Editorial: Slaying the gerrymandering monster of Pa. redistricting

Tick, tick, tick …

That sound you heard was the clock ticking down toward the deadline for the Pennsylvania Legislature to redraw the state Congressional maps.

It was the last few dying embers of the smoldering carcass of the redistricting process our elected representatives pulled off back in 2011.

On Friday Republican leaders in the state Legislature beat the clock, delivering new Congressional maps to Gov. Tom Wolf, who now must review them and decide whether he will sign off and submit them to the court. Wolf indicated no ruling would come until early in the week. He has until Thursday to make up his mind.

A first quick glance at the new GOP drawings shows a much more compact, contiguous 7th District, the poster boy for redistricting reform. Gone is the grotesque, two distinct chunks of ground roundly lampooned as “Goofy kicking Donald Duck.” Also gone is that wide swath that veered out into Lancaster County. The district appears much more contiguous now, covering the bulk of Chester County, along with contiguous slivers of Chester and Montgomery counties.

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This furious redrawing was sparked by a ruling that turned the Pennsylvania political world upside down, when the state Supreme Court tossed out the maps, ruling them unconstitutional because they were blatantly gerrymandered to favor Republicans. Not only that, but the court slapped a stringent deadline on the Legislature to redraw the maps, ordering a new version by Friday.

How serious was the court? Justices hinted that if the Legislature failed to rectify what they called a blatant exercise in politics, they would do it themselves.

Republicans appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, alleging this “activist” court was itself dabbling in politics, blatantly taking on a role that is reserved for the Legislature.

The nation’s high court rejected their complaint, and concurred with the state court. The maps had to go.

Top state Republicans Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson, and House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, believe the new map “complies fully” with the court’s order. Naturally, several Democrats disagree, and are already calling on Wolf to reject the plan.

This week the state Supreme Court expounded on why they ruled the way they did. In a 139-page majority opinion, Justice Debra Todd detailed the problems with the last redistricting exercise, something the Legislature is mandated to do based on the results of the latest census.

The next one is due in 2020.

The judge wrote that the redistricting process clearly violated the clause the mandate of neutral standards such as compact and contiguous districts not be distorted for unfair partisan political gain. The court wrote that the 2011 redistricting process plainly violated the guarantee laid out by the state constitution, that elections be “free and equal.”

“An election corrupted by extensive, sophisticated gerrymandering and partisan dilution of votes is not ‘free and equal,’” Todd wrote.

We applaud the court’s ruling, while reminding that this should not necessarily be seen as simply a Republican maneuver. The sad truth is that, given a political majority in the Legislature that tilted in their favor, Democrats would likely engage in the same political shenanigans.

It’s corrosive to the underlying democratic process, the idea that every vote counts. When gerrymandering flourishes, it dilutes the power of that vote, undermines citizens’ belief in the system, and fuels the rampant apathy seen in so many voters who no longer bother to exercise their precious franchise, the vote.

While we hail the courts’ rulings, we wonder about the stringent timetable they have put in place.

Citizen groups such as the League of Women Voters have waited seven years to expose this blatant political exercise to the disinfectant meted out in the court. Now the courts have imposed a rush to justice, seeking to reverse in weeks what has festered for years.

The GOP did their part in redrawing the state’s 18 congressional districts. Now the ball is in Gov. Wolf’s court.

All of this is being done so that the new, hopefully more representative map, can be in place for the May primary.

Here in the 7th, a small army of both Republicans and Democrats will be seeking their party’s nomination to replace Republican Rep. Pat Meehan, who has decided not to seek re-election after it was revealed he used taxpayer dollars to settle a sexual harassment complaint filed by a former staffer.

At this point, none of these candidates knows what the district will actually look like, and more importantly if they reside within the new borders, thus making them eligible to run.

Gov. Wolf, the clock is ticking.

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