GOP says census data proves new maps illegal
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[August 17, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Republicans in the Illinois
General Assembly say new, detailed census numbers released last week
show the legislative maps that Democrats pushed through in the spring
are unconstitutional.
The Census Bureau released the data Thursday, Aug. 12, several months
later than usual due to delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and other
factors. The numbers show population counts down to the block level,
which is what lawmakers need in order to draw districts that are as
close to equal in population as possible.
Due to the delays, Democrats who control the General Assembly drew maps
using population estimates based on survey data. Under the Illinois
Constitution, waiting beyond June 30 for the official data would have
triggered a provision putting the process in the hands of a bipartisan
legislative commission in which Democrats could have lost their partisan
advantage.
“Just as we predicted, the maps that were drawn by Illinois Democrats in
a closed room and without public input, and signed by Gov. Pritzker,
have proven to be unusable and unlawful given the release of the U.S.
Census data,” House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, of Western Springs, said
in a statement Monday.
Previous U.S. Supreme Court decisions have held that in state
legislative districts, populations can vary by as much as 10 percent
between the largest and smallest districts. Variations below that amount
can still be found unconstitutional if they are shown to be
discriminatory – either by breaking up minority groups to dilute their
voting power, or by concentrating them into too few districts in order
to limit their representation.
But variations of more than 10 percent generally have been held
unconstitutional.
Republicans are now arguing that based on their analysis, the smallest
and largest districts contained in the new maps that were passed this
spring and signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker vary by just under 30
percent – from 92,390 in the 83rd House District, which includes Aurora,
to 124,836 in the 5th House District, a narrow, rectangular-shaped
district that stretches from Chicago’s Near North Side south to 79th
Street on the city’s South Side.
In June, Durkin and Senate Minority Leader Dan McConchie, of Hawthorn
Woods, filed a federal lawsuit in Chicago seeking to have the maps
overturned and asking the court either to order the formation of the
bipartisan redistricting commission or appoint a special master to draw
new maps. A hearing in that case is currently set for Tuesday, Aug. 24.
Trial in the case is set for Sept. 27-29.
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Republicans argue this map of Illinois House
districts that Democrats pushed through the General Assembly in the
spring is unconstitutional, based on detailed census numbers that
were released Aug. 12. (Source: Ilhousedems.com)
If the maps are found to be unconstitutional, though,
it is not certain that the court would invoke the state
constitution’s provision calling for the bipartisan commission.
Democrats could argue that they met the constitution’s June 30
deadline and, therefore, only need to go back and make adjustments
to the maps to bring them into compliance.
Democratic Sens. Omar Aquino and Elgie Sims, both of Chicago, the
chair and vice chair of the Senate Redistricting Committee, issued a
joint statement Monday saying they are still reviewing the census
data.
“While we continue to analyze the information released by the U.S.
Census Bureau, our commitment to the people of Illinois remains the
same: We support a fair map that reflects the broad racial and
geographic diversity of Illinois,” the senators said. “As we go
through this review process, if it becomes clear that updates need
to be made, we will take the appropriate steps to do so.”
Aquino and Sims also indicated they may question the accuracy of the
data and the Census Bureau’s use in the 2020 census “differential
privacy” – a mathematical technique designed to prevent users from
extracting other people’s personal information from the data.
“This has been a unique census, and it’s important we take time to
fully understand the data,” they said in the statement. “This
includes the impact of ‘differential privacy,’ which is used by the
Census Bureau to protect identities of respondents but may also
result in inaccuracies, especially in more ethnically and racially
diverse communities.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |