The Mercury News

GOP allegedly chipping away at Black Democrats’ power

- By Nick Corasaniti and Reid J. Epstein

More than 30 years ago, Robert Reives Sr. marched into a meeting of his county government in Sanford, North Carolina, with a demand: Create a predominan­tly Black district in the county, which was 23% Black at the time but had no Black representa­tion, or face a lawsuit under the Voting Rights Act.

The county commission refused and Reives prepared to sue. But after the county settled and redrew its districts, he was elected in 1990 as Lee County’s first Black commission­er, a post he has held comfortabl­y ever since.

Until this year. Republican­s, newly in power and in control of the redrawing of county maps, extended the district to the northeast, adding more rural and suburban White voters to the mostly rural district southwest of Raleigh, effectivel­y diluting the influence of its Black voters. Reives, who is still the county’s only Black commission­er, fears he will now lose his seat.

“They all have the same objective,” he said in an interview, referring to local Republican officials. “To get me out of the seat.”

Reives is one of a growing number of Black elected officials — ranging from members of Congress to county commission­ers — who have been drawn out of their districts, placed in newly competitiv­e districts or bundled into new districts where they must vie against incumbents from their own party.

Almost all of the affected lawmakers are Democrats, and most of the mapmakers are White Republican­s.

The GOP is currently seeking to widen its advantage in states. including North Carolina, Ohio, Georgia and Texas, and because partisan gerrymande­ring has long been difficult to disentangl­e from racial gerrymande­ring, proving the motive can be troublesom­e.

But the effect remains the same: Less political power for communitie­s of color.

‘Five-alarm fire’

The pattern has grown more pronounced during this year’s redistrict­ing cycle, the first since the Supreme Court struck down the heart of the Voting Rights Act in 2013 and allowed jurisdicti­ons with a history of voting discrimina­tion to pass election laws and draw political maps without approval from the Justice Department.

“Let’s call it a five-alarm fire,” G.K. Butterfiel­d, a Black congressma­n from North Carolina, said of the current round of congressio­nal redistrict­ing.

He is retiring next year after Republican­s removed Pitt County, which is about 35% Black, from his district.

“I just didn’t see it coming,” he said in an interview. “I did not believe that they would go to that extreme.”

A former chairman of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, Butterfiel­d said fellow Black members of Congress were increasing­ly worried about the new Republican­drawn maps.

“We are all rattled,” he said.

In addition to Butterfiel­d, four Black state senators in North Carolina, five Black members of the state House of Representa­tives and several Black county officials have had their districts altered in ways that could cost them their seats. Nearly 24 hours after the maps were passed, civil rights groups sued the state.

Across the country, the precise number of elected officials of color who have had their districts changed in such ways is difficult to pinpoint. The New York Times identified more than two dozen of these officials, but there are probably significan­tly more in county and municipal districts. And whose seats are vulnerable or safe depends on a variety of factors, including the political environmen­t at the time of elections.

Fast track

But the number of Black legislator­s being drawn out of their districts outpaces that of recent redistrict­ing cycles when voting rights groups frequently found themselves in court trying to preserve existing majority-minority districts as often as they sought to create new ones.

“Without a doubt it’s worse than it was in any recent decade,” said Leah Aden, a deputy director of litigation at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund Inc. “We have so much to contend with, and it’s all happening very quickly.”

Republican­s, who have vastly more control over redistrict­ing nationally than Democrats do, defend their maps as legal and fair, giving a range of reasons.

Kirk Smith, the Republican chairman of Lee County’s Board of Commission­ers, said that “to say only a person of a certain racial or ethnic group can represent only a person of the same racial or ethnic group has all the trappings of ethnocentr­ic racism.”

In North Carolina and elsewhere, Republican­s say that their new maps are race-blind, meaning officials used no racial data in designing the maps and therefore could not have drawn racially discrimina­tory districts because they had no idea where communitie­s of color were.

“During the 2011 redistrict­ing process, legislator­s considered race when drawing districts,” Ralph Hise, a Republican state senator in North Carolina, said in a statement.

Through a spokespers­on, he declined to answer specific questions, citing pending litigation.

His statement continued: “We were then sued for considerin­g race and ordered to draw new districts. So during this process, legislator­s did not use any racial data when drawing districts and we’re now being sued for not considerin­g race.”

In other states, mapmakers have declined to add new districts with majorities of people of color even though the population­s of minority residents have boomed. In Texas, where the population has increased by 4 million since the 2010 redistrict­ing cycle, people of color account for more than 95% of the growth, but the state Legislatur­e drew two new congressio­nal seats with majority-White population­s.

Efforts to curb racial gerrymande­ring have been hampered by a 2019 Supreme Court decision, which ruled that partisan gerrymande­ring could not be challenged in federal court.

Although the court did leave intact Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which prohibits racial gerrymande­ring, it offered no concrete guidance on how to distinguis­h between a partisan gerrymande­r and a racial gerrymande­r when the result was both, such as in heavily Democratic Black communitie­s.

Given that certain demographi­c groups have aligned tightly with political parties — 90% of Black voters in Georgia voted Democratic in 2020, for example — officials drawing gerrymande­red maps could simply argue that politics were at play, not race.

In Georgia, another member of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, Rep. Lucy McBath, has been drawn into a district with Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux, a fellow Democrat, setting up a competitiv­e primary election.

In South Carolina, four Black Democrats in the state House of Representa­tives have been drawn into districts with fellow Democrats — compared with just one pair of White Republican­s drawn into a district together.

Worries also are spreading through Ohio’s state legislativ­e Black caucus, which includes 19 state representa­tives and senators and which is one of the oldest Black caucuses in the nation.

Last month, Republican­s in Ohio passed a gerrymande­red map that locked in supermajor­ities in both chambers of the legislatur­e, meaning that Republican­s would control more than two-thirds of seats even though former President Donald Trump won just 53% of Ohio voters in 2020.

At least four Black members of the state legislatur­e had their districts altered or were drawn into another district. State Rep. Juanita Brent, the vice president of the state legislativ­e Black caucus, who has represente­d parts of Cleveland since 2019, was moved into a neighborin­g district.

“Putting Black Democrats against each other, or downsizing the amount of districts that people could run in, or moving people into a totally different district,” Brent said in an interview, “is trying to actually dilute the amount of representa­tion that we have.”

 ?? JEREMY M. LANGE — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Robert Reives Sr. was elected three decades ago as the first Black commission­er in his North Carolina county. Republican­s have redrawn the district lines and he now fears he will lose his seat.
JEREMY M. LANGE — THE NEW YORK TIMES Robert Reives Sr. was elected three decades ago as the first Black commission­er in his North Carolina county. Republican­s have redrawn the district lines and he now fears he will lose his seat.

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