Elections 2012: Republicans Turn To Redistricting To Shore Up House Majority

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source: The Washingpost.com

Politics Alleged In Voting Cases
Justice Officials Are Accused of Influence


By Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, January 23, 2006; Page A01

The Justice Department's voting section, a small and usually obscure unit that enforces the Voting Rights Act and other federal election laws, has been thrust into the center of a growing debate over recent departures and controversial decisions in the Civil Rights Division as a whole.

Many current and former lawyers in the section charge that senior officials have exerted undue political influence in many of the sensitive voting-rights cases the unit handles. Most of the department's major voting-related actions over the past five years have been beneficial to the GOP, they say, including two in Georgia, one in Mississippi and a Texas redistricting plan orchestrated by Rep. Tom DeLay (R) in 2003.

The section also has lost about a third of its three dozen lawyers over the past nine months. Those who remain have been barred from offering recommendations in major voting-rights cases and have little input in the section's decisions on hiring and policy.

"If the Department of Justice and the Civil Rights Division is viewed as political, there is no doubt that credibility is lost," former voting-section chief Joe Rich said at a recent panel discussion in Washington. He added: "The voting section is always subject to political pressure and tension. But I never thought it would come to this."

Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales and his aides dispute such criticism and defend the department's actions in voting cases. "We're not going to politicize decisions within the department," he told reporters last month after The Washington Post had disclosed staff memoranda recommending objections to a Georgia voter-identification plan and to the Texas redistricting.

The 2005 Georgia case has been particularly controversial within the section. Staff members complain that higher-ranking Justice officials ignored serious problems with data supplied by the state in approving the plan, which would have required voters to carry photo identification.

Georgia provided Justice with information on Aug. 26 suggesting that tens of thousands of voters may not have driver's licenses or other identification required to vote, according to officials and records. That added to the concerns of a team of voting-section employees who had concluded that the Georgia plan would hurt black voters.

But higher-ranking officials disagreed, and approved the plan later that day. They said that as many as 200,000 of those without ID cards were felons and illegal immigrants and that they would not be eligible to vote anyway.

One of the officials involved in the decision was Hans von Spakovsky, a former head of the Fulton County GOP in Atlanta, who had long advocated a voter-identification law for the state and oversaw many voting issues at Justice. Justice spokesman Eric W. Holland said von Spakovsky's previous activities did not require a recusal and had no impact on his actions in the Georgia case.

Holland denied a request to interview von Spakovsky, saying that department policy "does not authorize the media to conduct interviews with staff attorneys." Von Spakovsky has since been named to the Federal Election Commission in a recess appointment by President Bush.

In written answers to questions from The Post, Holland called allegations of partisanship in the voting section "categorically untrue." He said the Bush administration has approved the vast majority of the approximately 3,000 redistricting plans it has reviewed, including many drawn up by Democrats.

Holland and other Justice officials also emphasize the Bush administration's aggressive enforcement of laws requiring foreign-language ballot information in districts where minorities make up a significant portion of the population. Since 2001, the division has filed 14 lawsuits to provide comprehensive language programs for minorities, including the first aimed at Filipino and Vietnamese voters, he said.

"We have undertaken the most vigorous enforcement of the language minority provisions of the Voting Rights Act in its history," Holland said.

Some lawyers who have recently left the Civil Rights Division, such as Rich at the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and William Yeomans at the American Constitution Society, have taken the unusual step of publicly criticizing the way voting matters have been handled. Other former and current employees have discussed the controversy on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution.

These critics say that the total number of redistricting cases approved under Bush means little because the section has always cleared the vast majority of the hundreds of plans it reviews every year.

The Bush administration has also initiated relatively few cases under Section 2, the main anti-discrimination provision of the Voting Rights Act, filing seven lawsuits over the past five years -- including the department's first reverse-discrimination complaint on behalf of white voters. The only case involving black voters was begun under the previous administration and formally filed by transitional leadership in early 2001.

By comparison, department records show, 14 Section 2 lawsuits were filed during the last two years of Bill Clinton's presidency alone.

Conflicts in the voting-rights arena at Justice are not new, particularly during Republican administrations, when liberal-leaning career lawyers often clash with more conservative political appointees, experts say. The conflicts have been further exacerbated by recent court rulings that have made it more difficult for Justice to challenge redistricting plans.

William Bradford Reynolds, the civil rights chief during the Reagan administration, opposed affirmative-action remedies and court-ordered busing -- and regularly battled with career lawyers in the division as a result. During the administration of George H.W. Bush, the division aggressively pushed for the creation of districts that were more than 60 percent black in a strategy designed to produce more solidly white and Republican districts in the South.

These districts were widely credited with boosting the GOP in the region during the 1994 elections.

Rich, who worked in the Civil Rights Division for 37 years, said the conflicts in the current administration are more severe than in earlier years. "I was there in the Reagan years, and this is worse," he said.

