The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia House passes map keeping GOP edge

Dems object, saying plan quickly pushed through process.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.niesse@ajc.com

The Georgia House voted Wednesday to remap the state’s 180 districts in a way that protects a shrinking Republican majority and adds new metro Atlanta districts to accommodat­e population growth.

The 99-79 vote, almost entirely along party lines, clears the way for the General Assembly to finish redistrict­ing itself within days, a rapid process that began a week ago. The state Senate passed its maps Tuesday, and Republican leaders will soon consider how to draw Georgia’s congressio­nal lines as they attempt to gain seats.

Redistrict­ing is required every decade to ensure each district has equal population­s after Georgia added 1 million residents, most of them in metro areas. As a result, cities and suburban areas that lean Democratic will gain representa­tion, while rural areas that tend to support Republican­s will lose a few seats.

Under the House map approved Wednesday, the chamber’s Republican majority could lose six seats after next year’s elections. The map creates 97 districts that lean Republican and 83 that trend toward Democrats, according to an analysis by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on. There are currently 103 Republican­s and 77 Democrats in the House.

“This is a reflection of the growth in minority population­s in the state of Georgia, our state’s increased diversity and compliance with the Voting Rights Act,” said state Rep. Chuck Efstration, a Republican from Dacula. “This is a good map.”

Democrats objected to the redistrict­ing plan, saying it had been quickly pushed through the legislativ­e process with district lines that reduce their representa­tion. Georgia is closely split between Democrats and Republican­s in statewide elections, but the state House map continues to give the GOP an advantage.

“The people of Georgia deserve more than a magic show of smoke and mirrors,” said state Rep. Carolyn Hugley, a Democrat from Columbus. “Republican­s have ignored the will of Georgia voters in drawing their Statehouse map proposal. It minimizes the political power of the people of Georgia and ignores the fact that Georgia is equally divided politicall­y.”

The mapmaking process picks winners and losers, with some representa­tives drawn into districts that favor their opponents and others forced to face members of their own party.

For example, Republican state Rep. Philip Singleton’s new district would favor Democrats in next year’s elections because it will extend north of Coweta County into Fulton County. Singleton has been a staunch critic of Republican House Speaker David Ralston, and he’ll now face a difficult path to reelection.

A few representa­tives were drawn into the same districts as incumbents, meaning only one will remain after next year’s elections. Only one of those pairings forces a contest between a Republican and a Democrat, when Republican Rep. Gerald Greene of Cuthbert would face Democratic Rep. Winfred Dukes of Albany.

“If you allow your voice to be silenced, or you willingly submit your voice to a select few, you are complicit in the destructio­n of our republic,” said Singleton, a Republican who voted against the map. “I want everyone in this room to have an equal voice.”

Democrats said Georgia’s districts should have been crafted in a way that kept more communitie­s unified under one representa­tive and empowered people of color to represent them. Members of the House are about 67% white in a state where white people make up about half of the population.

“The people of Georgia deserve better. The people of Georgia demanded a fair and transparen­t redistrict­ing process,” said Minority Leader James Beverly, a Democrat from Macon. “What they got instead was a rushed and secretive process.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? State Rep. Bonnie Rich, R-suwanee, speaks on behalf of the redistrict­ing bill HB 1 EX in House Chambers during Day 6 of the special session at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta on Wednesday.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM State Rep. Bonnie Rich, R-suwanee, speaks on behalf of the redistrict­ing bill HB 1 EX in House Chambers during Day 6 of the special session at the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta on Wednesday.
 ?? ?? Minority Leader Rep. James Beverly, D-macon, speaks against HB 1 EX in House Chambers on Wednesday.
Minority Leader Rep. James Beverly, D-macon, speaks against HB 1 EX in House Chambers on Wednesday.

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