New Colorado voting map spurs debate from ski towns to Latina coffee
group
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[July 02, 2021]
By Julia Harte
DENVER (Reuters) - Days after an
independent commission in Colorado released a map of proposed new
congressional districts, a group of about 30 Latina power brokers
considered its implications at a garden gathering in Denver’s historic
Park Hill neighborhood.
The commission had placed the state's new 8th Congressional District in
Denver’s northern suburbs, a decision aimed at reflecting Colorado’s
growing Hispanic community. But the Latina professionals chatting over
coffee and cake at a "cafecito" worried the plan would not represent
their community adequately.
The women vowed to turn out in force for 32 public hearings the
commission will hold in July and August in what it has dubbed a
redistricting "roadshow."
"We need to make sure Latinos have a voice in as many districts as
possible," said Polly Baca, who in 1978 became the first Hispanic woman
elected to Colorado’s state senate.
As the first state to reveal an initial map of its new districts ahead
of next year’s high-stakes midterm congressional elections, Colorado is
girding for one of the country's most vigorous debates over
redistricting.
In the once-a-decade process, new U.S. census data helps decide how
states redraw the boundaries of voting districts that elect legislators
to the House of Representatives. The mapping decisions can play a role
in determining control of Congress by consolidating or dispersing voters
of similar political views.
In most states, legislatures draw new districts, leaving little room for
public input. But in 2018, Colorado became one of 10 states that rely on
independent redistricting commissions to reduce partisanship, opening
new channels for public participation.
That change, coupled with increased awareness of how the plotting of
electoral lines can shift political advantage, has brought wider
scrutiny to the preliminary map released in Colorado on June 23.
Voters, advocacy groups and aspiring congressional candidates are
weighing in on the district lines, which will change once the state gets
final census data later this year and as a result of input at the public
hearings.
Getting most attention are competitive districts that will affect
Republicans’ chances in 2022 of seizing control of the House from
Democrats, who hold a slim 10-seat majority.
'A GREAT START'
Colorado's Hispanic population grew to 24% of the total in 2019, up from
21% in 2010, according to state data. Yet Colorado has no Hispanic U.S.
lawmakers, prompting community leaders to seek greater representation
through redistricting.
Under the commission’s plan, the new 8th District, which the state
received because of overall population growth since 2010, would pull in
many of the liberal cities north of Denver.
Hispanics would constitute 29.9% of the proposed district - "a great
start," said Mike Ferrufino, president of the Colorado Hispanic Chamber
of Commerce.
But he said the lines should be tweaked to include more cities that
reflect the area's full Hispanic community, pointing out that heavily
Hispanic Commerce City was only partly included in the district.
In addition to the number of Hispanic voters, Ferrufino and other
Hispanic leaders said the overall diversity and attitudes of voters in
any district also affected whether Hispanic candidates could
competitively run for Congress.
Rosemary Rodriguez, a co-founder of the 30-year-old cafecito gathering,
said the group's newsletter reached more than 800 women, and she planned
to use that platform to galvanize Latino participation in the
redistricting process.
Dividing Denver's progressive electorate evenly across two districts
would achieve more diverse representation than keeping it mostly in one
district, as the commission's preliminary map would, Rodriguez said at
last week's cafecito.
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The skyline of Denver, where the Colorado Independent Congressional
Redistricting Commission has proposed new voting districts in the
state, Denver, Colorado, U.S., June 24, 2021. REUTERS/Jim Urquhart
“Denver can bear the split. Its identity is solid,
and if it helps more people of color to run, that’s a great reason
to do it,” said Rodriguez, who worked to engage hard-to-reach
communities during the 2020 census.
Cecelia Espenoza, a captain in Colorado’s Democratic Party, said she
had been thinking of running for Congress if Denver was divided
across two districts. But she was reconsidering after the
preliminary map left Denver almost entirely in its single district,
which has been represented by Democrat Diana DeGette since 1997.
The proposal for the state's new district would push its current 7th
District into more conservative counties southwest of Denver, making
it potentially more competitive for Republicans.
In Marston, one of the Denver neighborhoods that is represented by
DeGette but could end up with a more conservative lawmaker, Monica
Ray, 34, a stay-at-home mother, was alarmed at the prospect.
“We’re registered Democrats; we’ve been really happy with our
representative,” she said.
Marston teacher Stewart Ratliff, 33, said he would prefer to vote in
the more politically diverse district, however, as a registered
unaffiliated voter who has “libertarian values with a conservative
swing."
'UTTERLY UNFAIR'
The proposed changes also are generating buzz hundreds of miles away
from Denver, on Colorado's Western Slope.
The commission's map would solidify the Republican base in the
district represented by Lauren Boebert, a first-term Republican
congresswoman closely aligned with former President Donald Trump.
Despite adding several liberal towns including Vail, the hometown of
Boebert's top Democratic challenger so far, the map adds larger
conservative areas to Boebert's district, such as Canon City,
boosting her Republican electorate overall.
"I'm gonna win!" said Boebert, when asked for her reaction to the
new map on Wednesday as she attended a Trump speech near an
unfinished section of U.S.-Mexican border wall in Texas.
Sara Blackhurst, president of Action 22, a regional advocacy
organization representing Colorado’s southern counties, praised the
commission’s decision not to let urban areas dilute Colorado’s two
main rural districts: the Western Slope region and the state’s
eastern plains.
But some residents in the eclectic mountain town of Nederland, where
a Pride flag hangs from the town hall, were distressed at the
thought of being moved from a deeply Democratic district to
Boebert's.
Rick Merrill, 69, a retired professional dancer who said he usually
votes Democratic, vowed to do whatever he could to avoid that
scenario.
“It’s utterly unfair to a community like Nederland because our vote
would be totally negated,” he said
(Reporting by Julia Harte; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Cynthia
Osterman)
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