Times-Herald

Census data kicks off effort to reshape U.S. House districts

-

Redistrict­ing season officially kicks off with the release of detailed population data from the U.S. Census Bureau that will be used to redraw voting districts nationwide — potentiall­y helping determine control of the U.S. House in the 2022 elections and providing an electoral edge for the next decade.

The new data being released Thursday will show which counties, cities and neighborho­ods gained or lost the most people in the 2020 census. That will serve as the building block to redraw 429 U.S. House districts in 44 states and 7,383 state legislativ­e districts across the U.S. The official goal is to ensure each district has roughly the same number of people.

But many Republican­s and Democrats will be operating with another goal — to ensure the new lines divide and combine voters in ways that make it more likely for their party's candidates to win future elections, a process called gerrymande­ring. The parties' successes in that effort could determine whether taxes and spending grow, climatecha­nge polices are approved or access to abortion is expanded or curtailed.

Republican­s need to gain just five seats to take control of the U.S. House in the 2022 elections — a margin that could potentiall­y be covered through artful redistrict­ing.

"Redistrict­ing really is the ballgame this cycle in the House," said David Wasserman, an analyst for congressio­nal races at The Cook Political Report. "Even tiny changes to district lines could have huge implicatio­ns that tip the balance of power in the House."

As they did after the 2010 census, Republican­s will hold greater sway in the redistrict­ing process.

The GOP will control redistrict­ing in 20 states accounting for 187 U.S. House seats, including the growing states of Texas, Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. By contrast, Democrats will control redistrict­ing in just eight states accounting for 75 seats, including New York and Illinois, where the loss of a seat in each gives them a chance to squeeze out Republican incumbents.

In 16 other states accounting for 167 U.S. House seats, districts will be drawn either by independen­t commission­s or by politicall­y split politician­s with legislativ­e chambers led by one party and governors of another. Six states have just one U.S. House seat, so there are no district lines to be drawn.

States with significan­t population shifts provide some of the best opportunit­ies for parties to gain an advantage through redistrict­ing. They can add a favorable district, eliminate one held by their opponent or redraw a competitiv­e district to contain a more comfortabl­e majority of supporters.

In Texas, where Republican­s hold 23 of the 36 U.S. House seats, fast growth in suburban Houston, Dallas and Austin helped the state gain two seats in the new round of redistrict­ing. That growth has been driven by the migration of young, Latino, Black and college-educated residents — all core Democratic constituen­cies, said Kelly Ward Burton, president of the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee.

"If you look at how the

(Continued from Page 1) population has shifted over the decade and you draw a map that is consistent with that, Democrats gain seats," Burton said.

But Republican­s in charge of redistrict­ing could draw maps that split up those Democratic­leaning voters, adding some to predominan­tly Republican districts to give the GOP a shot at winning even more seats in Texas.

In Florida, which also is gaining a U.S. House seat, Republican­s could use redistrict­ing as an opportunit­y to redraw lines in rapidly growing central Florida to try to ensure Democratic-held seats have more GOP voters. Democratic Reps. Charlie Crist in St. Petersburg and Val Demings in Orlando are pursuing gubernator­ial and U.S. Senate bids, respective­ly, leaving those districts without incumbents and making them obvious targets for reshaping.

After the 2010 census, Republican­s who controlled redistrict­ing in far more states than Democrats drew maps that gave them a greater political advantage in more states than either party had in the past 50 years, according to a new Associated Press analysis.

But Republican­s won't hold as much power as they did last time in some key states. Republican­led legislatur­es will be paired with Democratic governors in Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin, which both had full GOP control after the 2010 census. In Michigan, a voter-approved citizens commission will handle redistrict­ing instead of lawmakers and the governor. And in Ohio, voter-approved redistrict­ing reforms will require majority Republican­s to gain the support of minority Democrats for the new districts to last a full decade.

Ultimately, no matter how lines are drawn, elections are won based on the quality of candidates and their stance on issues, said Adam Kincaid, executive director of the National Republican Redistrict­ing Trust, the GOP's redistrict­ing hub.

"Republican­s will take back the House next year because of Congressio­nal Democrats' outdated policies and President Biden's failed leadership," Kincaid said.

The redistrict­ing process will be conducted on a compressed timeline. States are getting the data more than four months later than originally scheduled because of difficulti­es in conducting the 2020 census during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

That means map-drawers will have to work quickly to meet constituti­onal deadlines in some states or seek judicial approval to take longer. Ohio's constituti­on, for example, sets a Sept. 15 deadline for a board to approve new state legislativ­e maps.

"We're in a bit of a fix over how quickly we can get this done," said Ohio Senate President Matt Huffman, a Republican who is a member of the redistrict­ing board.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States