Category Archives: redistricting

“Court Of Appeals Approves 63rd NY Senate Seat”

The NY Daily News reports.  You can read the opinion at this link.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Florida: Court Rules Against Democrats on Congressional Map”

Roll Call reports.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“U.S. Department of Justice OK’s Florida’s propsed changes to legislative and congressional districts”

The Orlando Sentinel reports.

Share
Posted in Department of Justice, redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Republicans file 2 lawsuits challenging redistricting maps”

The Arizona Capitol Times reports (subscription required). See also this article in the Arizona Republic. The federal complaint raising one person, one vote challenges is here. the state complaint is here.

Share
Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting | Comments Off

“Supreme Court reiterates redistricting decision”

AP: “A legislative redistricting plan for Kentucky is unconstitutional because it doesn’t adequately address population shifts of the past decade, the Kentucky Supreme Court reiterated in a ruling Thursday. Justices also echoed a February decision that legislative candidates will have to run this year in districts that have been in place for the past 10 years.”

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

Arizona Supreme Court Issues Opinion Explaining Why It Blocked Governor from Removing Head of Independent Redistricting Commission

Here.

Share
Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting | Comments Off

“Van Hollen appeals redistricting ruling to U.S. Supreme Court”

News from Wisconsin.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Supreme Court | Comments Off

Another Lurking Issue in the Texas Redistricting Cases

Warning: Inside baseball post: Last night I posted a question about when we will see the DC Court in the Texas redistricting case.  I received a few responses, including one from a longtime reader (critical of section 5) who notes that DOJ has taken the position that at least aspects of the Interim maps ordered by the three-judge San Antonio court actually must be submitted for preclearance by the counties themselves. See here, here, and here. The reader adds: “I have never believed that the interim maps would need to be precleared, especially after the SA court issued them with no order compelling Texas to submit them for preclearance. I have heard nothing about  whether the counties are actually submitting their precinct boundary changes for preclearance. “

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Just Wondering Dept?

Isn’t it about time we get the opinion from the three-judge DC Court considering the merits of the Texas redistricting preclearance challenge?

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Expert Reports in Florida Redistricting Case

Here is Dan Smith’s for the Fair Districts Coalition.

Here is Steve Ansolabehere’s for the Democrats.

If I get electronic versions of the other reports I will post them too.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

DOJ’s Tom Perez’s Rutger’s Speech on Voting Rights

Here.  Lots of comments on Texas redistricting, the voter identification cases, and Florida’s new voting law. Perez says that because of evidence of discriminatory intent or effect, section 5 of the Voting Rights Act is still “critically necessary.”

Share
Posted in redistricting, The Voting Wars, voter id, voter registration, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Road to Democratic House Majority Bypasses Pennsylvania”

Bloomberg: “he road to a Democratic majority in the U.S. House of Representatives used to run through the industrial battleground states of Pennsylvania (BEESPA) and Ohio (BEESOH). That’s no longer so as Republicans, in control of the largest number of state legislatures since 1928, have redrawn congressional boundaries to bolster their 2010 election gains and cordon Democrats into concentrated urban districts. The new lines will make it difficult for Democrats to pick up enough seats to gain the House majority in November.”

Share
Posted in campaigns, redistricting | Comments Off

“GOP Redistricting Bolsters Vulnerable House Members”

WSJ reports.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“NY’s Redistricting Process Continues in Legal Purgatory”

WNYC: “Like a sequel to a horror movie most people never saw in the first place, New York’s redistricting saga continues to play out in court rooms and administrative offices from Washington, DC and Albany.”

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Arizona: Redistricting Plan Pre-Cleared”

Roll Call reports.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Federal court dismisses Michigan redistricting case”

AP reports.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Can Someone Put a Stop to the Insanity of Political Redistricting?”

Nick Stephanopoulos: “Americans have gotten used to this baroque struggle, but it’s worth remembering that most foreign observers consider it bizarre, even pathological. Compared to other countries with similar electoral systems, the American model of redistricting is an extreme outlier. And not only is the U.S. model different from its peers, it is also inferior. When it comes to elections, it’s clear that American exceptionalism is a vice, not a virtue.”

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Redrawn Districts Present a Hurdle for Democrats”

NYT: “As Democrats try to orchestrate a state-by-state drive to retake control of the House of Representatives, an unexpected hurdle has arisen in New York, an overwhelmingly Democratic state that should have been friendly terrain.”

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

Texas Redistricting: Too Late for DC Preclearance Case to Affect 2012 Primaries

I had been speculating that the three-judge court in DC might be holding its opinion until it would be too late for the court’s opinion to affect the 2012 elections.  This would be simply for administrative reasons—Texas could not handle more litigation over the district lines to be used in this election.

