Santa Cruz Sentinel

Democrats make surprising inroads in redistrict­ing fight

- By Nicholas Riccardi and Bobby Caina Calvan

Democrats braced for disaster when state legislatur­es began redrawing congressio­nal maps, fearing that Republican dominance of statehouse­s would tilt power away from them for the next decade.

But as the redistrict­ing process reaches its final stages, that anxiety is beginning to ease.

For Democrats, the worst case scenario of losing well over a dozen seats in the U.S. House appears unlikely to happen. After some aggressive map drawing of their own in states with Democratic legislatur­es, some Democrats predict the typical congressio­nal district will shift from leaning to the right of the national vote to matching it, ending a distortion that gave the GOP a built-in advantage over the past five House elections.

“We have stymied their intent to gerrymande­r their way to a House majority,” Kelly Ward Burton, head of the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee, said of the GOP.

The nation’s congressio­nal maps won’t be settled for several more months. Republican­s in some large states like Florida have yet to finalize proposed changes, giving the GOP a last-minute opportunit­y to seek an advantage.

But the picture could come into greater clarity this week as the Democratic-controlled New York state legislatur­e gets a chance to seize mapdrawing power from the state’s bipartisan commission. That would almost certainly blunt the GOP advantage that has been in place since the last redistrict­ing process in 2010.

The jockeying in state capitals has implicatio­ns not just for Democrats’ uphill effort to maintain a majority in the U.S. House in this year’s midterm elections. It will affect the broader balance of power in Washington and state legislatur­es for the remainder of the decade.

While Republican­s say they’ve achieved their goals so far, they’re surprised at how much Democrats have tried to expand the number of seats their party can win. The GOP has taken a markedly different approach by aiming to shore up its vulnerable members’ districts, transformi­ng competitiv­e seats into safe ones.

That’s in part because Republican­s already expanded the map with aggressive redistrict­ing after the 2010 census, when they controlled more states. Now, as the lines are adjusted to meet 2020 census figures released last year, they are locking in their gains while Democrats are taking risks to fight back.

In a wave election, Democrats could lose even more seats in the maps they have drawn because they spread their voters so thin, analysts say. And, if political coalitions shift in upcoming years, seats Democrats thought were within reach could suddenly disappear.

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