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Point of ViewRedistricting
Returns With a Vengeance
Rob Richie and Steven Hill
Special to the Mirror
Voters, beware. Redistricting is back. Every 10 years
it revisits us like a recurring plague. This year’s shenanigans show
just why the renewed civic pride in the wake of September’s terrorist
attacks won’t bring many disenchanted Americans back to the polls.
After the release of new census numbers, all legislative districts
in the nation must be redrawn to make sure that they are closely equal
in population. In a large state, that means about 640,000 residents
for each U.S. House district.
Whichever political party controls the line-drawing process has the
God-like powers to guarantee themselves majority control and make or
break individual political careers. They rely on “packing” and
“cracking”: packing as many opponents into as few districts as
possible, and “cracking” an opponent’s natural base into different
districts. Powerful computers and software have made this process of
unnatural selection ever more sophisticated and precise.
Does it make a difference? You bet it does. In Virginia, the
Democrats in 2001 won their first statewide race for governor since
1989. But Republicans went from barely controlling the statehouse to a
two-thirds’ majority. How?
That’s right — Republicans drew the district lines.
One of the best examples of partisan gerrymandering was
California’s congressional plan in the 1980s. The late Congressman
Phil Burton, its chief architect, called it his “contribution to
modern art.” One district was a ghastly looking, insect-like polygon
with 385 sides.
The result? In the 1984 elections the Democrats increased their
share of California’s house seats to 60 percent even as Ronald
Reagan’s landslide win helped Republican congressional candidates win
more votes than Democrats in the state.
This year in various states one party indeed has stuck it to the
other — just ask a Republican who was mugged in Georgia or Maryland or
a Democrat roughed up in Michigan or Pennsylvania. In all those states
and more, one party or the other used their redistricting advantage to
wipe out seats of the opposition.
But this year the real story is that both parties have often
colluded to take on their real enemy: the voters. This year will go
down in political history for the crass way it has raised “incumbent
protection” to a whole new level. With half the states finished with
redistricting, the current round may be the most anti-democratic ever.
Take California. The California Democratic Party controlled
redistricting, and its leaders decided to cement their advantage
rather then expand it. Incumbents took no chances. Congresswoman
Loretta Sanchez acknowledged to the Orange County Register that she
and most of her Democratic U.S. House colleagues each forked over
$20,000 to Michael Berman, the powerful Democratic Party consultant in
charge of redistricting.
The money was classic “protection money.” Sanchez stated “$20,000
is nothing to keep your seat. I spend $2 million (campaigning) every
election. If my colleagues are smart, they’ll pay their $20,000, and
Michael will draw the district they can win in.”
California’s Republican Party, which has vociferously opposed past
Democratic redistricting plans, was largely mute. That’s because their
pliant incumbents also were bought off with the promise of safe seats.
The one incumbent facing a tough re-election battle promptly announced
his retirement; the rest are likely free from serious competition for
the next ten years.
The story has been the same in state after state. The Wall Street
Journal in a November editorial on “The Gerrymander Scandal” estimated
that as few as 30 of the 435 U.S. House seats will be competitive next
year. Already fewer than one in 10 House seats were won by competitive
margins in 1998 and 2000.
The ones hurt by these back-room deals are the voters. For most
voters, their only real choice in the next decade will be to ratify
the candidate of the party that was handed that district in
redistricting. One-party fiefdoms will be the rule no matter what
changes are made in campaign financing and term limits until we reform
the redistricting process or turn to more innovative voting methods
like proportional representation.
There once was a time when voters went to the polls on the first
Tuesday in November and picked their representatives. But that’s
changed. Now, the representatives pick us first. Following on the
heels of Florida’s election debacle, this only further undermines
confidence in our already shaky political system.
Rob Richie and Steven Hill are, respectively, the executive
director and the western regional director of the Center for Voting
and Democracy (www.fairvote.org) and co-authors of “Whose Vote
Counts?” (2001, Beacon Press). |
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