The Columbus Dispatch

Dems facing redistrict­ing hurdles

Experts envision fewer interventi­ons in courts

- Nicholas Riccardi

The fight over redrawing political maps is intensifyi­ng in state legislatur­es and nonpartisa­n commission­s around the country. But Republican­s and Democrats already are planning for major showdowns in the courts.

For months, Democrats and Republican­s have been laying the groundwork for a complex, 50-state legal battle over the once-a-decade process of redistrict­ing. Both parties are preparing for a changed legal climate where federal courts are newly hostile to claims of unconstitu­tional partisan gerrymande­ring and state courts could create a patchwork of rulings. It will all play out in a tightened timeframe due to pandemicre­lated delays.

Experts say that adds up to a challengin­g landscape for Democrats, who have in the past won major court victories by proving Republican­s deliberate­ly used maps to disenfranc­hise Democratic voters. Some are predicting far fewer dramatic court interventi­ons, despite plans for a more aggressive strategy.

“There will be a lot of litigation, but in a lot of ways the tools will be less sharp than they used to be,” said Michael Li of the Brennan Center for Social Justice in New York City.

Democrats began filing preemptive lawsuits in April, well before last week’s release of the Census Bureau’s detailed population data used to draw the lines for Congress, statehouse­s and school districts around the country. Still, the most significant lawsuits are yet to come, and probably won’t be filed until states begin to produce maps over the next few months.

After the 2010 redistrict­ing cycle, courts eventually tossed out maps drawn by Republican­s in four states. The courts found Republican­s improperly used voters’ race and party affiliations to draw lines that favored their candidates – a practice known as gerrymande­ring. The judges redrew the maps in Florida, North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia

and Texas to give Democrats a better chance of winning congressio­nal seats. Without that interventi­on, the GOP would currently control the House of Representa­tives.

But legal experts are skeptical there will be such dramatic reversals in court this time. They note that the conservati­ve majority on the U.S. Supreme Court has already cut off one avenue for legal challenges, ruling that striking down partisan gerrymande­rs is no longer the role of federal courts. That makes it less likely that courts intervene, experts said.

The one way the dynamic could change is if Congress passes an ambitious election bill known as the For the People Act, which would, among other provisions, outlaw partisan gerrymande­ring. But the legislatio­n is stuck in the Senate, where Democrats have been reluctant to change rules to eliminate the 60-vote threshold needed to overcome a Republican filibuster blocking the measure.

The longer odds of litigation are particular­ly ominous for Democrats, who start the process at a significant disadvanta­ge. They control line-drawing in states with 75 House seats, while the

GOP controls the process in states with 187 seats.

Democrats “have a lot more incentive to litigate because they would have a lot more to gain,” said Jason Torchinsky, general counsel to the National Republican Redistrict­ing Trust.

Kelly Ward Burton, executive director of the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee, which coordinate­s litigation for that party, agreed that Democrats will be aggressive. “We fully anticipate being in court in the states where Republican­s control the redistrict­ing process and where they intend to gerrymande­r,” she said.

Burton said she’s not too concerned about the Supreme Court’s 2019 ruling that federal courts cannot overturn partisan gerrymande­ring, because racial gerrymande­ring remains illegal under federal law. In the states Democrats are most worried about where the GOP controls the process – Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Texas – party affiliation often runs along racial lines, with Black, Latino and Asian American voters more likely to be Democratic and white voters more likely to be Republican.

But Li warned that’s a double-edged sword. Democrats can argue Republican gerrymande­rs are racial, rather than partisan, but GOP lawyers can just tell judges they were following the Supreme Court’s direction and looking only at party, not race. “The Supreme Court has created this weird binary – if it’s on the racial side, it’s bad, but if it’s on the partisan side, it’s okay,” he said.

Republican­s in the North Carolina legislatur­e – who have complete control over the process because the state’s Democratic governor cannot veto a redistrict­ing bill – have already taken advantage of that dynamic by formally declaring they won’t use racial data in drawing lines.

Tom Saenz, president of the Mexican-american Legal Defense and Education Fund, said he still expects there to be plenty of successful racial gerrymande­ring cases, especially because population­s of voters of color swelled so significantly in the recent census data. The Voting Rights Act still requires the creation of majority-minority districts in areas where a compact legislativ­e district could be drawn that way, and due to the continued growth of several racial and ethnic groups there are more of those places than ever before, Saenz said.

That won’t always help Democrats – Saenz notes that, in some states like California, his group has fought with white Democrats over the creation of majority Latino districts. And he noted another obstacle – the tight timelines of redistrict­ing this decade. The Census data used to draw the maps was released six months late due to COVID-19 and legal disputes over how the Trump administra­tion ran the survey. That means courts may only have a few weeks to act before the 2022 elections formally kick off with deadlines to file to run in state primaries.

Though several lawsuits have already been filed, they’re mainly opening salvos trying to gain advantage before linedrawin­g begins in earnest. Democrats have sued in Louisiana, Minnesota and Pennsylvan­ia, arguing that deadlock is inevitable between those states’ Gopcontrol­led legislatur­es and Democratic governors, so courts need to get ready to draw lines.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP, FILE ?? Democrats began filing preemptive lawsuits in April, well before last week’s release of detailed Census data used to draw district lines for Congress, statehouse­s and school districts around the country.
ALEX BRANDON/AP, FILE Democrats began filing preemptive lawsuits in April, well before last week’s release of detailed Census data used to draw district lines for Congress, statehouse­s and school districts around the country.

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