U.S. judicial panel finds Texas hurt
Latino vote with redrawn boundaries
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[April 21, 2017]
By Jim Forsyth
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (Reuters) - A special
federal judicial panel ruled for the second time in two months on
Thursday that the Republican-led Texas Legislature deliberately redrew
political boundaries so as to unfairly diminish voter clout of the
state's growing Latino population.
A divided three-judge panel found that the boundaries of several state
legislative districts were reshaped with the intention of illegally
diluting the strength of the Democratic-leaning Hispanic electorate for
the benefit of the Republican Party.
The panel ruled that the redrawn boundaries were designed to either
fragment cohesive Latino communities among multiple districts, or to
lump Hispanics into a single jurisdiction and thus limit their overall
sway.
Similar gerrymandering tactics of "cracking" and "packing" were found
last month by the same panel in redrawn boundaries for three of the
state's 36 congressional districts.
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It was not immediately clear whether Texas would appeal the latest
decision, which pertained to state legislative districts encompassing
some of the state's largest cities, including Dallas, San Antonio and
Houston.
As in last month's 2-1 decision, Thursday's ruling was agreed upon by
U.S. District Judges Xavier Rodriguez and Orlando Garcia of San Antonio,
appointees of former Republican President George W. Bush and former
Democratic President Bill Clinton, respectively.
The third member of the panel, 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge
Jerry Smith, appointed by former Republican President Ronald Reagan,
dissented in both opinions.
He blasted the latest decision as "clearly erroneous," writing that
partisan advantage, not race itself, was the rationale for drawing the
districts as they were.
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A voter registration sign is seen on a taco truck, as part of the
U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce's "Guac the Vote" campaign, in
Houston, Texas, U.S. September 29, 2016. REUTERS/Trish Badger
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Generally courts have ruled that shaping districts based on race or
ethnicity is illegal, but drawing boundaries to gain political
advantage for the majority party is not.
Texas Democratic Party chair Gilberto Hinojosa welcomed the findings
of Thursday's 153-page majority opinion.
“The Republicans have dealt Texas a deep moral wound,” he said.
“They haven't just been cheating to gain an edge in the political
game. They have been deliberately holding back Texans from having a
voice in their own government.”
Republicans have dominated all statewide non judicial offices in
Texas for more than 20 years, and have frequently used that
advantage to redraw political maps to benefit their party.
(Editing for Steve Gorman & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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