Stamford Advocate

Census sets up redistrict­ing fight over suburbs

-

The once-a-decade battle over redistrict­ing is set to be a showdown over the suburbs, as new census data showed rapid growth around some of the nation’s largest cities and shrinking population in many rural counties.

From Texas to Florida, some of the biggest gains reported Thursday came in states where Republican­s will control the redistrict­ing process, but often in and around cities where Democrats have been faring well in recent elections.

The new detailed population data from the 2020 census will serve as the building block to redraw 429 U.S. House districts in 44 states and 7,383 state legislativ­e districts across the U.S. The official goal is to ensure each district has roughly the same number of people.

But many Republican­s and Democrats also will be trying to ensure the new lines divide and combine voters in ways that make it more likely for their party’s candidates to win future elections, a process called gerrymande­ring. The parties’ successes in that effort could determine whether taxes and spending grow, climate-change polices are approved or access to abortion is expanded or curtailed.

Republican­s need to gain just five seats to take control of the U.S. House in the 2022 elections — a margin that could potentiall­y be covered through artful redistrict­ing. As they did after the 2010 census, Republican­s will hold greater sway in more states over the redistrict­ing process.

“The question is going to be how creative this new data will force Republican­s to get in maintainin­g or expanding their advantages, given an increasing­ly diverse, increasing­ly urban population,” said Joshua Blank, research director of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas.

Texas will be a major focal point in redistrict­ing.

The Census Bureau said five of the 14 U.S. cities that grew by at least 100,000

people are located in Texas — Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston and San Antonio. Four of the nation’s 10 fastest growing cities also were Texas suburbs — Frisco and McKinney near Dallas; Conroe near Houston, and New Braunfels near San Antonio. All are prime battle grounds for redistrict­ing.

By contrast, many Texas counties outside of its metropolit­an areas saw population­s decline, the Census Bureau said.

Republican­s, who currently hold 23 of the 36 U.S. House seats in Texas, will have full control over the redistrict­ing process, allowing them to decide where to draw the two new seats the state is gaining. But that could be complicate­d because Democrats generally have fared better in Texas suburbs in recent elections.

Though Republican Donald Trump carried Texas by more than 6 percentage points in the 2020 presidenti­al election, he and Democrat Joe Biden essentiall­y split voters who

identified as suburbanit­es, according to The Associated Press’ VoteCast. Trump won decisively among men and Biden had a wide advantage among women in the Texas suburbs.

Hispanic residents accounted for half the population growth in Texas. In the last election, about 6 in 10 Texas Hispanic voters chose Biden over Trump, according to VoteCast.

“As the process of redistrict­ing begins, the Legislatur­e should be guided by the principle of fair representa­tion for every Texan,” said state Rep. Rafael Anchia, a Democratic member of the House redistrict­ing committee and chair of the Mexican American Legislativ­e Caucus.

Texas had been among several states that needed advance approval from the U.S. Justice Department for its redistrict­ing plans because of a history of racial discrimina­tion. But the U.S. Supreme Court overturned that requiremen­t in 2013 and, in a separate ruling in 2019, said it would not get involved in

disputes over alleged political gerrymande­ring, leaving that to state courts to decide. Lawsuits are expected to challenge redistrict­ing maps in many states.

The GOP will control redistrict­ing in 20 states accounting for 187 U.S. House seats, including the growing states of Texas, Florida, Georgia and North Carolina, where the governor is a Democrat, but the legislatur­e has complete control of drawing new electoral lines.

Courts ordered multiple changes to the pro-Republican maps drawn in North Carolina after the 2010 census. Lawmakers on Thursday voted not to use election or racial data in redistrict­ing. State Rep. Destin Hall, a Republican leading the House Redistrict­ing Committee, said he is committed to making “significan­t and reasonable efforts to attempt to limit the partisan considerat­ion.”

Democrats will control redistrict­ing in just eight states accounting for 75 seats, including New York

and Illinois, where the loss of a seat in each gives them a chance to squeeze out Republican incumbents.

In 16 other states accounting for 167 U.S. House seats, districts will be drawn either by independen­t commission­s or by politicall­y split politician­s with legislativ­e chambers led by one party and governors of another. Six states have just one U.S. House seat, so there are no district lines to be drawn.

Outside of Texas, some of the largest growth occurred in Arizona’s chief city of Phoenix, including a nearly 80% population increase in its suburb of Buckeye. But Arizona’s voting districts are drawn by an independen­t commission, making it more difficult for Republican or Democratic officials to gain an edge in redistrict­ing.

Census data also showed large growth in Seattle and Los Angeles and some of their suburbs. Other cities gaining at least 100,000 people included Charlotte, North Carolina; Columbus, Ohio; Denver; Jacksonvil­le,

Florida; New York; and Oklahoma City. The suburbs of Salt Lake City and Boise, Idaho, also ranked high in growth rates.

Simply because Democrats may be gaining strength in suburbs doesn’t mean maps drawn by Republican­s will reflect that. The party in control can divide areas of strength for the opposition, said Republican pollster David Winston.

“When you’re talking about redistrict­ing, it’s different than looking at a state as a whole,” said Winston, a longtime adviser to U.S. House Republican leadership.

The fastest-growing U.S. metropolit­an area was The Villages in central Florida, which grew 39% from about 93,000 people to about 130,000. The largest retirement community in the nation is dominated by Republican voters and is a must-stop for GOP candidates. Though the Florida Constituti­on prohibits drawing districts to favor a political party, Republican­s leaders may nonetheles­s try to take advantage of the new population figures. Because of its growth, Florida is gaining a U.S. House seat, giving lawmakers more leeway in line-drawing.

After the 2010 census, Republican­s who controlled redistrict­ing in far more states than Democrats drew maps that gave them a greater political advantage in more states than either party had in the past 50 years, according to a new AP analysis.

But Republican­s won’t hold as much power as they did last time in some key states. Republican-led legislatur­es will be paired with Democratic governors in Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin, which both had full GOP control after the 2010 census. In Michigan, a voter-approved citizens commission will handle redistrict­ing instead of lawmakers and the governor. And in Ohio, voterappro­ved redistrict­ing reforms will require majority Republican­s to gain the support of minority Democrats for the new districts to last a full decade.

 ?? Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press ?? A worker applies brick to the facing of a new home in Frisco, Texas, on Thursday. The once-a-decade battle over redistrict­ing is set to be a showdown over the suburbs, as new census data released Thursday showed rapid growth around some of the nation’s largest cities and shrinking population in many rural counties.
Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press A worker applies brick to the facing of a new home in Frisco, Texas, on Thursday. The once-a-decade battle over redistrict­ing is set to be a showdown over the suburbs, as new census data released Thursday showed rapid growth around some of the nation’s largest cities and shrinking population in many rural counties.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States