The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

High court picks new map of districts

- By Marc Levy and Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » Pennsylvan­ia’s highest court broke a partisan deadlock Wednesday over a new map of congressio­nal districts by selecting boundaries that broadly adhere to the outlines of current districts, even as the state loses one seat because of sluggish population growth.

The Democratic-majority state Supreme Court in a 4-3 decision picked a 17-district map that had been proposed by a group of Democratic-aligned voters who sued last year in an effort to get the court involved.

It is unlikely to create a big shift in the makeup of the congressio­nal delegation, as the state loses a seat, going Inside: from 18 to 17, to account for relatively stagnant population growth in census findings over the past decade, particular­ly in rural white areas predominan­tly represente­d by Republican­s.

It had some wins for Republican­s and some wins for Democrats on a map whose stated aim was to adhere as closely as possible to districts drawn by the high court in 2018 to replace a 6-year-old map it found to be unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red by Republican­s.

The new map provides eight Republican-leaning districts, six Democratic-leaning districts and three closely divided districts, according to an analysis by FiveThirty­Eight, a website that focuses on opinion poll analysis, politics and other topics.

Nine of the districts were won by Democrat Joe Biden in 2020’s presidenti­al election, according to an analysis by Redistrict­ing & You, while Republican Donald Trump would have won eight. It also pits two Republican incumbents against each other.

Pennsylvan­ia’s delegation is currently split evenly, nine Republican­s and nine Democrats,

in a state where registered Democrats outnumber Republican­s by 4 million to 3.4 million.

The court has selected boundaries twice before in the past three decades, and it’s decision is likely to be the final word, although a federal court challenge by Republican­s is pending.

Former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who leads the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee and whose affiliate organizati­on, the National Redistrict­ing Action Fund, backed the court-selected map, called it a “substantia­l win for Pennsylvan­ians who now get to vote for the candidate of their choosing in fair, lawful districts for the next decade.”

Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, said he was pleased with the decision.

“It is a fair map that will result in a congressio­nal delegation mirroring the citizenry of Pennsylvan­ia,” Wolf wrote.

Republican response was critical. Pennsylvan­ia’s national Republican committeem­an, Andrew Reilly, said it was unfortunat­e that the court chose a map that combines two safe Republican districts into one, makes a suburban Pittsburgh seat friendlier for Democrats and was represente­d in part by the firm of a prominent Democratic lawyer, Marc Elias.

“Despite that partisan choice, Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s will be ready to favorably compete in these districts to assist the National Republican Campaign Committee in taking back the U.S. House in November,” Reilly said in a statement.

The court ended up with the decision after Wolf and the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e deadlocked on a new plan.

Four of five Democrats on the court formed the majority in Wednesday’s decision, while one Democrat, Justice Debra Todd, sided with the court’s two Republican­s in opposing it.

In picking the new map, the justices also rejected a lower court judge’s recommenda­tion of a map backed by Republican lawmakers that Democrats had opposed.

The new map lumps two Republican incumbents — Glenn Thompson and Fred Keller — into a sprawling northern district, and draws two Pittsburgh-area districts where there are no sitting incumbents running for another term.

Neither Thompson nor Keller immediatel­y said whether they would run again.

Of the map’s Republican-leaning districts, one is held by a Democrat, Matt Cartwright in northeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia.

The swing districts are held by Allentown-area Democrat Susan Wild, Republican Brian Fitzpatric­k of Bucks County and suburban Pittsburgh Democrat Conor Lamb, who is not running for re-election.

The map sides with Republican­s on two big issues.

It keeps the city of Pittsburgh in one district, helping maintain a competitiv­e district for Republican­s in its suburbs, and it keeps all of Bucks County in one district, helping protect Fitzpatric­k.

However, the map also sides with Democrats on certain aspects.

It ensures each Democratic incumbent has their own district, and it keeps the metropolit­an Harrisburg area in one district with York, instead of splitting it into several districts, as Republican­s had sought.

Still, the map will put more pressure on Wild to get re-elected, drawing her new district to include conservati­ve Carbon County.

The court also adjusted the petition gathering schedule — starting Friday going until March 15 — but left the May 17 primary date intact for congressio­nal races and statewide contests.

However, the court on Wednesday also issued an order that suspended the primary calendar for state legislativ­e candidates because new state House and Senate maps are being challenged in court.

“It is a fair map that will result in a congressio­nal delegation mirroring the citizenry of Pennsylvan­ia.” — Gov. Tom Wolf

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