The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Bipartisan­ship key to redistrict­ing

- By State Reps. Jared Solomon, Jim Gregory and Pamela DeLissio Rep. Jim Gregory is a Blair County Republican. Reps. Jared Solomon and Pamela DeLissio are Philadelph­ia Democrats.

House Bill 2327 establishe­s a new commission to redraw the congressio­nal maps in Pennsylvan­ia.

Crises loom everywhere during these turbulent times, so you would be forgiven if the issue of gerrymande­ring was far down on your list of priorities. But it should not be. In fact, it plays a significan­t role in how your state Legislatur­e and U.S. representa­tives handle the myriad threats, upheavals and opportunit­ies we face right now. Due to gerrymande­ring, our elected officials select their voters by redrawing the boundaries in a partisan manner.

Efforts have been made for decades to place the boundary line-drawing process in the hands of an independen­t redistrict­ing commission. Those efforts have never succeeded.

Many have long known and lamented that congressio­nal redistrict­ing is a partisan process. The bill to redraw these boundaries needs to pass the Pennsylvan­ia General Assembly and be signed by the governor.

So, in this age of polarizati­on, it is noteworthy when a Republican from very-conservati­ve Blair County and two Democrats from very-liberal Philadelph­ia come together to tackle one aspect of gerrymande­ring. We are doing so via House Bill 2327, which establishe­s a new commission to redraw the congressio­nal maps. Many have indicated that past reform efforts have failed because there is not any legislativ­e, administra­tive or agency input in the process. We set out to address these concerns and create a redistrict­ing commission that is citizen led. Our bill balances these political realities with the need for independen­ce to minimize partisansh­ip.

How? First, the secretary of state oversees an open applicatio­n process where any interested and qualified Pennsylvan­ian can apply to be part of the commission. The qualificat­ions are simple: you must be registered to vote and have voted in at least one of the last three statewide elections, not have switched parties recently, and have been a resident of Pennsylvan­ia for a minimum of three years. No lobbyists, elected or party officials, or their family members would be eligible.

The applicatio­n process would remain open until at least 60 Republican­s, 60 Democrats, and 60 people who identify with neither party have applied. The secretary would then select 40 people from each list. Next, the majority and minority chairs of the House and Senate State Government committees would remove five members from each bucket, leaving 60 possible commission­ers. Then, the majority and minority leaders of the House and Senate would each pick a commission­er from their respective party (four in total), and the secretary — at a public meeting — randomly selects one Republican, one Democrat and three unaffiliat­ed members for a total of nine commission­ers. These commission­ers would then meet and appoint six commission­ers to arrive at the full, 15-person commission.

This spirit of public involvemen­t, random selection and party participat­ion would continue throughout the deliberati­ons and actions of the commission.

The work in crafting this legislatio­n has been exhaustive. Alas, the bill remains stuck in the House State Government Committee, along with other similarly well-intentione­d redistrict­ing bills with bipartisan support.

Time is running out to do something about it. And if we do not act now, congressio­nal redistrict­ing will occur in the same partisan manner as always, with the next opportunit­y for meaningful change to take effect in 2031.

Our last chance now with congressio­nal redistrict­ing reform comes at a time of low confidence in our governing bodies and rabid political polarizati­on that stretches, to the breaking point, our ability to govern. Gerrymande­ring is a contributi­ng factor to these problems.

We have a chance to empower you to decide how best to elect our political leaders. This change will result in more citizens participat­ing in the democratic process because individual­s will have a direct voice in the contours of our democracy. Let’s seize this moment and create a new political reality that breaks through the polarizati­on of the present and provides the chance of political unificatio­n in the future.

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