The Sentinel-Record

Census delay could put off voting districts, primaries

- DAVID A. LIEB AND MIKE SCHNEIDER

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — The U.S. Census Bureau needs more time to wrap up the oncea-decade count because of the coronaviru­s, opening the possibilit­y of delays in drawing new legislativ­e districts that could help determine what political party is in power, what laws pass or fail and whether communitie­s of color get a voice in their states.

The number of people counted and their demographi­cs guide how voting districts for the U.S. House and state legislatur­es are redrawn every 10 years. The monthslong delay in census data could make a divisive process more complicate­d, potentiall­y forcing lawmakers into costly special sessions to complete the work or postponing some primary elections.

“It will pinch the timing for sure on everybody,” said Justin Levitt, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles who tracks redistrict­ing nationwide. “For a few states, that’s incredibly meaningful.”

Despite the complicati­ons, advocates, lawmakers and others largely embraced the census delay as necessary to get a complete count.

With the U.S. so politicall­y polarized, redistrict­ing plays a major role in whether Republican­s or Democrats drive the agenda in each state and how those lawmakers’ decisions can affect people’s lives. Parties that win large legislativ­e majorities can tilt policy to the left or right on abortion, guns, taxes and other contentiou­s issues.

Redistrict­ing typically is done by state lawmakers and governors, but an increasing number of states have shifted to special commission­s.

The new districts frequently are challenged in court for not properly representi­ng minority communitie­s or for favoring one party over another in what is called gerrymande­ring.

After Republican­s scored big statehouse victories in the

2010, for example, they used their enhanced power in 2011 to draw districts to their advantage in some states, spawning Democratic-backed lawsuits that spanned much of the next decade. Democrats have historical­ly done the same when they were in control.

The census delay could trigger more lawsuits.

Because of stay-at-home orders designed to combat the coronaviru­s, the Census Bureau put off hiring and training temporary census takers in midMarch. They won’t start knocking on doors of people who haven’t answered the questionna­ire until August. The bureau pushed back the deadline to wrap up the count from the end of July to the end of October.

Congress must approve the Census Bureau’s request to delay turning over redistrict­ing data to the states from the end of March 2021 to the end of July 2021.

A delay could have big implicatio­ns for states with legislativ­e elections next year — New Jersey and Virginia.

“There will not be enough time for redistrict­ing, candidate filing, preparing for an election and running a general election. There simply won’t be time for it,” said Michael McDonald, a political science professor at the University of Florida.

California, Illinois, North Carolina and Texas all have early 2022 primaries, which could create a compressed schedule for new maps. Some states could require special legislativ­e sessions to complete the work

before candidates file to run for office in 2022. Others may have to postpone candidate filing, said Michael Li, a redistrict­ing attorney at New York University School of Law’s Brennan Center for Justice.

The New Jersey Constituti­on requires a commission to adopt new maps within 30 days of receiving census data and candidates to run in those new districts that same year. The state’s primary elections are scheduled for June 8, 2021, seven weeks before the Census Bureau’s new deadline for turning over the population figures.

“A delay in the release of the census informatio­n has the potential to throw everything out of whack,” said Al Barlas, Republican chairman of New Jersey’s redistrict­ing commission.

“There’s constituti­onal ramificati­ons to this. There’s obviously timelines and deadlines,” Barlas added. “Do you move the primary from June back? … Do you do a gubernator­ial primary and everybody-else-primary in June, but do you do a legislativ­e primary later, perhaps in August or right after Labor Day? Honestly, I don’t know.”

In 2011, Virginia moved its primary from June 14 to Aug. 23 to allow time for redistrict­ing after receiving census data. A similar delay could be needed for its 2021 election, which is scheduled for the second Tuesday in June.

Virginia voters are deciding this November on a constituti­onal amendment creating a bipartisan commission to draw the districts. If approved, the commission would have 45 days after receiving the census numbers to submit new maps to lawmakers for a vote.

State Sen. George Barker, a Democrat who sponsored the amendment, said it’s unclear whether the 2021 primary could be delayed long enough to allow time for the work. If not, candidates may have to run under current districts in 2021, he said.

“If the data isn’t in until sometime in early to mid-July, it would be very, very difficult to get it done in time to even come close to meeting requiremen­ts for both the primary and a general election,” Barker said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ONCE-A-DECADE COUNT: This April 5 photo shows a 2020 census letter mailed to a U.S. resident in Detroit. The U.S. Census Bureau needs more time to wrap up the once-a-decade count because of the coronaviru­s, opening the possibilit­y of delays in drawing new legislativ­e districts that could help determine what political party is in power, what laws pass or fail and whether communitie­s of color get a voice in their states.
The Associated Press ONCE-A-DECADE COUNT: This April 5 photo shows a 2020 census letter mailed to a U.S. resident in Detroit. The U.S. Census Bureau needs more time to wrap up the once-a-decade count because of the coronaviru­s, opening the possibilit­y of delays in drawing new legislativ­e districts that could help determine what political party is in power, what laws pass or fail and whether communitie­s of color get a voice in their states.

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