Judges' decision on North Carolina voting map could affect control of
U.S. Congress
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[January 07, 2022]
By Joseph Ax
(Reuters) - A legal battle over whether
North Carolina's new congressional map illegally favors Republicans over
Democrats is headed to a panel of judges, one of several lawsuits that
could influence who controls Congress after this year's midterm
elections.
Lawyers for Democratic voters and advocacy groups told a trio of state
Superior Court judges in Raleigh on Thursday that the map, which the
Republican-controlled legislature approved in November, effectively
deprives Democratic voters of representation by ensuring Republicans
will win a majority of seats under almost any circumstance.
But a lawyer for Republican lawmakers argued that the redistricting
process was legal and transparent, and he contended that courts cannot
reasonably determine when partisan considerations have crossed the line.
The judges are expected to issue a decision by Tuesday, after the
four-day trial concluded on Thursday.
Electoral analysts say Republicans would be favored to win at least 10
of the state's 14 congressional seats under the new map, despite North
Carolina's status as a closely divided swing state. Republicans
currently hold eight of 13 districts; the state is gaining a seat as a
result of population growth.
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Republicans need to flip only a handful of seats in the Nov. 8 elections
to retake control of the U.S. House of Representatives, where Democrats
currently hold a 221-212 edge, including vacancies.
U.S. law requires states to redraw their congressional districts every
10 years using data from the U.S. Census to account for population
changes. Many states give authority to lawmakers to create the maps,
which can lead to gerrymandering, the process by which one political
party manipulates district lines to entrench its own power.
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
Signs direct voters into a polling station during the 2020 U.S.
presidential election in Durham, Durham County, North Carolina,
U.S., November 3, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake/File Photo
 There are more than a dozen pending
lawsuits challenging congressional maps in at least six states
including Texas, Ohio and Georgia, according to the Brennan Center
for Justice at New York University.
The plaintiffs in North Carolina including the North Carolina League
of Conservation Voters claim the new map is both racially
discriminatory and illegally partisan in violation of the state
constitution. The case also involves new maps for state legislative
districts.
Experts for the plaintiffs testified that the Republican-drawn
congressional map was an outlier when compared to thousands of
computer-generated maps.
"This is the most extreme Republican gerrymander that's possible,"
said Elisabeth Theodore, a lawyer for some of the voter plaintiffs,
said in her closing argument on Thursday. "This map is deliberately
designed to ignore the will of the people expressed through their
votes."
Phil Strach, an attorney for Republican legislators, argued that any
map should be expected to favor Republicans, given that Democratic
voters tend to cluster in urban areas. But he also questioned
whether courts should even engage in the analysis the plaintiffs
were requesting.
"What is the line between permissible and impermissible partisan
considerations when drawing a map?" he said. "The fact is, that is
an unanswerable question."
The state Supreme Court moved North Carolina's scheduled primary
election from March to May to allow the case to proceed. Whatever
the decision, the case will likely end up in the high court after
appeals.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Cynthia
Osterman)
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