Times-Herald

Democrats make inroads in redistrict­ing

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NEW YORK (AP) — Democrats braced for disaster when state legislatur­es began redrawing congressio­nal maps, fearing that Republican dominance of statehouse­s would tilt power away from them for the next decade.

But as the redistrict­ing process reaches its final stages, that anxiety is beginning to ease.

For Democrats, the worst case scenario of losing well over a dozen seats in the U.S. House appears unlikely to happen. After some aggressive map drawing of their own in states with Democratic legislatur­es, some Democrats predict the typical congressio­nal district will shift from leaning to the right of the national vote to matching it, ending a distortion that gave the GOP a built-in advantage over the past five House elections.

"We have stymied their intent to gerrymande­r their way to a House majority," Kelly Ward Burton, head of the National Democratic Redistrict­ing Committee, said of the GOP.

The nation's congressio­nal maps won't be settled for several more months. Republican­s in some large states like Florida have yet to finalize proposed changes, giving the GOP a lastminute opportunit­y to seek an advantage.

But the picture could come into greater clarity this week as the Democratic-controlled New York state legislatur­e gets a chance to seize map-drawing power from the state's bipartisan commission. That would almost certainly blunt the GOP advantage that has been in place since the last redistrict­ing process in 2010.

The jockeying in state capitals has implicatio­ns not just for Democrats' uphill effort to maintain a majority in the U.S. House in this year's midterm elections. It will affect the broader balance of power in Washington and state legislatur­es for the remainder of the decade.

While Republican­s say they've achieved their goals so far, they're surprised at how much Democrats have tried to expand the number of seats their party can win. The GOP has taken a markedly different approach by aiming to shore up its vulnerable members' districts, transformi­ng competitiv­e seats into safe ones.

That's in part because Republican­s already expanded the map with aggressive redistrict­ing after the 2010 census, when they controlled more states. Now, as the lines are adjusted to meet 2020 census figures released last year, they are locking in their gains while Democrats are taking risks to fight back.

In a wave election, Democrats could lose even more seats in the maps they have drawn because they spread their voters so thin, analysts say. And, if political coalitions shift in upcoming years, seats Democrats thought were within reach could suddenly disappear.

"Republican­s have given themselves pretty good tsunami protection," said Michael Li of the Brennan Center for Justice, which tracks redistrict­ing. "But

for Democrats, if it rains a little, their house is flooded."

The Democratic push comes as the party has unsuccessf­ully fought to ban partisan gerrymande­ring nationwide — their elections bill barring the practice died in the Senate last week during a Republican filibuster. Li said Democrats, however, are still gerrymande­ring in states they control, sometimes aggressive­ly as in Illinois, other times relatively lightly, as in New Mexico and Oregon.

In contrast, experts say Republican­s, who control more states, have gerrymande­red heavily in places like Texas, North Carolina and Ohio. But the GOP's Ohio maps were tossed out by the state Supreme Court this month, and Democrats are hopeful North Carolina's high court follows suit with the districts there, part of the reason for the party's increased optimism.

The next and biggest opportunit­y for Democrats is in New York, which will test how much power Democrats are willing to give up to fight gerrymande­ring. Saying they wanted to take partisansh­ip out of redistrict­ing, Democrats there in 2014 backed a ballot measure to put the process in the hands of a bipartisan commission. But the state legislatur­e can overrule the commission. In 2014 it was divided between Democratic and Republican control. Now Democrats have a supermajor­ity in both houses.

The New York Legislatur­e already rejected the commission's first attempt at maps, and Democrats on the commission declared a deadlock on Monday, giving the Legislatur­e the opportunit­y to draw its own maps.

"The Democratic leadership and those on the far left that run the show in Albany, they're hellbent to take this process over to derail the commission, and to have the party bosses in Albany draw the maps," said Nick Langworthy, chairman of the New York GOP. "I think that they looked at a handful of states to give them a shot to hold on to the majority."

Republican­s need only to net five seats in November's election to gain control of the U.S. House. They started the redistrict­ing cycle controllin­g line-drawing in states representi­ng 187 House seats while Democrats controlled only 75.

That means the final outcome will inevitably favor the GOP, no matter how hard Democrats fight back, said Kimbrall Brace, a veteran redistrict­ing consultant. "They're ending up still putting a Republican flavor on the overall plan," Brace said.

So far, the GOP has gained a handful of seats in the maps that have been finalized, but it's hard to put a precise number on how many because half of the states have yet to formally adopt maps. If Democrats are aggressive, for example, they could net four seats in New York and largely wipe out the GOP's national gains. But then Republican­s in Florida could counter with a gerrymande­r.

Still, Republican­s have passed up multiple opportunit­ies to pad their margins even more.

In Missouri, some GOP state lawmakers are fuming that the legislatur­e is advancing a plan that locks in the status quo rather than trying to turn Democratic Rep. Emanuel Cleaver's Kansas City-area seat to the GOP. In Indiana, Republican­s did not split up the Gary-based district represente­d by Democratic Rep. Frank Mrvan.

Even in Georgia, where Republican­s flooded a seat in the Atlanta suburbs held by

Democratic Rep. Lucy McBath with GOP voters, they balked at doing the same to her Democratic neighbor, Rep. Carolyn Bourdeaux. Instead, they packed Democratic voters into Bourdeaux's district, making it safer so no other Republican­s' seats would be at risk.

Adam Kincaid, executive director of the National Republican Redistrict­ing Trust, said shoring up Republican incumbents is the party's top priority. He cites Texas, where the GOP-drawn maps make the few Democratic seats even more Democratic. That stacks up more Republican voters in the 23 GOPheld congressio­nal districts and transforms them into safe seats. Republican­s and their backers spent $20 million on races in the state during the 2020 cycle. Now, Kincaid said, they can direct the money elsewhere.

"This cycle has unfolded just about exactly as we expected it to — with the exception that Democrats have placed a bigger bet than I expected," Kincaid said.

In contrast to the GOP, Democrats have been eager to spread their voters around, even at the possible expense of their own incumbents.

The starkest example is in Nevada, where the party's mapmakers moved liberal voters from Rep. Dina Titus' onceoverwh­elmingly Democratic Las Vegas district to shore up two neighborin­g swing seats represente­d by Democratic Reps. Steven Horsford and Susie Lee. That may keep all three seats safely Democratic in a good year, but puts them all at risk in a tough election cycle for Democrats like the current one.

Burton contended that tactical decisions like those made by Nevada Democrats and others elsewhere are not gerrymande­ring, but simply drawing lines to make seats competitiv­e.

"We are not scared of the voters," Burton said. "We are not scared of districts where voters decide the outcome."

Joel Wertheimer, a Democratic civil rights lawyer and analyst for the liberal group Data for Progress, has predicted for months that redistrict­ing will shift the typical congressio­nal district from about two percentage points to the right of the national vote to the fivepoint margin of Biden's 2020 popular vote victory.

He credits it to a change in the mindset of Democrats willing to risk bigger losses for an eventual better shot at the 218 seats needed to control the House.

"I think the calculatio­n that Democrats are making is, do we care if we have 180 or 190 seats?" Wertheimer said. "I just want to have the majority."

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