Michael Li says that this moment has arrived.

This means that the D.C. court could issue its ruling relatively soon.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Analysis: Consolidation map splits Bibb into white Republican, black Democratic districts”

News from Georgia.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Congressional Redistricting Matters, and It’s Hurting This Country: a Response to Michael Barone”

FairVote responds.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Court finds lawmakers failed to create majority-minority Assembly district for Latinos, but leaves maps intact otherwise”

WisPolitics: ” A federal court this morning ruled Republicans failed to create a majority-minority Assembly seat for Milwaukee’s Latino community and offered lawmakers the chance to tweak those lines.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“San Antonio court releases explanatory opinions on interim maps”

Texas Redistricting has the three opinions.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Redistricting wrangle hits Romney and Texas Republicans”

Reuters reports.

Share
Posted in campaign finance, campaigns, redistricting | Comments Off

“Redistricting Not a Big Story in 2012; Neither Republicans nor Democrats stand to gain much.”

Interesting Michael Barone analysis.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“New York Law Ending Prison-Based Gerrymandering Stands: Plaintiffs Drop Challenge”

Prisoners of the Census: “New Yorkers enjoyed a clear victory today, as plaintiffs in the Little v. LATFOR case dropped their challenge of the state law ending prison-based gerrymandering. The law, known as Part XX, was passed in 2010 to increase fairness in redistricting by counting incarcerated people as residents of their home districts. The previous practice, often called prison-based gerrymandering, gave extra political influence to districts containing prisons, diluting the votes of every resident of a district with no (or fewer) prisons. The law corrects this bias and assures that all communities in New York have equal representation in our government.”

Share
Posted in felon voting, redistricting | Comments Off

Daily Kos Calls Gov. Cuomo “Number One Redistricting Villain in the Nation”

Here.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Cuomo to sign NY Legislature’s redistricting plan”

AP reports: “A senior administration official said Wednesday night that Cuomo will sign the measure, withdrawing his promised veto of any “hyper-partisan lines.” Cuomo ultimately traded his veto for a long-term overhaul through a constitutional amendment promised by legislative leaders. The senior administration official spoke on condition of anonymity because although the deal is sealed, the officials hadn’t yet announced it.”

The NY Daily News says minority lawmakers are on board with the plan.

 

Share
Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting | Comments Off

“Politicians as Fiduciaires”

Teddy Rave has posted this draft on SSRN (forthcoming, Harvard Law Review). Here is the abstract:

When incumbent legislators draw the districts from which they are elected, the conflict of interest is glaring: they can and do gerrymander district lines to entrench themselves. Despite recognizing that such incumbent self-dealing works a democratic harm, the Supreme Court has not figured out what to do with political gerrymandering claims, which inherently require first-order decisions about the allocation of raw political power—decision that courts are institutionally ill-suited to make. But the same type of agency problem arises all the time in corporate law. And though we do not think courts are any better at making business decisions than political ones or trust elections alone to align the interests of corporate directors with their shareholders, courts nevertheless play an important role in checking self-dealing by corporate agents. They do so through an enforceable fiduciary duty of loyalty. Courts apply a strict standard of review when corporate agents act under a conflict of interest, typically invalidating the transactions unless the taint of self-dealing is cleansed by approval through a neutral process (such as ratification by disinterested directors or shareholders), in which case courts apply the much more deferential “business judgment rule.”

Drawing from constitutional history and political theory, this Article argues that political representatives should be treated as fiduciaries, subject to a duty of loyalty, which they breach when they manipulate election laws to their own advantage. Courts can thus check incumbent self-dealing in gerrymandering by taking a cue from corporate-law strategies for getting around their institutional incompetence. As in corporate law, courts should strictly scrutinize incumbent decisions that are tainted by conflicts of interest (such as when a legislature draws its own districts). But when the taint is cleansed by a neutral process (such as an independent districting commission), courts should apply a much more deferential standard of review. The threat of searching review should serve as a powerful incentive for legislators to adopt neutral processes for redistricting, allowing a reviewing court to focus not on the substantive political outcomes, but on ensuring that the processes are free from incumbent influence — a role for which they are institutionally well-suited.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

Proposed NY Maps Released After Delay

See here and here.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Albany Redrawing Political Map With Old Lines of Thought”

NYT: “This was the year New York State lawmakers were going to stop protecting incumbents by gerrymandering political maps to improve their re-election chances….But in Albany, as they say, it is déjà vu all over again.”

Share
Posted in citizen commissions, redistricting | Comments Off

Big Week for Texas Election Law?

Could be.

