Thursday, September 27, 2018
Excluding Voters: How to Make America Grate
Demographics
for the Republican Party are pretty nasty. Older, white voters, particularly
those without a college education. GOP core. Minorities? Not looking good for
the GOP. Younger voters (59% of Millennials have at least some college). Really
not good for the GOP. Since the United States has already become a “majority of
minorities,” and by definition older voters die off, the GOP doesn’t have a
shot at maintaining its dominance of state legislatures, governorships,
Congress and the presidency… as long as one person has the same voting power
and access to the ballot as any other.
The
solution, where Republicans can appoint judges, is to create voter ID laws,
move polling places out of minority neighborhoods, policies that clearly hinder
minorities from voting. Those incumbent Republicans have also created voting
districts where non-Republicans are severely diluted and pushed aside.
Remember,
Republican Donald Trump won the presidency while losing the popular vote by
millions. Hmmm. Gerrymandering is an American tradition: Defining congressional
districts to over-weight the power of voters favoring incumbents and
under-weight voters of the “other” party. Whenever you see voting districts
that have elongated reaches or twist excessively (the above are examples of
several current gerrymandered districts), you can pretty much bet that you are
witnessing gerrymandering.
Even
sensing the inherent manipulative unfairness in partisan gerrymandering, the
Supreme Court has struggled with how to remedy this distortion of our
democracy. Meanwhile, modern academics were designing computer-generated
algorithms, based on U.S. Census data and physical distance measurements, to
provide objective determination that gerrymandering is present and to recommend
structures where the inherent nature of the voters are reflected in the
ultimate voting districts. Where the district is not reflective of the actual voting
proclivities of the people in the area, an “efficiency gap” generates a clear
mathematical verification of that fact. When the modern Supreme Court began to
review gerrymandering, however, there were no “efficiency gap” measurements. Today,
these algorithms are amazingly accurate. But history struggles to catch up.
For
example, in “Davis v. Bandemer (1986), the Supreme Court held that partisan
gerrymandering violated the Equal Protection
Clause, but the court
could not agree on the appropriate constitutional standard against which legal
claims of partisan gerrymandering should be evaluated… Lower courts found
it difficult to apply Bandemer, and only in one subsequent
case, Party of North Carolina v. Martin (1992), did a lower court
strike down a redistricting plan on partisan gerrymandering grounds.
“The Supreme Court revisited the concept of partisan
gerrymandering claims in Vieth v. Jubelirer (2004).
The justices divided, and no clear standard against which to evaluate partisan
gerrymandering claims emerged. Writing for a plurality, Justice Scalia said
that partisan gerrymandering claims were nonjusticiable. A majority of the
court would continue to allow partisan gerrymandering claims to be considered
justiciable, but those Justices had divergent views on how such claims should
be evaluated…
“In Gill v. Whitford (2016) a District Court used the efficiency gap statistic to evaluate the claim of partisan gerrymander in
Wisconsin's legislative districts. In the 2012 election for the state
legislature, the efficiency gap was 11.69% to 13% in favor of the Republicans. ‘Republicans
in Wisconsin won 60 of the 99 Assembly seats, despite Democrats having a
majority of the statewide vote…’” Wikipedia. In June of 2017, the Supreme Court
agreed to hear Gill, but it soon
reversed itself, remanding the case back to the lower courts for further
review. Clearly, efficiency gap measurements can objectively address the
concern that such voting anomalies cannot be objectively determined and
resolved. They sure can today!
Yet the Court is more politically motivated that at any time in
American history. There is much skepticism that the current Court, particularly
if Brett Kavanaugh is confirmed as the next Associate Justice, would ever reach
a ruling that would effectively reverse Republican voter district dominance and
effectively level the voting playing field.
The Supreme Court’s bias in support of voter exclusion and
distortion was unambiguous in its 2013 Shelby
County v. Holder decision, in which it eviscerated long-standing provisions
of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which had been upheld by earlier incarnations
of that Court. Effectively, the 2013 Court challenged maintaining
voter-compliance scrutiny of certain named states where clear voting
discrimination had been common practice. Lawyers arguing support for the
statute as drafted argued that if those states were no longer going to subject
to ongoing federal scrutiny, those discriminatory voter exclusions would be
immediately reinstated. Those lawyers were horribly correct.
“On
June 25, 2013, the Court ruled by a 5-to-4 vote that Section 4(b) [of the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, ] is unconstitutional because the coverage formula is based
on data over 40 years old, making it no longer responsive to current needs and
therefore an impermissible burden on the constitutional principles of federalism and equal
sovereignty of the states. The Court did not strike down Section 5, but without
Section 4(b), no jurisdiction will be subject to Section 5 preclearance unless
Congress enacts a new coverage formula. [Like a GOP-dominated Congress with a
GOP President would ever enact such legislation!!!]
“Five
years after the ruling, nearly a thousand polling places had been closed in the
country, with many of the closed polling places in predominantly
African-American counties. Research shows that the changing of voter locations
and reduction in voting locations can reduce voter turnout.” Wikipedia.
But
much more has occurred since that ruling. “Five years after the Supreme Court
gutted a key provision of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, a new report from the
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights has confirmed predictions that the ruling would
hobble enforcement of that landmark law…
“The
term ‘judicial activism’ is thrown around, but if a decision ever deserved it,
Shelby County did. The Constitution authorizes Congress to enforce the
provisions of the 15th Amendment — which guarantees the right to vote without
regard to ‘race, color, or previous condition of servitude’ — by enacting ‘appropriate
legislation.’ In 2006 Congress voted to extend the Voting Rights Act’s coverage
formula for an additional 25 years. Despite that, the court threw it out.
“The
Civil Rights Commission report, ‘An Assessment of Minority Voting Rights Access
in the United States,’ makes it clear why the court should have deferred to
Congress’ judgment that extending the coverage formula would protect gains
already made and prevent states from relapsing into discriminatory practices.
“The
report notes that within two hours of the decision, Texas’ attorney general
tweeted that the state would reinstitute a strict photo ID law, which had been
struck down by a court during the pre-clearance process. A day later, North
Carolina’s Legislature voted to make its voter ID law stricter, and eliminated
or restricted rules that had made it easier for minorities to vote. Both
states’ actions were ultimately found to be acts of intentional racial
discrimination, but only after years of litigation. It wouldn’t have come to
that if the pre-clearance formula had remained in place.” Los Angeles Times,
September 23rd.
So
if you think you live in a representative democracy where voters are all
approximately equal, think again. Despite their clear minority status,
Republicans are in control, not only disproportionately in who gets to vote
(always favoring the GOP) and who gets excluded (almost always
Democratic-leaning voters) but of any attempt to correct this anti-democratic
anomaly. Perhaps that’s why the Economist’s
2016 Democracy Index (released
in January 2017) removed the United States from that category of nations living
in a “full democracy” (9% of the global population) and pushed us down into 45%
of the world population who live in a “flawed democracy.” Makes you feel all
warm and fuzzy inside.
I’m Peter Dekom, and if a dying
Republican constituency is prepared to violate some of the most basic
democratic principles of our great nation just to maintain their minority
governance, is the unraveling of our entire country now just a matter of time?
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