In court hearing, Latino rights group says new maps still unfair
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[September 02, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Lawyers for a Latino advocacy
group told a panel of federal judges Wednesday that the new legislative
district maps passed by the Illinois General Assembly the night before
still dilute the vote of Hispanic citizens in the state, and they intend
to proceed with a lawsuit in hopes of having them overturned.
Ernest Herrera, an attorney with the Mexican American Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, or MALDEF, said the latest maps actually reduce the
number of majority-Latino legislative districts in Illinois, despite the
fact that the Latino population grew over the last decade, both in terms
of total numbers and as a percent of the state’s overall population.
MALDEF is representing several Latino voters, mainly in the Chicago
area, who filed a lawsuit in July challenging the maps that lawmakers
initially passed during the spring. A similar but separate lawsuit also
was filed by Republican legislative leaders, Senate Minority Leader Dan
McConchie, of Hawthorn Woods, and House Minority Leader Jim Durkin, of
Western Springs.
Both suits name Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, and House
Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, D-Hillside, as defendants, along with the
Illinois State Board of Elections.
A three-judge federal panel in Chicago presiding over both cases held a
status hearing Wednesday to determine how the case should proceed in
light of the General Assembly’s actions.
The maps that lawmakers initially adopted in the spring, and which Gov.
JB Pritzker signed into law, were based on population estimates from the
Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. That was because official
numbers from the 2020 census were delayed, largely because of the
COVID-19 pandemic.
When the official numbers were finally released in August, they showed
the overall population of Illinois had declined by 7,893, to a little
more than 12.8 million. But Herrera noted that the Latino population
grew by nearly 310,000.
Despite that, he said, in the new maps approved by lawmakers Tuesday
night, which are now awaiting Pritzker’s approval, the number of House
districts in which Latino voters make up a majority of the voting-age
population would shrink to four, instead of the current five. The number
of majority-Latino Senate districts would shrink to two, instead of the
current three.
Herrera said that could constitute a violation Section 2 of the federal
Voting Rights Act, which prohibits voting practices or procedures that
discriminate on the basis of race, color or membership in a language
minority group. He said it could also constitute violations of the 14th
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits states from denying
its citizens equal protection under the law.
Herrera also said that because the new maps have not yet been signed
into law, he still wants the court to declare that the maps adopted in
May are illegal and unconstitutional. That would allow the court to
proceed to what’s called the “remedial phase” in which the court would
have oversight over how the state comes into compliance with federal law
and the U.S. Constitution.
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The Illinois House and Senate maps passed Tuesday
night are pictured in the form of Google Maps documents released by
the Illinois General Assembly this week.
Attorneys for both sets of plaintiffs indicated that
they intend to file amended complaints to include challenges to the
latest set of maps. But attorneys for the Republican leaders
indicated that they, too, would like a verdict against the original
redistricting plan approved in the spring.
The GOP leaders are hoping that such a verdict would mean that the
Democratic majority missed the June 30 deadline in the Illinois
Constitution for lawmakers to approve new maps, which would trigger
another state constitutional provision requiring the formation of a
bipartisan commission to redraw maps where Republicans would have a
50-50 chance at controlling the process.
But attorneys for Harmon and Welch said they no longer intend to
defend the original maps that prompted the lawsuit and that they
believe Pritzker will approve the new maps within a short period of
time.
U.S. District Judge Robert Dow Jr., who presides over the
three-judge panel, suggested that the entire issue of the original
maps could become moot if Pritzker approves the new set of maps
before the court has a chance to act on the original redistricting
plan. He also indicated that any question of invoking the state
constitution to form a bipartisan commission would be a matter for
the Illinois Supreme Court to decide, not the federal district
court.
A trial in the case had tentatively been set for Sept. 27-29 but
that is now certain to change because lawyers for both sets of
plaintiffs said they will need at least a month to file their
amended complaints.
The judges did not immediately set a date for the next hearing.
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.
Peter Hancock
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