Share
Posted in redistricting, voter id, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Now Latino and Black Voters Fight for Map Power in Redistricting”

Ross Ramsey reports for the Texas Tribune/NYT.  More links via Texas Redistricting.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Florida Supreme Court throws out Senate redistricting plan”

The Orlando Sentinel reports. Dan Smith has posted the 234-page opinion (also upholding the state House districts) here.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Some Texas Democrats wonder if they could have fared better in redistricting case”

Dallas Morning News: “As candidates scramble to file for the 2012 elections under new political maps ordered by a court last week, some Texas Democrats are wondering: Could they have gotten more? Districts for Congress and the Texas House adhere closely to a compromise plan negotiated by Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott and the Texas Latino Redistricting Task Force, one of the state’s myriad opponents. Other groups resisted compromising with the state, and Abbott, a Republican, has been credited with employing a divide-and-conquer strategy to win approval for maps that look a lot like the ones adopted by the Legislature.”

Remember that pushback when I and others said that the Supreme Court’s decision in Perry v. Perez was a big win for Republicans?

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

DOJ Making Section 5 Objections in Two Texas Counties

Texas Redistricting has the details.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Court’s Map Could Push New York Legislature to Act”

Roll Call:“A federal judge unexpectedly tightened the redistricting vice on the deadlocked New York state Legislature this week, pushing the body to come up with a compromise or cede the redraw to an apolitical observer. The release of a court-drawn draft map by U.S. Magistrate Judge Roanne Mann late Monday surprised the Albany political establishment — she wasn’t expected to release a map until next week — and added immense pressure to the Democratic-held Assembly and Republican-held state Senate to draw new Congressional lines.”

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

“Court inquires about Austin congressional district; Inquiry could delay election, clarify issue of ‘coalition districts’”

Austin-American Statesman: “Ithe D.C. court issues an opinion saying that District 25 deserves protection, it could throw Texas’ election schedule into turmoil again. That’s because the San Antonio court adopted the Legislature’s boundaries for District 25 in drawing the congressional map to be used for this year’s elections. Assuming the D.C. court will allow enough time to produce new maps by March 31, the San Antonio court could redraw new boundaries for District 25 and the surrounding districts, said Michael Li, a redistricting expert and author of a Texas redistricting blog. But because of tight timetables, any changes would force the court to push back the primary until June 29, almost four months after the original date of March 6. But if the D.C. court does not allow for new maps to be drawn by March 31, then the primary would have to be pushed back to July with a runoff in September — a move that would be problematic because of general election deadlines, Li said.”

This is why I suggested the D.C. Court may hold its opinion until it is too late to do anything about the upcoming primaries.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Partisan Gerrymandering and the Politics of Judicial Review”

Franita Tolson has posted this draft on SSRN.  Here is the abstract:

The debate over whether partisan gerrymandering claims are justiciable reveals a Supreme Court that is at war with itself. The Court first found these claims to be actionable in Davis v. Bandemer on equal protection grounds, but switched gears a mere eighteen years later in Vieth v. Jubelirer. In Vieth, a plurality of the justices argued that partisan gerrymandering presented a non-justiciable political question because of the lack of manageable standards, while three of the remaining justices offered their own proposals for regulation. This impasse has led scholars to alternate between developing their own standards, premised on an individual rights conception of the harm from gerrymandering, or calling for a “structural” approach to resolving these disputes, in which courts treat gerrymanders as political lock ups and police them with easily administrable bright lines rules. Although structuralists have come to dominate the literature, both approaches fail to adequately conceptualize partisan gerrymandering because neither the Court nor these scholars have acknowledged that it has federalism benefits that must be accounted for in developing standards.

The thesis of this Article is that partisan gerrymandering is a political safeguard of federalism, but courts cannot properly value this federalism benefit and should therefore police gerrymandering indirectly. This federalism benefit emerges because states can draw legislative districts along partisan lines in order to increase the probability that its delegation to the U.S. House of Representatives will reflect the partisan composition of a majority of the electorate and the majority party of the state. A delegation that is as cohesive as practicable will ensure that the state’s preferred policy preferences are expressed at the federal level. These preferences are determined, not by reference to the wants and desires of elected officials, but by path dependent processes, or constraints imposed by the state’s institutional framework, that limit the ability of official decisionmaking to veer too far from voter preferences.

This Article illustrates that, in the context of congressional redistricting, the sole focus on manageable standards ignores the concerns about institutional legitimacy and judicially dictated political outcomes that are exacerbated because of the related federalism issues in this area. In other words, even if governing standards can be developed, the federalism implications of partisan gerrymandering demand indirect regulation through prophylactic rules like section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. The Court has used section 2’s prohibition on racial vote dilution to police partisan gerrymandering in the past. This approach respects its federalism potential and the institutional limitations of the judiciary while protecting democratic norms through section 2’s focus on equality of representation.

