Texarkana Gazette

A redistrict­ing gamble the Democrats will regret

- Ramesh Ponnuru

Amid all the ominous political news of this season, Democrats have kept their eyes fixed on a ray of hope: States were redrawing the lines that define congressio­nal districts, and Democrats were making out well in the process. “How Democrats are winning congressio­nal redistrict­ing fights” was a CNN.com headline last month. “Republican­s built on their existing gerrymande­rs to try to expand their House advantage, but Democrats fired back even more pow- erfully with gerrymande­rs of their own,” reports Vox.

But gerrymande­ring isn’t going to save the Democrats. Not this year, and probably not this decade. It may not even do much to help them.

In part, that’s because the new lines aren’t final. In Florida, Republican governor Ron DeSantis has persuaded the state senate to revise the borders in a special legislativ­e session. If his new map prevails, the state will have four more Republican­leaning House seats than it does now.

But there are also trade-offs in redistrict­ing that pose an especially acute problem for contempora­ry Democrats. Their voters have gotten more geographic­ally concentrat­ed over time; they’ve shed rural voters while gaining city-dwellers. To maximize the number of House seats they can contest, they have to divide the voters in their urban stronghold­s among districts. Because the 2020 election left them with full control over redistrict­ing in relatively few places, they have to use this tactic very aggressive­ly where they can.

Nevada is a case in point. Three of the state’s four House districts tilt Republican. The Democrats, who control the governorsh­ip and both houses of the legislatur­e, took Democratic voters out of the district centered in Las Vegas and split them among two other seats. The result was a new map with three districts that voted for Joe Biden in 2020.

The danger for Democrats lies in the fact that all three of the redrawn districts voted for Biden narrowly. Rep. Dina Titus, the Democrat who holds the Las Vegas seat, would have been a lock for re-election under the old lines. Now a Republican wave, even a medium-sized one, could sweep the Democrats out of every seat in the state. That’s a real prospect in a state with a lot of working-class Hispanic voters, a group that has been moving toward the Republican­s lately.

Keep in mind, too, that this wave would be measured against the parties’ showing in the 2020 presidenti­al race. On average, Biden ran ahead of Democratic congressio­nal candidates that year, winning over some voters who often back Republican­s but couldn’t abide Trump. Democrats can’t count on those voters in 2022.

Republican­s generally followed a different strategy in redistrict­ing. With more district lines under their control, Republican­s could afford to make it a higher priority to protect the seats where they already had an advantage. They weren’t as aggressive about maximizing the number of seats they could contest. That’s why news coverage played up Democrats’ surprising gains from redistrict­ing.

But Republican­s got both a short-term and a long-term benefit from their approach. This year, they can concentrat­e their efforts on a smaller number of winnable seats. And in future elections of this decade, when there might be a Democratic wave, more of the Republican­s’ seats will be safe.

In a 1986 Supreme Court decision concerning district lines, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor noted that “an overambiti­ous gerrymande­r can lead to disaster for the legislativ­e majority: because it has created more seats in which it hopes to win relatively narrow victories, the same swing in overall voting strength will tend to cost the legislativ­e majority more and more seats as the gerrymande­r becomes more ambitious.” Thirty-six years later, Democrats may learn that lesson the hard way.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States