The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia Senate OKS new state maps in first major vote

- By Maya T. Prabhu maya.prabhu@ajc.com and Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

The Georgia Senate approved new political maps for itself on Tuesday, securing the chamber’s Republican majority while allowing minor inroads by Democrats in a closely divided state.

The Senate map, drawn by the chamber’s Republican leadership, solidifies GOP control while allowing one additional Democratic-leaning district as Georgia’s population has grown by 1 million residents since 2010. There are currently 34 Republican­s and 22 Democrats in the state Senate.

Tuesday’s 34-21 vote along party lines is the most significan­t step yet in redrawing Georgia’s district boundaries during the oncea-decade redistrict­ing process.

Democrats tried unsuccessf­ully to debate maps drawn by their caucus to substitute for the maps presented by Republican­s, but didn’t file the legislatio­n correctly.

Approval of the state’s 56 Senate districts, each with more than 191,000 residents, puts them on a rapid path toward final approval by the state House as soon as this week. Proposals to redraw Georgia’s 14 congressio­nal seats and 180 state House seats will follow.

The map opens an opportunit­y for Republican­s to flip a Johns Creek district held by Democrat Michelle Au, encompassi­ng more Gop-leaning voters from Forsyth County within its boundaries. The map also calls for two new districts that would favor Democrats in metro Atlanta.

The changes to Au’s district convert it from having a majority of people of color to a majority-white district.

“The Republican map under considerat­ion does not add even a single majority-minority district over the total we’ve had for the past decade,” said Au, the daughter of Chinese immigrants, noting that the state’s population changes were driven by people of color while white population­s

Senate Redistrict­ing Chairman

declined. “It’s as if the huge population growth we’ve seen consisting essentiall­y entirely of Georgians of color has been rendered invisible.”

Senate Republican­s said they drew a fair map that accounts for Georgia’s expansion to 10.7 million residents.

Senate Redistrict­ing Chairman John Kennedy said the maps presented by the Republican majority prioritize­d keeping communitie­s of like-minded residents together in compact, contiguous districts. At least a dozen times, Kennedy pointed out the ways in which the map he was presenting was similar to the map introduced by the Senate Democratic Caucus.

“Many of the Senate districts that are in the bill that you have to vote on are the same as that which was proposed in the publicatio­n in the press of the Senate Democrats’ bill a couple of weeks ago,” he said.

Overall, however, Kennedy said Republican­s did a better job in redistrict­ing than Democrats when they were in power two decades ago.

“Quite frankly, the Republican­s are not going to be lectured by Democrats who ran the system 20 years ago the way they did and come into this chamber and talk about how horribly unfair it is and what a challenge it is to democracy,” said Kennedy, a Macon Republican. “No, not at all. Let’s be honest. If you’re not consistent, you’re not going to be credible.”

While some cities are split up, the Senate map keeps most of Georgia’s 159 counties intact. Twenty-nine counties would have multiple senators, down from 39.

No incumbents of either party were drawn into competitio­n with their peers. Two districts where senators are seeking higher office were dissolved and reformed in areas with growing population­s — one in Gwinnett County and another near Alpharetta and Roswell in Fulton County.

State Sen. Kim Jackson, a Stone Mountain Democrat who is also in her first term, said it seemed as though the Republican-drawn maps target Au, the only Asian American woman in the Senate.

”When you target women leaders, you are targeting all women in Georgia,” Jackson said. “When you come after women, women will come after you at the ballot box.”

The two new Democratic-leaning districts in metro Atlanta were born from the state’s shifting demographi­cs, with rural areas losing people and cities making gains. At the same time, Georgia’s white population has shrunk to just over 50%, the U.S. census says.

The map dissolves a South Georgia district currently represente­d by state Sen. Tyler Harper, a Republican from Ocilla who is running for agricultur­e commission­er. The revised Senate boundaries also relocate a district north of Atlanta represente­d by state Sen. Bruce Thompson, a Republican from White who is running for labor commission­er.

Meanwhile, new state House maps also advanced through committee and are scheduled for a vote on the House floor today.

Like the Senate maps, the House proposal would safeguard Republican majorities while bending to the realities of a politicall­y shifting state. The House map envisions 97 Gop-leaning districts in the 180-seat legislativ­e body. The current split in the House is 103 Republican­s to 77 Democrats.

Congressio­nal maps will be the last to be debated.

Senate leaders pitched a map that would improve Republican­s’ chances of gaining a seat in Congress by shifting boundaries of a district in Atlanta’s northern suburbs held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy Mcbath. The House hasn’t yet introduced its congressio­nal map, which could differ from the Senate proposal.

‘Many of the Senate districts that are in the bill that you have to vote on are the same as that which was proposed in the publicatio­n in the press of the Senate Democrats’ bill a couple of weeks ago.’ John Kennedy

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Sen. John Kennedy (right), R-macon, answers a question from Sen. Emanuel Jones, D-decatur, during a hearing on new Senate districts on Tuesday at the Georgia Capitol. The Legislatur­e is in special session to draw new political maps for the state House, state Senate and Congress.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Sen. John Kennedy (right), R-macon, answers a question from Sen. Emanuel Jones, D-decatur, during a hearing on new Senate districts on Tuesday at the Georgia Capitol. The Legislatur­e is in special session to draw new political maps for the state House, state Senate and Congress.

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