A provocative and well-done paper.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Nate Persily Knows How to Draw Straight Lines

Following court assignment, the NY congressional maps are out.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

DC Court Reviewing Texas Preclearance Request Wants More Briefing

See here.  That court seems stuck in a tough spot.  If they issue an opinion soon, parties will go back to the San Antonio court and argue that the interim maps should be changed to reflect the D.C. ruling. So I expect the D.C. court to wait until those new maps are relied upon a lot and cannot be changed.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“As 2012 races kick off, new U.S. congressional map looks a little better for Republicans “

The Fix reports.

Share
Posted in redistricting | Comments Off

The Big Underplayed Story in the Texas Redistricting Case

The divide between Latino and African-American voters’ rights groups.  Many Latino leaders are happy with the interim maps and many African-American leaders are not.  The issue is that Latino gains may come (at least in part) from African-American voting power.

It is one of the big unanswered questions about the VRA: how to deal with conflicting minority interests.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Federal Court in San Antonio Sets Texas Primary, Runoff, Ballot Rules

You can find the court’s order here (via Texas Redistricting).  May 29 primary and July 31 runoff–unless there is a further delay caused by either a Supreme Court stay request or some action from the D.C. court.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Minority Voices Split Over Whether Interim Texas Redistricting Maps Are Good for Minorities

Here, at the Texas Tribune.  From one of the three, written by Rep. Dukes:

I understand that the court’s plan is based on a plan that MALDEF, the Latino Task force and U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Laredo, proposed along with the state of Texas. Undoubtedly, these plaintiffs believe that their agreed-to plan is fair to minority voters.

The Texas Legislative Black Caucus, NAACP, LULAC and I disagree. We feel that the congressional plan should protect the voting rights of all minority voters, not just a limited subset — especially when the agreed-to plan (and the court’s plan) continues to harm Hispanic and black voters in several parts of the state.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

“Minority groups object to new Texas political maps”

AP: “Minority groups in Texas objected Wednesday to new congressional and state House maps drawn by a San Antonio court, urging a separate court in Washington, D.C., to speed up a review that could mark the last opportunity to change the political boundaries ahead of the 2012 elections.”  (More on the filing from Texas Redistricting.)

Note no mention of a possible motion for a stay to the U.S. Supreme Court.  More at Texas Redistricting on what comes next and who won or lost.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

After All the Machinations at the Supreme Court, Was It Worth It for Texas to Appeal the Interim Maps?

The verdict appears to be “yes.”  Rothenberg Political Report:

 While neither party gets its ideal scenario, the proposed map is likely to result in a split of the state’s four new congressional districts by creating three new Hispanic-majority seats that should be won by Democrats. The new map strongly resembles a “compromise” map that emerged earlier this month between Attorney General Greg Abbott and a Latino interest group – but it was a map that many Democrats and other Hispanic coalitions didn’t endorse or like.

Still, the map won’t help the calculus Democrats need to take back the House. While Democrats concede privately that the map is slightly better than the one the GOP-controlled legislature produced last year, they would have liked to have seen more gains, with three of the new seats solidly in their column. While Democrats should pick up at least two seats, an Austin seat transforms into a solid GOP seat and the 23rd remains a toss-up. The map could result in a 25-11 advantage for Republicans – a two seat gain for both parties, resulting in no real net change from the current 23-9 split.

Democratic Rep. Lloyd Doggett’s district was decimated in this proposal (as it was in the original GOP map), turning his 25th District into a GOP-leaning seat and likely forcing him to run in one of the new Hispanic districts, most likely the 35th District that stretches from Austin to San Antonio — a solidly Democratic seat with a 58 percent Hispanic population. Doggett will still likely face a primary from a Latino candidate, but with over $3.3 million in the bank, it would take a cash-flush challenger to take him on in an abbreviated primary campaign. State Rep. Joaquin Castro is still expected to run in the open 20th District, vacated by retiring Rep. Charlie Gonzalez.

 

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Coverage of the Texas Redistricting Interim Maps

San Antonio News-Express

NY Times

AP

Texas Tribune

 

 

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Texas Court Orders on Interim Maps Signed by All Three Judges

The Court says “an opinion” coming later.  I would think (but cannot guarantee) that the signature of the three judges and the references to “an” opinion means no dissents.  From the order:

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off

Breaking News: Three Judge Texas Court Releases New Interim Maps

Texas Redistricting has them.  More to come.

Share
Posted in redistricting, Voting Rights Act | Comments Off