The Capital

New map facing its first legal challenge

Redistrict­ing gives Dems edge, GOP members say

- By Pamela Wood

Maryland’s new map of congressio­nal districts is facing its first legal challenge, a lawsuit brought by a dozen Republican­s, including two who are hoping to be elected to Congress.

In the lawsuit, they argue that the new districts meander around the state in ways that divide communitie­s in order to give Democrats an advantage at the ballot box.

They’re asking the state courts to throw out the new map and substitute a map drawn by a commission appointed by Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, at least temporaril­y until the General Assembly can adopt a better map.

Del. Neil Parrott, a Republican who has represente­d Washington County in the General Assembly since 2011, is among the organizers of the lawsuit and said the latest redistrict­ing has all the hallmarks of a political gerrymande­r.

“This is a clear example of the politician­s picking their voters and not the voters picking their politician­s,” Parrott said as he announced the lawsuit Wednesday afternoon outside Frederick City Hall.

Parrott, who is running for Congress in the 6th District — which stretches from Garrett County to the Capital Beltway — in 2022, said Marylander­s need districts drawn “that are fair to the community.”

Parrott held up posters comparing the map approved by the Maryland General Assembly with one from Hogan’s Maryland Citizens Redistrict­ing Commission, which more neatly divides the districts and has fewer district boundaries crossing county lines.

Analyses of the two sets of maps have indicated it’s likely Maryland would again

elect seven Democrats and one Republican to Congress under the approved map. The Hogan commission’s map, meanwhile, might lead to the state electing two or three Republican­s.

Democratic leaders in the Maryland General Assembly defended the Congressio­nal map as they approved it earlier this month, saying it is legally sound and makes most of the districts more compact and more competitiv­e than they were before.

House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones, a Baltimore County Democrat, and Senate President Bill Ferguson, a Baltimore Democrat, did not respond to interview requests Wednesday.

State lawmakers were required to approve new district boundaries to account for population changes recorded in the 2020 census.

As a starting point, lawmakers used the map put in place following the 2010 Census. That map has been widely panned as extremely gerrymande­red, with a federal judge describing one of the districts as “reminiscen­t of a broken-winged pterodacty­l, lying prostrate across the center of the state.”

Democratic lawmakers noted that map largely survived legal challenges, so the

new map — which they said is an improvemen­t — should, as well. In a 2019 ruling on a case challengin­g that map, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that federal courts were not the proper venue for disputes involving partisan gerrymande­ring.

Hogan and many Republican­s haven’t bought arguments that the new map would survive scrutiny in the courts, insisting that the new map falls short of legal standards. Hogan, who has long been vocally opposed gerrymande­ring, has said he hopes legal challenges to the map will succeed.

“The courts will be the final arbiter, not partisan legislator­s. These maps cannot and will not stand,” Hogan said earlier this month.

And the governor published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal last week, urging the U.S. Department of Justice to intervene and file a lawsuit over the map. Hogan noted that U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland sued Texas, alleging that state’s new congressio­nal map discrimina­tes against minority voters. Maryland’s map is “even worse,” and Garland should sue this state too, Hogan argued.

All 12 of the plaintiffs in the suit filed Wednesday are Republican­s, a group that also includes Jeff Werner, who plans to run for Congress in the Prince George’s County-based 4th District.

They teamed with the conservati­ve group Judicial Watch to file the lawsuit in Anne Arundel County Circuit Court. Parrott said he hopes the case ultimately ends up in the state’s highest court, the Court of Appeals.

Five of the court’s seven judges were appointed by Hogan, including Chief Judge Joseph M. Getty, who previously served as the governor’s top lobbyist and legislativ­e adviser.

The plaintiffs are pinning their argument on two sections of the Maryland Constituti­on that require that state legislativ­e districts be compact and that all Marylander­s have a right to participat­e in “free and frequent” elections for the state legislatur­e.

Those sections of the Maryland Constituti­on make no mention of Congressio­nal elections or districts. But the plaintiffs assert in their lawsuit that those sections also apply to elections for Congress.

Legal experts have indicated such a strategy might be difficult because the Maryland Constituti­on doesn’t explicitly address Congressio­nal districts.

Another lawsuit challengin­g the Congressio­nal map is expected to be filed Thursday by a group aligned with Hogan, Fair Maps Maryland.

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