CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 2015, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“A CALIFORNIA COMEBACK FOR GERRYMANDERING?”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 2015, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“A CALIFORNIA COMEBACK FOR GERRYMANDERING?”
Way back in 1811, almost 40 years before California became a state, then Massachusetts Gov. Elbridge Gerry okayed a congressional redistricting plan guaranteed to let his Democratic-Republican Party control his state’s congressional delegation.
The plan – motivated by Gerry’s loss
of a seat in Congress after opponents set up a district he could not possibly
win – contained a district shaped like a lot like a salamander. This led to use
of the term “gerrymander” to describe the process by which legislatures draw
districts to ensure outcomes they like.
Fast forward 197 years to when
California voters short-circuited that process by approving the 2008
Proposition 11, which set up an independent citizens’ commission to draw state
legislative district lines starting in 2011. Two years later, passage of
Proposition 20 added congressional districts to the commission’s task.
Now, after two election cycles
featuring many more close and competitive races than California had seen in
decades, the citizens commission’s work may be thrown out by the U.S. Supreme
Court via a case brought by leaders of the Arizona Legislature.
Ironically, the plaintiff Arizona
politicians are Republicans fearing a weakening in their control of that desert
state. But if the Republican-dominated high court rules for them, it will be at
the same time be increasing Democratic hegemony in California, where almost 80
percent of Congress members already are Democrats.
But that would not be inconsistent for
this Supreme Court, which has shown for almost 20 years that it cares little
about increasing voter turnout or letting voters make their own choices.
The current justices have gutted the
Voting Rights Act. Most were on the court that in 2000 threw out California’s
former “blanket primary” system, adopted by voters in 1996. Under that system,
challenged by both major political parties, anyone could vote for any candidate
on the primary ballot, regardless of party registration. The leading
vote-getter in each party then made the November runoff election. Most current
justices also were on the court that – also in 2000 – called a halt to
recounting votes in Florida, thus assuring the presidency for Republican George
W. Bush, who tallied about half a million fewer votes than Democrat Al Gore. In
all those cases, so much for what the majority of voters wanted or for helping
more Americans exercise their right to vote.
So it was hardly surprising that
several justices appeared in a court hearing this month to favor the arguments
of the Arizona Legislature’s Republicans, who argued that the Constitution
gives the right to redraw congressional districts each decade exclusively to
legislators.
They noted that the Constitution says
“the times, places and manner of holding elections for Senators and
Representatives shall be prescribed in each state by the Legislature thereof.”
Of course, choice of U.S. senators was taken out of legislative hands in 1913
by the 17th Amendment, but even before then, many states were
electing senators by popular vote regardless of the fact that Article 1 of the
Constitution still said senators from each state were to be “chosen by the
Legislature thereof…”
So there’s plenty of precedent for
deviating from strict constitutional construction, even without an amendment.
But, as cynics might say, tell that to
the justices.
Justice Antonin Scalia, leader of the
court’s usually controlling conservatives, claimed in the early March hearing
on the Arizona appeal that when the Constitution says “Legislature,” it means
only elected lawmakers and not the mass of voters who often pass state law via
ballot propositions. Never mind that initiatives didn’t exist in 1787.
Letting a commission draw districts,
Scalia said, “is giving this power to an unelected body…”
Californians deliberately did just
that. And the work of the first citizens’ commission, vetted by the state’s
non-partisan auditor, has gotten generally good marks.
Chances are if the court – due to rule
on this case before July 1 – rules for the Arizona legislators, the decision
would quickly be applied to California via lawsuits in lower federal courts.
That makes it possible new congressional districts could be in place by the
2016 primary, drawn by Democratic legislators to favor election of even more
Democrats to Congress. Voters would be lucky if lines look no more convoluted
than salamanders.
But there’s one large comfort here:
Any such ruling would apply only to congressional districts and not state
legislative lines. So the citizens commission will be back in 2021 no matter
what, even if its work is not as broad as it was four years ago.
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Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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