The Oklahoman

Texas lawmakers pass new maps bolstering GOP

Democrats claim a rushed process

- Acacia Coronado and Paul J. Weber

AUSTIN, Texas – Texas Republican­s approved redrawn U.S. House maps that favor incumbents and decrease political representa­tion for growing minority communitie­s, even as Latinos drive much of the growth in the nation’s largest red state.

The maps were approved late Monday night following outcry from Democrats over what they claimed was a rushed redistrict­ing process crammed into a 30-day session, and one which gave little time for public input. They also denounced the reduction of minority opportunit­y districts – Texas will now have seven House districts where Latino residents hold a majority, down from eight – despite the state’s changing demographi­cs.

“What we are doing in passing this congressio­nal map is a disservice to the people of Texas,” Democratic state Rep. Rafael Anchia said to the chamber just before the final vote.

GOP Gov. Greg Abbott is expected to sign off on the changes.

Civil rights groups, including the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, sued before Republican lawmakers were even done Monday. The lawsuit alleges that Republican mapmakers diluted the political strength of minority voters by not drawing any new districts where Latino residents hold a majority, despite Latinos making up half of Texas’ 4 million new residents over the last decade.

Abbott’s office did not respond to a message seeking comment.

Republican­s have said they followed the law in defending the maps, which protect their slipping grip on Texas by pulling more GOP-leaning voters into suburban districts where Democrats have made inroads in recent years.

Texas has been routinely dragged into court for decades over voting maps, and in 2017, a federal court found that a Republican-drawn map was drawn to intentiona­lly discrimina­te against minority voters. But two years later, that same court said there was insufficient reason to take the extraordin­ary step of putting Texas back under federal supervisio­n before changing voting laws or maps.

The maps that overhaul how Texas’ nearly 30 million residents are sorted into political districts – and who is elected to represent them – bookends a highly charged year in the state over voting rights.

Democratic lawmakers twice walked out on an elections bill that tightened the state’s already strict voting rules, which they called a brazen attempt to disenfranc­hise minorities and other Democratic-leaning voters in Texas.

The plan does not create any additional districts where Black or Hispanic voters make up more than 50% of the voting population, even as people of color accounted for more than 9 of 10 new residents in Texas over the past decade.

Republican state Sen. Joan Huffman, who authored the maps and leads the Senate Redistrict­ing Committee, told fellow lawmakers that they were “drawn blind to race.” She said her legal team ensured the plan followed the Voting Rights Act.

The Texas GOP control both chambers of the Legislatur­e, giving them nearly complete control of the mapmaking process.

The state has had to defend their maps in court after every redistrict­ing process since the Voting Rights Act took effect in 1965, but this will be the first since a U.S. Supreme Court ruling said Texas and other states with a history of racial discrimina­tion no longer need to have the Justice Department scrutinize the maps before they are approved.

However, drawing maps to engineer a political advantage is not unconstitu­tional. The proposal would also make an estimated two dozen of the state’s 38 congressio­nal districts safe Republican districts.

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