The Guardian (USA)

How gerrymande­ring paved the way for the US's anti-abortion movement

- Adrian Horton , Tom McCarthy and Jessica Glenza

Public opinion polls in Alabama, Georgia, Ohio and elsewhere have all found that a majority of citizens in those places prefer to keep abortion legal. Yet Republican-controlled legislatur­es in each of those states have, in the past three months, passed laws that would outlaw abortion in most cases.

The customary reward in a democracy for violating the will of voters is ejection from office. But the legislator­s in question do not seem particular­ly worried about a comeuppanc­e in the 2020 election, judging by the extremist quality of their legislatin­g.

The legislator­s realize what a lot of voters still do not: in many places in the US today, the voters don’t choose the politician­s. The politician­s choose the voters.

Thanks to gerrymande­ring, by which political insiders draw distorted legislativ­e districts to ensure that one party will hold that district, the only

elections many seated officials have to worry about are primary challenges from opponents more extreme than they are, creating a kind of ideologica­l arms race that is producing increasing­ly distorted policy, analysts say.

“There is a direct line between gerrymande­ring and extreme policy outcomes like these ‘heartbeat’ abortion bills,” said David Daley, the bestsellin­g author of Ratf**ked: Why Your Vote Doesn’t Count. “And not only does gerrymande­ring create the circumstan­ces that elect such extreme legislatur­es, but it makes it extraordin­arily difficult for voters to get rid of them when they go too far.

“This is how gerrymande­ring sets up minority rule that voters can’t undo at the ballot box. It’s very dangerous, and we need to be taking this very, very seriously.”

As powerfully demonstrat­ed by the passage last month in Alabama by 25 white Republican men of the country’s strictest abortion law, minority rule persists as a defining feature of American governance. Bulwarks of minority rule range from historical factors such as the disenfranc­hisement of women and non-white people in the US constituti­on and the enslavemen­t of African Americans, to today’s dark money in politics and voter suppressio­n schemes.

One of the most effective tools, however, for asserting the kind of minority rule on display in the recent flurry of anti-abortion measures – Republican-controlled legislatur­es in at least six states have passed strict new anti-abortion laws in the past three months – is gerrymande­ring, analysts say.

The parties’ strategies for gerrymande­ring, which as Daley’s book explains has been astonishin­gly effective on the Republican side over the last 15 years, may be about to be rewritten, if the supreme court rules as expected this month on whether the court should even hear partisan gerrymande­ring cases (as distinct from gerrymande­ring based, for example, on race).

But whatever the supreme court decides, gerrymande­ring is too powerful a political tool for the parties to discard anytime soon.

“Uncompetit­ive districts can allow [legislator­s] to pursue more extreme measures without any backlash from the electorate,” said Robynn Kuhlmann, an associate professor of political science at the University of Central Missouri who specialize­s in state legislativ­e elections.

Though Missouri’s legislatur­e last month passed an eight-week abortion ban by a wide margin – 24-10 in the senate, 110-44 in the house – such an extreme measure is, according to numerous polls, far out of step with public opinion. A 2018 Gallup poll found that 77% of US voters supported abortion access during the first trimester of pregnancy, and only 18% think it should be illegal in all circumstan­ces.

The thinktank Data for Progress, using national survey data, concluded that not one state has a majority of voters who support making abortion illegal in all circumstan­ces; it estimated that in Missouri, only 20% of voters support a full ban on abortion.

But Missouri is also a state with what Kuhlmann called “sweetheart gerrymande­ring” – maps agreed upon between the parties that “maintain the status quo for districts that are essentiall­y uncompetit­ive”. Tellingly, nearly half of Missouri’s state house elections were unconteste­d in 2016, “which isn’t actually all that different from other state legislatur­es”, said Kuhlmann, “but it still illustrate­s how there’s not even a seat at the table if no one is running against the incumbent”.