But Michael A. Carvin, a civil rights deputy under Reagan, said such allegations amount to "revisionist history." He contended that the voting section has long tilted to the left politically.

Carvin and other conservatives also say the opinions of career lawyers in the section frequently have been at odds with the courts, including a special panel in Texas that rejected challenges to the Republican-sponsored redistricting plan there. The Supreme Court has since agreed to hear the case.

"The notion that they are somehow neutral or somehow ideologically impartial is simply not supported by the evidence," Carvin said. "It hasn't been the politicos that were departing from the law or normal practice, but the voting-rights section."

In Mississippi in 2002, Justice political appointees rejected a recommendation from career lawyers to approve a redistricting plan favorable to Democrats. While Justice delayed issuing a final decision, a panel of three GOP federal judges approved a plan favorable to a Republican congressman.

The division has also issued unusually detailed legal opinions favoring Republicans in at least two states, contrary to what former staff members describe as a dictum to avoid unnecessary involvement in partisan disputes. The practice ended up embarrassing the department in Arizona in 2005, when Justice officials had to rescind a letter that wrongly endorsed the legality of a GOP bill limiting provisional ballots

In Georgia, a federal judge eventually ruled against the voter identification plan on constitutional grounds, likening it to a poll tax from the Jim Crow era. The measure would have required voters to pay $20 for a special card if they did not have photo identification; Georgia Republicans are pushing ahead this year with a bill that does not charge a fee for the card.

Holland called the data in the case "very straightforward," and said it showed statistically that 100 percent of Georgians had identification and that no racial disparities were evident.

But an Aug. 25 staff memo that recommended opposing the plan disparaged the quality of the state's information and said that only limited conclusions could be drawn from it.

"They took all that data and willfully misread it," one source familiar with the case said. "They were only looking for statistics that would back up their view."

Mark Posner, a former longtime Civil Rights Division lawyer who teaches election law at American University, noted that Justice could have taken as many as 60 more days -- rather than seven hours -- to issue an opinion because of the new data.

Staff writer Thomas B. Edsall and researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.
 
source: Huffington Post


WASHINGTON — The odds of getting re-elected have gotten better for Rep. Renee Ellmers and other Republican freshmen in the House – thanks to GOP calculations in redrawing congressional maps.

The 47-year-old nurse who ousted seven-term Democrat Bob Etheridge by fewer than 1,500 votes last November will be running next year in a newly drawn North Carolina district that's less swing and more Republican. The outlook is brighter too for Texas Rep. Blake Farenthold, a conservative talk radio host who edged 14-term Democrat Solomon Ortiz by just 797 votes. Farenthold will find more Republicans in a Corpus Christi-based district that now stretches north.

Republicans romped last November, gaining 63 House seats to secure the majority, winning 11 governorships, including Ohio and Pennsylvania, and seizing control of the most state legislative seats they've held since 1928. The GOP is capitalizing on its across-the-board control in 26 states – governorship plus legislature – in the census-based drawing of a new political map that will be a decisive factor in the 2012 elections and beyond.

"Republican freshmen are finding the ground harden beneath them as their current swing districts become less competitive for Democrats," said Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas, chairman of the National Republican Campaign Committee. "Even seemingly small changes in district political leanings can mean big returns at the ballot box."

Nearly half of the states have finished redrawing House lines based on population changes, although lawsuits and Justice Department reviews loom. The immediate post-election claims that the GOP could add 15 to 30 seats in the U.S. House through redistricting have proven unfounded, in large part because Republicans captured so many seats last November. Instead, the GOP has used the redistricting process to shore up its most vulnerable lawmakers, people like Ellmers and Farenthold.

"Redistricting starts with Republicans at a peak," said Tim Storey, an elections analyst with the nonpartisan National Conference of State Legislatures. "They hold a solid majority of seats in the House. It's hard to gain much more."

In the last election, Republicans took control of the governorships and legislatures in Michigan, Wisconsin and Indiana. That grip on power is reflected in the latest congressional lines. The GOP improved the political landscape for freshman Rep. Todd Young in southern Indiana, for example. And two of Michigan's newest members, Dan Benishek in the north and Tim Walberg in the south, got a boost, as did Rep. Thaddeus McCotter, who's also running for president. Wisconsin's Paul Ryan and Sean Duffy also are looking at districts with more Republicans.

Republican optimism aside, Democrats are making the most of their opportunities. They've drawn favorable district lines in Illinois. And they're hoping several political realities will help the party pick up the 25 net seats needed to recapture the House. Next year is a presidential election year, with the promise of higher turnout and an electorate with a greater number of Democratic-leaning younger voters and Hispanics. President Barack Obama will head the party ticket against a still to-be-determined Republican, who could either win over independents or send them running toward the Democrats.

