The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Questions the courts need to ask about gerrymande­ring

- G. Terry Madonna is professor of public affairs at Franklin & Marshall College, and Michael Young is a former professor of politics and public affairs at Penn State University and managing partner of Michael Young Strategic Research.

Politics! Today it’s everywhere or often seems so.

Trump mania pervades news coverage while heated and often testy debates about health care, immigratio­n, criminal justice and trade policy increasing­ly dominate the national conversati­on.

But one place political questions do not prevail — indeed according to legal doctrine cannot prevail — is when the courts consider the problem of reapportio­nment, the decennial process in which states draw the congressio­nal and state legislativ­e districts to conform to population shifts occurring over the past decade.

Decennial reapportio­nment has been the law of the land since a landmark Supreme Court case in 1964 (Reynolds v Sims) ruled that the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th amendment requires voting districts be as equal in population as possible.

Equal they may now be — but fair they are still not. The problem is “gerrymande­ring” — the ancient, insidious and so far insoluble practice in American politics of creating voting districts that protect incumbents and immunize the party in power from competitiv­e elections.

The result across the nation has been a conglomera­tion of weirdly shaped almost ghoulish in appearance congressio­nal districts that defy geography in the service of partisan advantage.

Gerrymande­ring in America is a problem looking for a solution — and maybe there is one.

Last month, a concerned group of Pennsylvan­ia voters in each of the state’s 18 congressio­nal districts acted with the state’s League of Women Voters to find one.

They filed a lawsuit in Commonweal­th Court arguing that the last (2011) state congressio­nal redistrict­ing plan was unconstitu­tional.

The issue raised in the suit is whether the boundary lines drawn by a Republican controlled legislatur­e and signed into law by a Republican governor violated the first amendment and the equal protection clause of the U.S. constituti­on.

Some history helps here. Political gerrymande­ring is a reference to the infamously shaped salamander district drawn in 1812 by then Governor of Massachuse­tts, Elbridge Gerry.

Gerry named it, but Pennsylvan­ia may have invented it.

Certainly, political gerrymande­ring has existed in Pennsylvan­ia back to colonial times when an effort was made by some county political leaders to limit the power of Philadelph­ia.

If it begun here, could it end here? Pennsylvan­ia’s history tilting at the gerrymande­r windmill doesn’t start with the current lawsuit. Back in 2004 the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a Pennsylvan­ia case, known as Vieth et al. v. Jubelirer.

When Vieth was finally decided in 2004, a divided Supreme Court ruled that the alleged gerrymande­ring could not be challenged because it involved a question that was not justiciabl­e.

Thus the filing of the Pennsylvan­ia lawsuit challenges this orthodoxy as does the case that the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear involving a Wisconsin redistrict­ing plan.

Both the Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin cases essentiall­y ask whether partisan gerrymande­ring violates the Equal Protection clause of the U. S. Constituti­on.

To do that the justices need to wade into that sticky wicket of “political questions” they have been so loath to enter.

But if the courts take a good look at the grotesque, distorted and disjointed congressio­nal districts across the country produced by past gerrymande­rs, those “political questions” might start to also look like some pretty good questions to ask.

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