The Sentinel-Record

Court should steer away from politics of gerrymande­ring

- George Will

WASHINGTON — If an adjective creates a redundancy, does preceding it with two other adjectives give the Supreme Court a reason to venture where it has never gone before?

Come Tuesday, the court will hear oral arguments urging it to referee gerrymande­ring in the drawing of congressio­nal districts. The justices should, like Ulysses, listen to this siren song but bind themselves from obeying it.

The arguments will concern two cases: one from Maryland, where Republican­s are aggrieved, another from

North Carolina, where Democrats are unhappy. The practice the court will consider is (adjective one) “partisan gerrymande­ring.” This modifier, however, does not modify; there is no other kind of gerrymande­ring.

Tuesday’s issue is whether the court should attempt something for

which it has neither an aptitude nor any constituti­onal warrant — concocting criteria for deciding when (adjective two) excessive partisan gerrymande­ring becomes (adjective three) unconstitu­tional.

Gerrymande­ring is generally as surreptiti­ous as a brass band and is, always and everywhere, as political as lemonade is lemony. It is the drawing of district lines by faction A for the purpose of disadvanta­ging faction B. This practice is older than the republic: Pennsylvan­ians and North Carolinian­s were engaging in it in the first half of the 18th century, about a century before it acquired its name. (In 1812, Massachuse­tts Democratic-Republican­s, serving Gov. Elbridge Gerry, drew a district shaped like a salamander.)

Until 1962, the court stayed away from the inherently political process of the drawing of district lines by legislatur­es organized along partisan lines because the Constituti­on is unambiguou­s: “The times, places and manner of holding elections for senators and representa­tives, shall be prescribed in each state by the legislatur­e thereof.” There are enough open-textured terms in the Constituti­on (“establishm­ent” of religion, “unreasonab­le” searches, “cruel” punishment­s, etc.) to rescue the Supreme Court from ennui. The Elections Clause just quoted contains no such terms. (Although four years ago five misguided justices said “legislatur­e” can mean a commission vested with redistrict­ing power taken away by referendum from a state legislatur­e.)

Furthermor­e, the political realists who framed the Constituti­on, and who understood the pervasiven­ess of partisansh­ip, added the following to the Elections Clause quoted above: Congress may “at any time by law make or alter such regulation­s” as the states might write regarding congressio­nal elections. So, the Constituti­on is explicit: Congress, not the judiciary, is the federal remedy for alleged defects in the drawing of congressio­nal districts. The political branches of the state and federal government­s are assigned to deal with the inherently value-laden politics of drawing district lines.

In 1872, 92 years before the court found a constituti­onal requiremen­t (equal protection of the laws) for “one person, one vote,” Congress had said that districts must contain “as nearly as practicabl­e an equal number of inhabitant­s.” This stipulatio­n was strictly enforced after 1964, when the court enunciated the simple and neutral principle of numericall­y equal districts.

There can, however, be nothing simple or neutral about what opponents of gerrymande­ring want to inveigle the court into trying to devise. These include criteria for measuring unconstitu­tional excesses in the common practices of “cracking” (dispersing one party’s voters across districts dominated by the other party) and “packing” (one party concentrat­ing the other party’s voters into supermajor­ities in a few districts). And the political science professori­ate stands ready to eagerly tutor the court about “wasted votes” resulting from “efficiency gaps.”

Today, people who are unhappy about North Carolina’s gerrymande­ring argue (as a lower court did) that “the Constituti­on does not authorize state redistrict­ing bodies to engage in … partisan gerrymande­ring.” (Emphasis added.) Now, there is a perverse doctrine: Everything is forbidden that the Constituti­on does not explicitly authorize.

Those who are eager to sink the judiciary waist-deep into the politics of politics resort to blunderbus­s arguments. For example, they say they have suffered justiciabl­e injury because gerrymande­ring “dilutes” their votes and infringes their First Amendment rights — even though everyone everywhere remains free to associate with his or her party of choice, and campaign and vote for any candidate.

The Constituti­on is silent regarding limits on state legislatur­es’ partisan redistrict­ing practices and is explicit regarding Congress’ exclusive power to modify these practices. If the court neverthele­ss assigns a portion of this power to itself, its condign punishment, inflicted after each decennial census, will be avalanches of litigation arising from partisan unhappines­s about states’ redistrict­ing plans. And no matter how the court decides each case, its reputation as a nonpolitic­al institutio­n will be steadily tarnished.

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