Candidate recruitment and financial resources also will be factors in 2012.

In Illinois, Democrats ensured that the new political map makes life extremely tough for half of the state's 11 House Republicans. The Democrats focused on competitive districts close to Democratic strongholds, carving up huge swaths of GOP territory and creating some difficult matchups for GOP incumbents. Freshman Republican Robert Dold is suddenly in a race against seven-term Democrat Jan Schakowky. Freshman Republican Adam Kinzinger's hometown of Manteno is now in nine-term Democrat Jesse Jackson Jr.'s district. Two Republican freshmen, Joe Walsh and Randy Hultgren, are now in the same district.

Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y., who heads the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, calls Illinois the party's "center of gravity" in the campaign to take back the House.

"Cook County still rules," observed Thom Serafin, a political communications analyst in Illinois. "Everything around them may be getting redder."

In California, Democrats have the potential to gain 3 or 4 seats based on the map drawn by the 14-member Citizens Redistricting Commission, an independent panel that paid more attention to geography and ethnicity than incumbency. Longtime Republicans Gary Miller and Ed Royce face uncertain futures as does David Dreier.

The Democratic outlook is the mirror opposite in North Carolina, where Republicans took control of the legislature last year – the first time since 1870. The new GOP-driven map makes the districts of conservative to moderate Democrats Heath Shuler, Larry Kissell, Mike McIntyre and Brad Miller more Republican. Miller loses the urban sections of Wake County while Shuler loses a good chunk of the city of Asheville.

And even though Democrat Bev Perdue is governor, she has little say in redistricting. The political parties in North Carolina agreed years ago that the governor couldn't approve or reject the map.

Not surprisingly, Robin Hayes, chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party, was gleeful as he looked ahead to 2012 and the prospect of the GOP reversing the Democrats' 7-6 edge in House seats. Not only does the party have the new map, but Hayes argued that the economic policies of Obama and Perdue's support for the president will help boost the GOP.

"It's a buffet line of reasons to vote Republican," Hayes said.

Miller and Kissell, however, bucked the Republican wave in 2010, a remarkable feat considering how many conservative Southern Democrats were knocked out. Favorable factors for the Democrats include Obama's plentiful resources, aimed at again winning a state he captured in 2008, and the choice of Charlotte for the Democratic National Convention next summer.

Paul Shumaker, a Republican political consultant, said nothing's certain: "North Carolina is a swing state."

Several states still must finish their maps – Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania and Florida, the latter expected to be completed next year.

Florida voters last year backed an initiative that requires redistricting that favors geography and compact districts over incumbency, which could improve Democrats' chances. Florida Republicans currently hold 19 House seats, Democrats six.
 
Justice Department Sues Texas Over Voting Re-Districting

source: news-journal


Justice Department: New Texas voting maps don't meet federal law


WASHINGTON - The Justice Department on Monday rejected a Texas redistricting plan for the state's 36 House seats on the basis that the plan approved by the state legislature violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965 because it doesn't give enough voice to minority voters.

The Justice Department announcement said the Obama administration didn't have a problem with Texas plans for voting districts for the State Board of Education or the State Senate, but disapproved of the plans for the congressional districts and the state House. The department said those plans did not "maintain or increase" the ability of black and Hispanic districts to elect "their candidate of choice."

Texas is among the states required by the 1965 Voting Rights Act to obtain pre-clearance from the Justice Department on its redistricting plans. The Constitution requires states to draw new congressional district maps every 10 years to reflect changes in the size and distribution of the population, though that process is left up to the states. Texas' population growth between 2000 and 2010 enabled the state to gain four new U.S. House seats, bringing the total to 36.

The 1965 law, initially passed under Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson and most recently renewed in 2006 under Republican President George W. Bush, prohibits discriminatory voting laws and practices. The act also requires voting plans to be free of discriminatory intent. It came as a response to decades of racist voting laws in the South that disenfranchised black and other minority voters.

The pre-clearance provision applies to any state that had less than half its eligible voters voting in 1960 or 1964, and includes most of the southern states as well as Alaska, Arizona, and parts of Florida, California, Michigan, South Dakota, and New Hampshire.

In Texas, the Republican-controlled state legislature and Republican Gov. Rick Perry approved a new map in June. Rather than ask for Justice Department approval directly, the state filed suit against the department and asked the court to rule the new map legal. The department's opposition means that the U.S. District Court in Washington will have to decide whether the two plans do in fact comply with the 1965 law.

Separately, some minority groups have challenged the redistricting plan in U.S. District Court in San Antonio. That trial ended last week without a ruling because the court said it wanted to wait until the Department of Justice weighed in on the issue, as it did Monday.

