Miami Herald

Gerrymande­ring distorts democracy. The Supreme Court should end it now

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During oral arguments Tuesday at the Supreme Court, Justice Brett Kavanaugh conceded that “extreme partisan gerrymande­ring is a real problem for our democracy.” That was a huge understate­ment.

When legislator­s manipulate congressio­nal or legislativ­e district lines to favor one party over another — a time-dishonored practice that has become more sophistica­ted in the computer age — the party in control can effectivel­y nullify the votes of tens of thousands

of citizens.

With the decennial redistrict­ing process set to begin again in only a couple of years, it's time that the court held that partisan gerrymande­ring is not just routine political gamesmansh­ip — but a cynical subversion of democracy and a violation of the U.S. Constituti­on.

The two cases argued Tuesday demonstrat­e that gerrymande­ring is undertaken with a similar fervor by both major political parties.

One of the cases involved a congressio­nal district map in North Carolina that Republican­s admitted was designed to give their party the maximum advantage.

The other case came from Maryland, where dominant Democrats designed a congressio­nal map that moved more than 300,000 people in order to capture a seat long held by a Republican.

In 1986, the Supreme Court said that partisan gerrymande­ring could be challenged as unconstitu­tional under the 14th Amendment if it involved “intentiona­l discrimina­tion against an identifiab­le political group and an actual discrimina­tory effect on that group.”

On Tuesday, Justice Samuel Alito Jr. worried that a multiplici­ty of redistrict­ing issues “are going to potentiall­y end up in court” if the justices ruled for the challenger­s. But Justice Elena Kagan said that if the court were to rule that extreme gerrymande­ring is unconstitu­tional, “presumably, some actors would change their behavior.”

If they didn’t, then, yes, the court would have to step in — just as it has done with redistrict­ing plans that discrimina­te against racial minorities. Alito and Justice Neil Gorsuch also wondered if the challenger­s in the North Carolina case were demanding that districts be drawn with some form of proportion­al representa­tion — so that the makeup of a congressio­nal delegation would mirror the number of votes cast statewide for each party.

That would be a difficult standard to impose because it could conflict with other redistrict­ing principles, such as ensuring that congressio­nal districts are compact and don't split municipali­ties.

Finally, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh raised the question of whether the court needed to act at all, given that several states have moved on their own to combat gerrymande­ring, such as by entrusting congressio­nal redistrict­ing to an independen­t, nonpartisa­n citizens commission as California has done.

Those developmen­ts are welcome, but they don't provide a nationwide solution grounded in the Constituti­on.

The court must stop its agonizing and provide one.

This editorial originally was published in the Los Angeles Times.

 ?? Getty Images ?? Back in 2017, demonstrat­ors protest partisan redistrict­ing during oral arguments in a case out of Wisconsin.
Getty Images Back in 2017, demonstrat­ors protest partisan redistrict­ing during oral arguments in a case out of Wisconsin.

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