Monday, June 24, 2019
Sociological Gobbledygook – Empirically Ending Gerrymandering
“[The] whole point is you’re taking these issues away from
democracy and you're throwing them into the courts pursuant to, and it may be
simply my educational background, but I can only describe as sociological
gobbledygook.”
U.S.
Supreme Court Chief Justice and Harvard Law School Magna Cum Laude grad John
Roberts, in the fall of 2017, describing computer-driven demographic analytics
applied to determining gerrymandering and provide unbiased reconfiguration
In a modern era, particularly using
artificial intelligence and objective data generated over decades, through
voting records, Census information and other governmental “objective”
demographic analysis, it is beyond doubt that computer-driven reviews of voting
districts can very accurately determine whether voting districts have been
artificially-drawn to favor political affiliation while denying a large number
(often even a majority) of voters their objectively proportional vote.
Gerrymandering. The Democrats were masters of that distortion in the post-Civil
War Reconstruction era, and Republicans became the masters beginning in the
late 20th century until the present.
We already have a political system
that disproportionately empowers rural regions over heavily urbanized states:
the Senate, where a state with almost 40 million residents or a state with 600
thousand will each have two U.S. Senators.
We also know that the alignment of voting districts leaks into the
composition of our Electoral College system of electing a president. Add the
unleashing of spending limits allowed so-called SuperPac by the 2010 Supreme
Court Citizen’s United decision, and ordinary voters’ power was
significantly if not permanently eroded in favor of the mega-rich able to fund
such campaign efforts.
This combination of organic bias in
our political system, combined with voter district distortion (gerrymandering)
and voter suppression of minority voters (mostly in red states) have let the
prestigious British periodical, The Economist, to label the United
States a “flawed democracy,” as not being fully representative of its
constituency. But without all of this voter distortion, the GOP would be
seriously impaired, particularly when it came to national elections. The result
is that a GOP-leaning supporter casts the voting equivalent of 1.8 times an
average Democratic vote.
Thus, without that manipulation,
Republicans would not, as they do now, control 27 gubernatorial and 30 state
legislatures plus the U.S. Senate and the Presidency, despite the fact that
Donald Trump lost the popular vote in 2016 by almost 3 million votes. By 2040,
16 states will hold an estimated 70% of the U.S. population, which states will
control less than one-third of the U.S. Senate. The Supreme Court could end
substantial aspects of this distortion, but their recent conservative decisions
seem to moving the court in the opposite direction.
In the 2013 Shelby County vs
Holder, the Supreme Court effectively eviscerated federal supervision
(under the amended Voting Rights Act of 1965) of states that routinely practiced
statutory voter discrimination, mostly against minority voters likely to cast
the ballots of Democrats. Given Chief Justice John Roberts’ claim of
undereducated ignorance (really?) above, it seems reasonable to expect that the
court, facing two gerrymandering cases (by Republicans in North Carolina and
Democrats in Maryland), is likely to let stand the pernicious practice of
voting district distortion simply to maintain incumbent control.
The available analytic systems apply
algorithms based on the above-noted data, and measure physical distances within
the district (“spatial analysis”), how those distances are populated with party
affiliation, how the overall voting in the region is reflected in the actual
districting (the “efficiency gap”), etc. There many such mathematical
structures, all reasonably equal in accurate analysis, systems that are
routinely and generally supported by academics the world over.
Except in the case of blatant racial
discrimination, the courts have generally eschewed tackling the issue of
political gerrymander to favor incumbents. John Roberts’ quote is very
indicative of this tradition. The Constitution relegates the creation of voting
districts to the states, but the question of whether they can distort the one
person, one vote system may have other constitutional limitations.
The argument is that courts are not
configured to manage the task. A few states have forced voter initiatives to
set neutral districting bodies, usually challenged by the incumbent party in
court, but most states still relegate districting to elected legislatures,
which usually draw lines sympathetic to their party. But technology has now
rendered the courts’ claims of inability to manage districting challenges moot.
Special masters, a common legal practice, could certainly engage one or more of
these analytic processes and bring their substantiated conclusion to the court
for final ratification. Easy. Accurate. Relevant. American democracy is at
stake.
But even in the unlikely event that
the Supreme Court does the right thing and tackles unrepresentative
gerrymandering to favor incumbents, don’t expect red states to alter their
practices based on such a decision. They will probably hold the decisions to be
limited to the states directly involved in the litigation, forcing further
litigation, state by discriminatory state, to apply the underlying principles
to their own gerrymandered distortions.
“Both parties are guilty of
gerrymandering, but Republicans have made it an art form. In fact, the GOP has
proved that, as long as it controls statehouses, it will be hell-bent on
preserving and advancing its agenda through redistricting and other moves, no
matter the cost. Republican statehouses have tried to impeach judges who
challenged their gerrymandered maps , stripped power from newly elected
Democratic governors , overturned voter-approved ballot initiatives , passed
voter-suppression laws tightening their grip on the electorate, and of course,
manipulated district lines to the point that they held on to more than a dozen
gerrymandered seats in Congress even during the biggest Democratic wave since
Watergate.
