In U.S. redistricting fight, citizens come armed with a new weapon:
their own maps
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[August 13, 2021]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - On a recent evening, Tyler
Daye, an organizer with Common Cause North Carolina, hosted an online
seminar for residents of the city of Wilson on an important but arcane
topic: redistricting.
With the help of publicly available mapping software known as Districtr,
Daye clicked through maps of federal and state voting districts, showing
how in each case Republican lawmakers in 2011 neatly cleaved the city in
two, dividing the largely Black eastern half from the mostly white
western half.
"When your communities are split, your voting power and representation
is split as well," he told attendees. "This attacks the very backbone,
the very core of our democratic system, which is having the voters, the
citizens, picking their legislators. Through this system, it's the other
way around."
The once-a-decade process of redistricting has long been a back-room
affair in many states, with lawmakers carving out skewed, politically
advantageous voting districts with the help of proprietary software that
can sort voters down to the individual block.
As states begin the 2021 redistricting cycle, however, legislators face
a powerful new check: a suite of freely accessible map-making tools that
allow ordinary citizens to draw their own lines and evaluate those
proposed by lawmakers for any partisan bias.
Advocacy groups say the new technologies are transforming their fight
against gerrymandering, a tactic used by one political party to
manipulate district lines to maintain power. The groups' efforts are
bolstered by redistricting labs housed at universities including
Princeton and Tufts, where experts have developed new ways to measure
gerrymandering.
"I think that's ground-shifting," said Michael Li, a redistricting
expert at New York University's Brennan Center for Justice. "You'll have
thousands of maps out there."
The redistricting battle effectively began on Thursday, when the U.S.
Census Bureau released data https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-release-census-data-used-legislative-redistricting-2021-08-12
from its 2020 count that states use to draw both U.S. House of
Representatives and state legislative districts for the next decade.
It promises to be a brutal, high-stakes fight. Control of the House -
where the Democrats hold a narrow majority - could be decided simply
through redistricting https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-politics-redistricting/how-the-battle-over-redistricting-in-2021-could-decide-control-of-the-u-s-congress-idUSKBN2AI1CX.
Republicans are expected to create more favorable maps in Georgia,
Texas, Florida and North Carolina, while Democrats may counter with
their own gerrymandering in states including Illinois and New York,
according to election analysts.
In states like Missouri and Michigan, activists and residents are
submitting hundreds of maps to lawmakers and redistricting commissions.
Organizers are employing map software to mobilize citizens against
gerrymandering. And some groups are using mapping contests to assemble
"citizens map corps" to press their case at the local level.
"It's almost like a light-bulb moment," said Bob Phillips, the executive
director of Common Cause North Carolina, a voting rights organization.
"We feel we've been able to reach people in ways we never have."
It remains to be seen whether reform groups can succeed in blocking
gerrymanders, given that in most states legislators have the final say
in redistricting. A sweeping federal voting bill backed by Democrats
would outlaw partisan gerrymandering for congressional districts, but
the legislation appears to have no path forward in the Senate.
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Demonstrators rally in front of the Supreme court before oral
arguments on Benisek v. Lamone, a redistricting case on whether
Democratic lawmakers in Maryland unlawfully drew a congressional
district in a way that would prevent a Republican candidate from
winning, in Washington, March 28, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
Even if gerrymanders are enacted, however, advocates
say their work could strengthen potential court challenges. It could
also lay the groundwork for the future by engaging the public and
calling out lawmakers' manipulation, they say.
"We're playing a long-term game," said Djemanesh Aneteneh, a
redistricting coordinator with Fair Count in Georgia, a nonpartisan
group founded by former Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey
Abrams.
'SMOKE-FILLED ROOM'
Twelve years ago, Dave Bradlee, a former Microsoft software engineer
interested in redistricting, discovered there was no free software
available online where people could try their hand at drawing
district maps. So he designed his own.
Dave's Redistricting App now boasts thousands of visitors a day. The
website has added new powerful features, including metrics to
measure partisan and racial bias.
"The level of awareness of redistricting, especially now – a lot
more people are aware of it, and they can see what used to happen in
that so-called 'smoke-filled room,'" Bradlee said.
Other applications have since launched, including Districtr, backed
by a redistricting lab at Tufts University; DistrictBuilder, founded
by researchers at the University of Florida and the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology; and Representable, housed at Princeton
University.
More than 125 organizations have launched "mapping drives" using
Representable, including Fair Count, which has been hosting "Mapping
Mondays" workshops in Georgia with an emphasis on reaching rural
Black communities.
The Southern Coalition for Social Justice is holding dozens of
seminars across eight states that include how to identify
gerrymanders using mapping software, said Jeff Loperfido, the
group's senior counsel.
Other groups have created mapping contests as an organizing tool. In
Pennsylvania, winners of Draw the Lines PA's competitions helped
form a citizens map corps that meets monthly to discuss submitting
testimony and maps to lawmakers.
"It makes it way harder for politicians to get away with what they
have in the past, which is to draw these maps behind closed doors,"
said Kyle Hynes, 17, a statewide winner.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; editing by Paul Thomasch and Aurora Ellis)
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