The Standard Journal

Rights groups push for redistrict­ing maps reflecting growth of minorities

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — The new congressio­nal and legislativ­e district maps the General Assembly will draw this fall should reflect the tremendous growth of minority groups in Georgia, representa­tives of civil rights and voting rights groups said Monday, Aug. 30.

The state’s Black, Hispanic and Asian-American population­s increased by double digits during the last decade, while Georgia’s white population declined by 1%, Christophe­r Bruce, policy director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia, told members of the state House and Senate committees overseeing redistrict­ing.

The federal Voting Rights Act prohibits redrawing maps in a way that dilutes minority voting power, added Sean Young, the ACLU of Georgia’s legal director.

“When you’re looking at a map, are you making it harder for communitie­s of color to elect a candidate of their choice?” Young said. “The Voting Rights Act trumps everything other than the U.S. Constituti­on.”

States must redraw their congressio­nal and legislativ­e district lines every 10 years to account for population shifts reflected in the U.S. Census.

The Census Bureau released local data from the 2020 Census earlier this month. The Republican-controlled General Assembly will use that data to redraw Georgia’s district boundaries during a special session this fall.

Voting rights advocates and civil rights groups representi­ng

Black, Hispanic and AsianAmeri­can voters urged lawmakers Monday, Aug. 30, to engage in a transparen­t redistrict­ing process that will lead to fair maps. That was essentiall­y the message the two committees already heard during 11 public hearings held across the state in recent weeks.

To ensure transparen­cy, the committees should allow additional hearings after proposed maps have been drawn, let the public submit alternativ­e maps, and provide relevant materials in a language other than English, said Lavita Tuff, policy director for Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta, which represents by far Georgia’s fastest growing minority group.

“Georgians want a fair redistrict­ing process that results in maps that respond to the needs of citizens … [and] that do not confer partisan advantage,” said Julie Bolen, redistrict­ing chair for the League of Women Voters of Georgia. “Secrecy intensifie­s public mistrust of public elected officials at a time it’s already at a low.”

Sachin Varghese, general counsel for the Democratic Party of Georgia, said that’s not what happened in 2011 when Republican­s were in charge of redistrict­ing. He said GOP lawmakers moved Black voters out of Georgia’s 12th Congressio­nal District to make it easier to elect a white candidate and paired Black legislativ­e incumbents with other incumbents, creating more uncompetit­ive districts elsewhere.

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