“Republican tactics aren’t suddenly
going to change should the court strike down the maps in Maryland (Benisek vs.
Lemone) or North Carolina (Rucho vs. Common Cause), or establish a new legal
standard for partisan gerrymandering. Anyone who thinks that Republicans will
go quietly into the night needs a dose of reality. If voters allow the GOP to
remain in control of state legislatures after the 2020 election, the party will
gerrymander Congress and rig our democracy all over again.
“Should this happen, more legal
challenges will inevitably ensue as GOP-controlled states are forced to once
again defend new maps in court. However, these legal battles will take years —
just like it did for the latest gerrymandered maps to reach the Supreme Court.
In that time, Republicans will continue to have a built-in gerrymandered
advantage of seats in congressional and state elections, empowering them to
obstruct progress at a profoundly consequential moment for our country.
“Need more proof of Republican
willingness to go around the Supreme Court to get their way? Look no further
than what’s happened to women’s reproductive rights since Roe vs. Wade. After
the court ruled in Roe in 1973 that women had a constitutional right to an
abortion, Republican-controlled state governments immediately began challenging
the ruling with an onslaught of new laws limiting a woman’s right to make her
own healthcare decisions. Those unconstitutional and restrictive laws were not
overturned until 1992, nearly two decades later. And now, we are watching
firsthand as Republican-controlled state governments in Alabama, Georgia, Ohio
and elsewhere take the lead on challenging the very foundations of Roe with
egregious abortion bans. There are zero reasons to assume the GOP won’t use its
control of state governments to challenge a new Supreme Court precedent on
partisan gerrymandering with new gerrymandered maps in 2021 as well.
“The Republican Party’s leaders know
that the future of the congressional map doesn’t lie with the Supreme Court,
and they’re not hiding it. That’s why the national Republican State Leadership
Committee has spent nearly $100 million over the last decade solidifying the
GOP’s grip on state elections via its ‘Redmap’ program, a strategy to dominate
the redistricting process. Even in 2018, a banner election year for Democrats
in Congress, Republican fundraising outpaced Democrats in state elections. In
Florida, the preeminent battleground state that historically has had some of
the nation’s most extreme maps, Republicans outraised Democrats by more than
5-to-1 in the average statehouse race. Yet Democrats at the top of the ticket
shattered fundraising records.” Vicky Hausman, writing for the June 7th
Los Angeles Times.
Yup, Republicans clearly aren’t
hiding their efforts, just claiming that there is nothing the courts can do
about it. “[In] the 2010 midterm election, the GOP won full control in states
including North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin, and
Republicans drew election maps so that their party would typically win a
lopsided majority of the seats… Those gerrymanders helped the Republicans
protect their majority in the House of Representatives until the Democratic
wave in 2018, and kept them in control of all five of the state legislatures
even though Democrats won more votes in those states… Citing the partisan tilt,
judges recently struck down the district maps in each of those states on the
grounds that Democratic voters were denied the right to a fair and equal vote.
“The Supreme Court, however, has
never struck down a partisan gerrymander. The justices sounded closely split in
March when they heard an appeal from North Carolina’s Republican leaders, who
freely admitted they drew the districts for a ‘partisan advantage,’ aiming to
ensure Republicans would win 10 of the state’s 13 congressional seats.
“The census dispute also has become
intensely partisan. Citing the climate of fear in immigrant communities,
demographers and political scientists testified in lower-court proceedings that
millions of people will refuse to answer if the census includes a citizenship
question. That would lead to a significant undercount of the population in
states like California that have large immigrant populations — areas that also
typically tilt in favor of Democrats. Federal judges in New York, San Francisco
and Baltimore have ruled against the added question.
“Last week [first week in June],
lawyers who sued over the census plan raised a second concern. They said a 2020
census with detailed data on citizens would permit states to divide their
election districts based on the number of eligible voters, not the total
population. This ‘would be advantageous to Republicans and non-Hispanic whites’
and ‘would clearly be a disadvantage for Democrats,’ Republican strategist Tom
Hofeller wrote in 2015.” David Savage writing for the June 8th Los
Angeles Times.
Unless the court addresses this fundamental distortion, they
will simply add one more giant nail to a coffin that may someday soon hold the
end of the United States as we know it.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and if you truly care, scream, yell and vote!
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On June 27th, The Supreme Court ruled that federal courts have no role to play in policing political districts drawn for partisan gain. The decision could embolden political line-drawing for partisan gain when state lawmakers undertake the next round of redistricting following the 2020 census.
The justices said by a 5-4 vote on Thursday that claims of partisan gerrymandering do not belong in federal court. The court's conservative, Republican-appointed majority says that voters and elected officials should be the arbiters of what is a political dispute.
The court rejected challenges to Republican-drawn congressional districts in North Carolina and a Democratic district in Maryland. The court also noted that many states were addressing this political practice internally.
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