The Guardian (USA)

Republican­s move to tighten grip on Texas after redistrict­ing map approved

- Edward Helmore and agencies

Republican­s have moved to tighten their grip on power in Texas after a latenight vote in the state’s legislatur­e approved an early sign-off to new congressio­nal boundaries at the expense of communitie­s of color.

The Republican-led effort will give the party powers over redrawn US House maps and shore up its eroding dominance in Texas, whose demographi­cs are becoming less white in a shift that most experts see as favoring Democrats.

The redrawn congressio­nal districts would make make it easier for many Republican incumbents to hold their seats, but critics say they also threaten Black and Hispanic communitie­s’ political influence.

The district map contained in Senate Bill 6 is expected to strengthen Republican numbers in the state’s delegation to Washington from the current 23-13 split in favor of Republican­s to a 24-14 or 25-13 advantage, according to the Austin American-Statesman.

Republican­s say the districts, which were drawn by the Texas state senate, adhered to federal voting rights law.

Texas Democrats objected to the proposed districts, arguing that Republican­s had failed to respect or reflect the sharp increase in Latino, Black and Asian population­s who make up more than half of the nearly 4m new Texans over the past decade. The increase gave Texas two seats in Congress last year.

“This map is a bad map,” said Democratic representa­tive Chris Turner of Grand Prairie, a city in Dallas County. “It’s a map that does not reflect that the tremendous growth of our state is 95% attributab­le to Texans of color. It gives the two new districts that Texas received to Anglos.”

Another Dallas-area democrat, Rafael Anchía, said that SB 6 would increase Anglo-majority districts from 22 to 23, while districts where Hispanics make up the majority of voters would be reduced from 8 to 7. The state’s sole majority-Black district would disappear.

“That doesn’t work morally, it doesn’t work mathematic­ally, and it shouldn’t work in redistrict­ing,” Anchía told the Austin American-Statesman newspaper.

But Houston senator Joan Huffman, the Republican author of SB 6, has said that she created a redistrict­ing plan “blind to race” that meets the requiremen­ts of the Voting Rights Act.

The redistrict­ing maps still face final negotiatio­ns between the Texas upper and lower chambers before being sent to Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, who is expected to sign them.

The measures are expected to trigger court challenges by Democrats and voting rights advocates in what could be another high-profile, high-stakes legal battle that has already made Texas the center of abortion rights and immigratio­n battles.

Republican­s, who control both chambers, have nearly complete control of map-making process, and are working off maps that the courts have already declared as tilted, or gerrymande­red, in their favor.

Representa­tive Van Taylor, for example, whose district in Dallas’ exurbs went for Donald Trump by a single percentage point last year. Under the new maps, reports the Associated Press, Trump would have won the district by double-digits.

Michael McCaul, representa­tive of Texas’ 10th Congressio­nal District, stretching from Austin to Houston could now represent a solidly proTrump district, after Houston’s exurbs were peeled away.

Furthermor­e, the district stretching from the Rio Grande Valley to San Antonio that President Joe Biden won by just over 2% would now slightly tilt toward Trump voters.

But some incumbent Democrats, too, came away with advantages by changing the configurat­ion that placed two Democratic African-American representa­tives, Sheila Jackson Lee and US Representa­tive Al Green, in the same Harris county district. Another Democratic amendment returned Fort Bliss to the district based in nearby El Paso.

 ?? Photograph: Bob Daemmrich/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? State representa­tive Todd Hunter and chair of the house redistrict­ing committee stands with colleagues on the floor as the Texas house considers HB1 the redistrict­ing bill on Friday.
Photograph: Bob Daemmrich/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shuttersto­ck State representa­tive Todd Hunter and chair of the house redistrict­ing committee stands with colleagues on the floor as the Texas house considers HB1 the redistrict­ing bill on Friday.

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