Redistricting lawsuit to be heard in early December
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[November 06, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – A three-judge federal court
panel on Friday set the week of Dec. 6 as the time it will hear three
consolidated cases challenging the new legislative district maps that
were drawn by Democrats and signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker earlier
this year.
During a status conference held by teleconference Friday, U.S. District
Judge Robert M. Dow Jr., who presides over the panel, said that while
not all of the logistics have been worked out, the hearing will most
likely be held in-person in the ceremonial courtroom of the Dirksen
Federal Building in Chicago.
State lawmakers approved the new maps during a special session in August
following the delayed release of detailed 2020 U.S Census data. Pritzker
signed them into law Sept. 24.
The maps establish the boundaries for all 118 districts in the Illinois
House and 59 districts in the state Senate. But three groups of
plaintiffs are suing in federal court arguing that the redistricting
plan violates both the U.S. Constitution and the federal Voting Rights
Act of 1965.
Each of the lawsuits claims that the new maps break up concentrated
areas of minority voters who tend to vote as a bloc, thus depriving them
of their right to elect candidates of their choice.
One lawsuit, filed by the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, or MALDEF, focuses exclusively on largely Latino areas of Chicago
and its southwest suburbs.
Another, filed by the East St. Louis Branch of the NAACP and other civil
rights groups, argues that the new maps in East St. Louis and the Metro
East region unfairly breaks up the Black voting population in Democratic
Rep. LaToya Greenwood’s district in order to protect white Democratic
incumbents in neighboring districts.
The other lawsuit, filed by Republican leaders of the General Assembly,
Sen. Dan McConchie and Rep. Jim Durkin, along with their respective GOP
caucuses, argues many of the same points as the other two cases.
All three lawsuits name the Illinois State Board of Elections, Senate
President Don Harmon and House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch as
defendants.
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Dow indicated that the case is being put on an
expedited schedule in order to accommodate the 2022 election cycle.
Under the current schedule, candidates can begin circulating
nominating petitions on Jan. 13 and those petitions must be
submitted to the State Board of Elections the week of March 7-14. In
order to do that, though, candidates need to know what district they
will be running in.
During Friday’s status conference, all of the plaintiffs agreed to
submit their proposed remedies to the court by Wednesday, Nov. 10.
That gives the defendants until Monday, Nov. 22, to file their
response.
Sean Berkowitz, an attorney representing Harmon and Welch, said he
does not intend to submit a new plan but instead will defend the
maps passed by the General Assembly. An attorney for the State Board
of Elections said she did not plan to submit any filings and would
just “passively monitor” the proceedings.
Attorneys for each of the plaintiffs said they do not plan to redraw
all 177 House and Senate districts but will focus only on the areas
of the state they are contesting.
That would be the Metro East region for the NAACP, portions of Cook
County for MALDEF, and both the Metro East and Chicago areas for the
Republican plaintiffs.
In addition to Dow, the other two judges hearing the case are U.S.
District Judge Jon DeGuilio, chief judge of the Northern District of
Indiana, and Judge Michael B. Brennan of the 7th Circuit Court of
Appeals.
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.
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