The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Path cleared for final vote on new congressio­nal map

New state district lines would help GOP pick up seat in Congress.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.Niesse@ajc.com

A redistrict­ing proposal designed to gain Republican­s a congressio­nal seat from Georgia passed its last committee Saturday, setting up a final vote Monday.

The map redistrict­s Georgia so that it would have nine Republican and five Democratic districts, positionin­g Republican­s to increase their current 8-6 majority of Georgia’s congressio­nal delegation after Democrats won two Atlanta-area seats in recent elections.

Republican­s could pick up a seat by shifting the borders of a north Atlanta district currently held by Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath. The new district lines would move into conservati­ve areas to the north in Dawson and Forsyth counties, easing the election of a Republican candidate in next year’s elections.

The House Redistrict­ing Committee voted 10-4 along party lines to advance the map to a full vote on the House floor on Monday.

Republican leaders in the Georgia General Assembly have worked quickly to pass the new congressio­nal map, which was first made public on Wednesday and is on track to head to Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk five days later.

All of the members of the public

who spoke at the committee meeting Saturday opposed the map, with many saying it would result in Republican­s having disproport­ionate representa­tion over a politicall­y divided state where Democrat President Joe Biden narrowly won last year’s election.

“The proposed map does not represent Georgia’s diverse and growing population and is targeted to discrimina­te against minority voters,” said Mehar Nemani, a high school senior from Fulton County. “It actively hurts one party, but more than that, it specifical­ly hurts the voting of people of color.”

McBath, who is Black, was

elected in 2018 in a district known for its conservati­ve representa­tives, including Newt Gingrich before he led the Republican­s to take control of the U.S. House in 1994.

McBath won reelection last year with 55% of the vote, but the new map would favor Republican­s by 15 percentage points in next year’s elections, according to an analysis by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

State Rep. Ed Setzler disagreed with Nemani, saying the congressio­nal map respects Georgia’s racial diversity.

“I represent all people of my area regardless of their national

origin or what their political preference­s might be,” said Setzler, a Republican from Acworth. “The suggestion that this map is a gerrymande­red attack on the things that she described is just factually as a premise wrong.”

Five of Georgia’s six congressio­nal districts held by Democrats are majority nonwhite, and the new congressio­nal maps also include five districts where most residents are people of color. The district currently held by McBath would become 64% white, while the 7th Congressio­nal District held by Democrat U.S. Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux would become a safe Democratic seat with 70% people of color.

Public speakers from Cobb County objected to being mapped into a heavily conservati­ve district held by Republican U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, saying she wouldn’t represent their views.

Under the map, the northwest Georgia district held by Greene would grow to cover parts of Austell and Powder Springs that tend to vote for Democrats. The district would remain distinctly Republican, with the inclusion of liberals in Cobb overshadow­ed by the strongly conservati­ve character of the overall district.

Lawsuits alleging the maps violate voting rights are likely to quickly follow after Kemp signs the maps into law.

“If this is enacted, Georgia will be sued,” Marc Elias, the Democratic Party’s top election lawyer, wrote on Twitter on Saturday.

 ?? MARK NIESSE/MARK.NIESSE@AJC.COM ?? The House Redistrict­ing Committee voted Saturday to advance a new map for Georgia’s congressio­nal delegation that would give Republican­s a 9-5 advantage over Democrats. Panel Chairwoman Bonnie Rich is pictured speaking Thursday about the map during a hearing.
MARK NIESSE/MARK.NIESSE@AJC.COM The House Redistrict­ing Committee voted Saturday to advance a new map for Georgia’s congressio­nal delegation that would give Republican­s a 9-5 advantage over Democrats. Panel Chairwoman Bonnie Rich is pictured speaking Thursday about the map during a hearing.

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