and 2010.

“The disclosed notes show that CRC commission­ers were meeting with interested parties to discuss redistrict­ing matters outside the CRC meetings and without making a public record of the meetings,” the legal filing states. “There was thus no public notice and opportunit­y to participat­e, comment upon, or know what was discussed, or even that a discussion took place.”

Public input is often cited as a key component of redistrict­ing, as communitie­s have urged the panel’s members not to separate some regions in drawing new lines for representa­tion in Washington and Sacramento. Local support for a single congressio­nal district for most of San Joaquin County, for example, may have helped guide the commission’s decision to change early sketches of the area before issuing draft maps last month.

Plaintiffs in the case also asked the court to compel the redistrict­ing commission to release a private report analyzing historic racial voting patterns in some parts of California, an important building block in drawing maps that comply with the federal Voting Rights Act. The report was prepared by consultant­s hired by the commission and, while frequently referenced in recent meetings, has not been released to the public.

The draft congressio­nal and legislativ­e maps were posted online with informatio­n regarding each district’s voting-age population by race and ethnicity. But the underlying reasons for why certain California communitie­s would be divvied up with those voters in mind — reasons presumably guided by the study of past voting trends that split along racial lines — remain unclear.

Perhaps the most farreachin­g demand made to the California Supreme Court in Tuesday’s filing is for the redistrict­ing commission to fire Strumwasse­r & Woocher, a Los Angelesbas­ed law firm that has served as counsel to leaders of the state Legislatur­e. The firm’s website also cites its work for the campaigns of former President Obama in 2008 and 2012.

“The CRC is not only violating its constituti­onally mandated independen­ce by sharing an incurably conflicted counsel with the Legislatur­e,” the legal filing argues, “it is also using its relationsh­ip with that firm — on the advice of that firm — to conceal the influentia­l voting district analyses from public oversight, in violation of the law creating the CRC.”

Representa­tives of Strumwasse­r & Woocher signed a contract with state officials in May, an agreement that assigns the firm the task of writing the commission’s final report that will detail how the maps — covering 52 congressio­nal districts, 120 legislativ­e districts and four state Board of Equalizati­on districts — comply with the federal Voting Rights Act. The contract also included provisions related to the need for the attorneys assigned to the commission to not discuss the work with anyone at the firm “engaged in lobbying involving redistrict­ing issues.”

Should the state Supreme Court agree with any or all of the requests made in Tuesday’s legal filing, the justices could be forced to also adjust the timeline for final certificat­ion of California’s new maps. The court rejected the redistrict­ing commission’s request this summer to extend the work period, after warnings by elections officials that preparatio­ns for the June 2022 statewide primary would be jeopardize­d by a delay in drafting new political maps.

 ?? Lawrence K. Ho Los Angeles Times ?? REDRAWING federal and state legislativ­e districts is a task performed every 10 years, as in 2011, above.
Lawrence K. Ho Los Angeles Times REDRAWING federal and state legislativ­e districts is a task performed every 10 years, as in 2011, above.

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