Supreme Court Must Halt Growing Abuse of Redistricting (Gerrymandering)
By Mitchell Berman
First published by the Los
Angeles Times, May 28, 2004
While the nation continues its efforts to export democracy abroad,
the U.S. Supreme Court is engaged in a quiet, far-less-publicized
debate here at home over partisan gerrymandering - the shaping of
electoral districts for partisan ends - that
will profoundly influence the state of American democracy for years to come.
Earlier this year, in Vieth vs. Jubelirer, the court considered a challenge to
an extreme gerrymander in Pennsylvania in which the Republicans who control the
state Legislature drew a new electoral map that gave their own party the edge
in 12 out of 19 congressional seats and that most observers agreed was a clear
case of partisan manipulation.
But last month, the court unexpectedly rejected the challenge, saying there was
no clear, manageable "judicial standard" by which to judge the claim. Thus the
Legislature's unfair plan was allowed to go forward.
Now there's a new case before the court that threatens to open the door to unprecedented
political abuses. But this case - the Texas redistricting episode that received
so much attention when the Democrats fled across the state border last year - also
offers an opportunity: the chance to carve out just the kind of manageable judicial
standard that the court says it has been looking for.
Partisan gerrymandering is as old as the nation. Since the earliest days of the
United States, legislatures have redrawn states' congressional districts every
10 years to take into account population shifts and to add or subtract seats.
And since legislatures are inherently political bodies, each party has long sought
to draw the lines to its partisan advantage.
In recent decades, however, the incidence and extremism of partisan redistricting
have escalated. Voting patterns have become more consistently partisan, enabling
political mapmakers to better predict how voters will vote. And advances in computer
technology and political databases allow cartographers to fine-tune district
boundaries to maximize partisan advantage.
Both Democrats and Republicans have sought to manipulate the system by drawing "safe
seats" for their own members. The result: fewer competitive elections.
Many observers expected the court to use last month's Vieth case to bring the
situation under control. But that did not happen. Although all nine justices
agreed that "excessive partisanship" in districting is unconstitutional, the
court split over what to do about it. Four justices proposed creating new legal
tests for what was acceptable and what was not. But four others predicted that
federal courts could never craft standards that would be manageable, and argued
that the judiciary should retreat from even trying.
That left one justice - Anthony Kennedy - in the middle. Although he voted to
uphold the Pennsylvania gerrymander for want of a manageable standard, Kennedy
explicitly left open hope that "if workable standards do emerge, courts should
be prepared to order relief."
The Texas case, Jackson vs. Perry, offers just such an opportunity. Like Vieth,
it presents a textbook example of partisan gerrymandering - one so egregious
that the state itself admitted that maximizing electoral prospects for Republican
candidates was "the single-minded purpose of the Texas Legislature." But the
Texas reapportionment has a new characteristic that is potentially even more
dangerous: It was adopted mid-decade to replace valid, court-approved district
lines.
Redistricting had always been a once-in-a-decade affair - a necessary response
to population changes revealed in the decennial census. But in 2002, Colorado
Republicans shocked observers by abandoning this tradition, redrawing the state's
congressional districts barely a year after new districts had been adopted. Although
a state court invalidated that gambit, Texas - where Republicans had just taken
control of both houses of the Legislature - followed suit last year. Republicans
in Georgia and Ohio have made noises about doing the same; Democrats in California,
Illinois and Oklahoma have as well.
This difference between the Texas and Pennsylvania gerrymanders serves up precisely
what the Vieth case didn't: a judicially manageable standard. The court should
declare that mid-decade redistricting is unconstitutional when adopted by a single-party-dominated
legislature, unless narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling interest.
True, this test would address only a piece of the partisan gerrymandering problem,
leaving unanswered what courts should do about partisan gerrymanders enacted
during the ordinary decennial cycle.
But it is a critical piece nevertheless. Decennial gerrymanders are self-limiting
because, over a decade, voters die, move, even change political views. The mere
passage of time reduces its power. But by gerrymandering more frequently, in
mid-decade, legislatures restack the deck.
The fight for democracy abroad begins at home. Jackson vs. Perry is the next
battleground. Anyone who cares about democracy should hope that Justice Kennedy
will have the courage of the convictions he expressed in Vieth - the courage
to stop at least the most crass partisan abuses. To miss this opportunity would
threaten to unleash a frenzy of biennial partisan gerrymandering that would further
corrode American politics and render even more hollow our claim to model democracy
for others.
Mitchell Berman is a professor of constitutional law at the University of
Texas at Austin.