In Missouri, where Democratic voters are largely concentrat­ed in two urban areas, Kansas City and St Louis, on opposite ends of the state, the status quo favors a veto-proof Republican majority.

“If there is no competitio­n, there is no real need for politician­s to be more attentive to constituen­ts and be more attentive to public opinion and polls,” said Kuhlmann.

This was the case in Ohio, which passed a six-week abortion ban last month. “I think you can unequivoca­lly state gerrymande­ring made that happen,” Richard Gunther, professor emeritus of political science at Ohio State University, said of the law.

Ohio’s congressio­nal map, which a panel of judges recently found unconstitu­tional, “cracked” and “packed” Democratic voters into misshapen districts to ensure a Republican majority of representa­tives at both the state and federal levels; in 2012, for example, Democratic candidates for the state house received 55,000 more votes than Republican­s, yet Republican­s won a supermajor­ity of seats (60 out of 99).

As maps predetermi­ned the partisan outcome, the onus of the vote shifted from general elections to the primaries, creating what Gunther called a “dynamic of increased polarizati­on, as more moderate members are ousted by more committed ideologues”.

But gerrymande­ring means that “those who are willing to adopt extreme positions on abortion are in a much stronger position than those who are moderates”, said Gunther. And in turn, moderates like the former Ohio governor John Kasich, who vetoed a six-week abortion bill twice, “wind up losing battles with the legislatur­e, which is dominated by much more extreme individual­s who have real ideologica­l commitment­s”.

Similarly, the current map and redistrict­ing procedure in Missouri “maintains the clear majority of Republican­s in the state legislatur­e and allows them to pursue conservati­ve policies without much resistance”, said Kuhlmann.

That could change, however, with the implementa­tion of new redistrict­ing plan, known as Clean Missouri, which passed with 62% of the popular vote in 2018. The plan would put Missouri’s redistrict­ing effort in the hands of an independen­t demographe­r required by law to draw maps ensuring “partisan fairness”. The changes have faced stiff opposition from Republican­s, including the governor; since the election, five legislativ­e resolution­s have unsuccessf­ully challenged the plan, which is set to go into effect for the 2020 election.

“That’s one of the scariest things,” said Daley. “In addition to this extreme legislatio­n that we’re seeing pop up around the country, one of the really frightful things we’re watching is how these legislatur­es feel that they don’t have to listen to the will of the people expressed in constituti­onal amendments involving democracy and voting rights.

“They feel that way because they know how insulated they are, and they’re determined to stay that way.”

Because districts will be redrawn again after the 2020 US census, and with the imminence of the supreme court ruling, the battle over gerrymande­ring is at an inflection point, Daley said. He warned that current Republican efforts to place a citizenshi­p question on the census were an attempt to set up a Republican plan to disenfranc­hise groups that tend to vote Democratic by changing the basis for allotting legislativ­e districts from overall population count of a certain area to a count of voting age US citizens in that area.

“It sounds wonky, specific and technical, but it has the potential to transform the politics of states like Texas, Florida, Arizona, Georgia and others with large conservati­ve population­s but also large immigrant population­s,” Daley said.

“The work is well under way.”

There is a direct line between gerrymande­ring and extreme policy outcomes like these ‘heartbeat’ abortion bills

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors before a rally to protest the closure of the last abortion clinic in Missouri on 30 May, in St Louis, Missouri. Photograph: Jacob Moscovitch/Getty Images
Demonstrat­ors before a rally to protest the closure of the last abortion clinic in Missouri on 30 May, in St Louis, Missouri. Photograph: Jacob Moscovitch/Getty Images
 ??  ?? Pro-choice and anti-abortion protesters gather in front of the US supreme court building during the Right to Life march on 18 January, in Washington DC. Photograph: Mark Wilson/Getty Images
Pro-choice and anti-abortion protesters gather in front of the US supreme court building during the Right to Life march on 18 January, in Washington DC. Photograph: Mark Wilson/Getty Images

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