Santa Fe New Mexican

Senate now considerin­g redistrict­ing reform bills

Advocates hope to see independen­t, bipartisan panel redrawing boundaries

- By Robert Nott rnott@sfnewmexic­an.com

Lawmakers on the Senate Rules Committee came to a quick compromise Monday on a measure they hope will set the state’s sometimes controvers­ial redistrict­ing process on a smooth path via an independen­t, bipartisan panel to redraw voting district boundaries.

A substitute bill introduced by Sen. Daniel Ivey-Soto, an Albuquerqu­e Democrat, gained the committee’s unanimous approval, replacing two competing Senate bills — including one sponsored by Ivey-Soto.

Monday’s deal came only after Ivey-Soto took a verbal swipe at critics who accused him of opposing the idea of an independen­t redistrict­ing committee because his initial bill called for a committee composed of legislator­s.

“I take a little personal some of the comments that have been made about the perspectiv­e of the Legislatur­e in the redistrict­ing process,” he said.

He said his name had been used as a “barrier to independen­t redistrict­ing. Shame on you, shame on you for doing that.”

Ivey-Soto often has said he introduced Senate Bill 15, creating a 16-member committee of lawmakers, as a placeholde­r to ensure the legislativ­e discussion on redistrict­ing took place during this year’s 60-day session.

But as the various bills on redistrict­ing stalled or failed to get an initial hearing, advocates for an independen­t panel began suggesting Ivey-Soto was holding things up on the Senate side.

Meanwhile, Albuquerqu­e Sens. Jerry Ortiz y Pino, a Democrat, and Mark Moores, a Republican, introduced Senate Bill 199, which would create an independen­t commission made up of seven people who are not currently serving as lawmakers.

Like its companion bill, House Bill 211, SB 199 would require the commission to hold public meetings on the process and come up with three to five options for the Legislatur­e to consider during an expected special session later this year.

Both bills state that if the Legislatur­e does not agree on a redistrict­ing plan, the commission would decide which option best satisfies redistrict­ing criteria. Ivey-Soto said that provision, which he called illogical, goes against the state Constituti­on on legislativ­e matters.

“I don’t see how, if we can’t select a plan, we have to select a plan,” he said.

Like SB 199, his substitute bill still calls for a seven-member panel. But it also prohibits a majority of Democrats or Republican­s and only requires the commission to come up with three plans for the Legislatur­e to consider.

There is no language in the substitute bill that would force the Legislatur­e to accept any submitted plans.

Ortiz y Pino and Moores voiced support for the new bill, and the committee voted 10-0 to approve it after about an hour of debate Monday.

Ortiz y Pino said Ivey-Soto’s bill “retains the core of what we were trying to do … while dealing with the potential challenges around the constituti­onality of it.”

The redistrict­ing effort has become a high-profile issue in the legislativ­e session, with House Speaker Brian Egolf, D-Santa Fe, publicly speaking against the bipartisan plan to create an independen­t panel to carry out the effort.

In a recent Zoom conference with Retake Our Democracy, an organizati­on focused on social justice, Egolf said he did not understand why fellow Democrats would support an independen­t panel and therefore “give advantage to the people who are trying to make the world a dirtier place, take rights away from people, make it harder to vote — all the things that we oppose. I don’t want to make it easier for them to do it.”

On Monday night, Egolf wrote in an email that he is co-sponsoring SB 15, which he said “will ensure a fair, open, and transparen­t process for the people of New Mexico.

“As many Republican-controlled states are cynically making it hard to vote, restrictin­g access to the voting booth, and perpetuati­ng lies about the 2020 election, I am proud that New Mexico is pushing hard in the opposite direction by expanding voting access and involving everyday New Mexicans in the redistrict­ing process.”

Redistrict­ing is required in every state once a decade, following the national census. The 2020 census data is not expected to be released until at least September, due to delays largely caused by the pandemic.

The Legislatur­e plans to convene a special session in November or December to select a final plan for new district maps for U.S. Congress, the state Public Education Commission and the state legislativ­e seats.

The goal of redistrict­ing is to ensure the number of people in each voting district remains fairly equal as population­s shift. The fear, some say, is that lawmakers will take advantage of the redistrict­ing process to protect party stronghold­s — in essence, picking their constituen­ts rather than letting their constituen­ts choose who will represent them.

Voting districts in New Mexico were last drawn in 2012 by a state District Court after then-Gov. Susana Martinez, a Republican, vetoed a redistrict­ing plan drafted by a Legislatur­e with a Democratic majority following the 2010 census.

The court costs associated with the legal wrangling were between $6 million and $7 million, according to media reports at the time.

Ortiz y Pino said Monday the legislativ­e efforts in the Senate are an attempt at “finding a way to avoid litigation by making the process as publicly involved as possible while retaining the Legislatur­e’s final authority over whichever maps are finally adopted.”

The substitute Senate bill next goes to the Senate Judiciary Committee for considerat­ion. Meanwhile, HB 211 awaits a hearing in the House Judiciary Committee.

The Legislatur­e plans to convene a special session in November or December to select a final plan for new district maps for Congress, the state Public Education Commission and the state legislativ­e seats.

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