This post originally was published in the Wilson
Times July 6, 2019.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s
ruling last week that the court has no jurisdiction over partisan
gerrymandering constitutes a baffling abandonment of basic democratic
principles. The court sent the matter back to the state legislatures, which
have been busily making it more difficult for candidates in one party to get
elected while the other party, the one drawing the electoral district lines,
gets to yawn through elections confident that they have the votes. After all,
the latter party got to choose who would vote in the election.
Gerrymandering, having been done
by both parties in various states, is a rejection of the Supreme Court’s 1964
“one person, one vote” ruling, which held that one group of voters could not
have greater impact than other groups. Congressional districts had to be of roughly
equal population so that each voter’s ballot would have the same impact in the
House of Representatives. The ruling also applied to state legislative
districts. A state could not give each county one seat in the State Senate (as
some in North Carolina wanted) because the counties’ populations are not equal.
Like those forbidden voting
populations, partisan gerrymandering denies voters equal impact in an election.
Although running for office in same-population districts, candidates of the
party drawing the lines have far better chances of winning the election. Thus,
voters supporting the other political party cast votes that have little chance
of winning. In North Carolina, a state with a nearly even partisan division among
voters, shrewd gerrymandering has given Republicans a 10-3 advantage in
congressional seats.
The court’s decision to let
partisan politicians have their way takes America a step toward one-party rule
and leaves voters with the possibility that future election ballots may not
have any choices. Elections become superfluous, and fair representation is
denied. The party in power will stay in power because it gets to choose who
votes.
In North Carolina, the
Democratic Party and Common Cause have filed suit over the GOP’s highly
partisan redistricting plans. If the high court continues to stand behind this
new precedent, Democrats will have few options:
1.
They could all
abandon the Democratic Party and re-register as Republicans, then carry out a
subversive effort to replace that party’s leadership with people more committed
to democracy and less dedicated to raw political power.
2.
They can propose
a federal law that clearly defines partisan gerrymanders and makes them
illegal. Because many states’ congressional districts are already gerrymandered
and Republicans hold a solid majority in the U.S. Senate, it may be impossible
to find the votes to get such legislation through Congress.
3. The plaintiffs
can go back to the federal courts and try to persuade the increasingly partisan
Supreme Court to reconsider its decision. Chief Justice Roberts says the courts
have no jurisdiction over the drawing of electoral districts. Surely the chief
justice is familiar with the concept of “checks and balances.” If the courts
are not going to be allowed to limit the worst instincts of state legislatures,
there are no checks and balances, and there is no representative democracy. The
court has been less reluctant to take on matters that, like partisan
gerrymandering, are not mentioned in the Constitution, such as same-sex
marriage, abortion, and public education.
This ruling will go down in
history as an abandonment of liberty. When there are no fairly elected
representatives, there is no democracy.
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