Although Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott's office expressed confidence that the state's plan complies with the 1965 law, opponents charged that the new plan failed to reflect Texas' new racial reality. Despite an explosion of Hispanic population growth since the last census in 2000, Democrats and minority advocacy groups alleged that the new plan doesn't offer a chance for the state's Hispanic population to increase its representation in Congress.

An increase in the Hispanic population in the state accounted for much of the growth of more than five million residents since the 2000 census and Hispanics now account for about 38 percent of the Texas population, according to the 2010 census. The state has six Hispanic members of Congress.
 
Re: Justice Department Sues Texas Over Voting Re-Districting

source: news-journal


Justice Department: New Texas voting maps don't meet federal law


WASHINGTON - The Justice Department on Monday rejected a Texas redistricting plan for the state's 36 House seats on the basis that the plan approved by the state legislature violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965 because it doesn't give enough voice to minority voters.


Attorney General Eric Holder said Thursday that, in the wake of the Supreme Court decision in June knocking down a key piece of voting-rights law, he would aggressively use other surviving parts of that law to continue scrutinizing states to see if they are making it harder for minorities to vote.

At a speech in Philadelphia, Mr. Holder said the Justice Department would seek to continue close examination of election law in Texas—using a legal fight over the drawing of that state's voting districts as justification.

The move is likely to anger conservatives who have long argued that the law has outlived its usefulness and punishes certain states—particularly in the South—based not on their current conduct, but on their past.

Texas marks the first such decision by the Justice Department since the Supreme Court ruling. "It will not be our last,'' Mr. Holder said, signaling the department was also likely to move against some states that have passed new voter-identification laws that critics call discriminatory.

At issue is a process called preclearance, which is part of the 1965 Voting Rights Law. The Supreme Court knocked down a formula that determines which jurisdictions must receive federal preclearance of voting changes, a key part of that law.

Mr. Holder and others have decried that ruling, saying there was still ample need for laws to safeguard minority voting rights. But in Thursday's speech, he signaled the beginning of a new legal approach to try to continue much of the Justice Department's enforcement on the issue.

For states that are subject to preclearance, the Justice Department can move to block any changes to voting rules or procedures with either a discriminatory purpose or effect.

When the Supreme Court effectively nullified Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act by ruling the formula used to identity jurisdictions that must receive preclearance isn't constitutionally valid, it effectively ended the longstanding preclearance standard for a host of states, including Texas.

Now, Mr. Holder said, the Justice Department will use a different section of the law to try to keep Texas subject to preclearance, based in large part on a case last year in which a federal court concluded congressional districts drawn by the Texas state Legislature were discriminatory to Hispanics. He said government lawyers would ask a judge to require that state to obtain prior approval from either the department or a federal court before implementing voting-rule changes.


The Justice Department announcement said the Obama administration didn't have a problem with Texas plans for voting districts for the State Board of Education or the State Senate, but disapproved of the plans for the congressional districts and the state House. The department said those plans did not "maintain or increase" the ability of black and Hispanic districts to elect "their candidate of choice."

Texas is among the states required by the 1965 Voting Rights Act to obtain pre-clearance from the Justice Department on its redistricting plans. The Constitution requires states to draw new congressional district maps every 10 years to reflect changes in the size and distribution of the population, though that process is left up to the states. Texas' population growth between 2000 and 2010 enabled the state to gain four new U.S. House seats, bringing the total to 36.

The 1965 law, initially passed under Democratic President Lyndon B. Johnson and most recently renewed in 2006 under Republican President George W. Bush, prohibits discriminatory voting laws and practices. The act also requires voting plans to be free of discriminatory intent. It came as a response to decades of racist voting laws in the South that disenfranchised black and other minority voters.

The pre-clearance provision applies to any state that had less than half its eligible voters voting in 1960 or 1964, and includes most of the southern states as well as Alaska, Arizona, and parts of Florida, California, Michigan, South Dakota, and New Hampshire.

In Texas, the Republican-controlled state legislature and Republican Gov. Rick Perry approved a new map in June. Rather than ask for Justice Department approval directly, the state filed suit against the department and asked the court to rule the new map legal. The department's opposition means that the U.S. District Court in Washington will have to decide whether the two plans do in fact comply with the 1965 law.

Separately, some minority groups have challenged the redistricting plan in U.S. District Court in San Antonio. That trial ended last week without a ruling because the court said it wanted to wait until the Department of Justice weighed in on the issue, as it did Monday.

Although Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott's office expressed confidence that the state's plan complies with the 1965 law, opponents charged that the new plan failed to reflect Texas' new racial reality. Despite an explosion of Hispanic population growth since the last census in 2000, Democrats and minority advocacy groups alleged that the new plan doesn't offer a chance for the state's Hispanic population to increase its representation in Congress.

An increase in the Hispanic population in the state accounted for much of the growth of more than five million residents since the 2000 census and Hispanics now account for about 38 percent of the Texas population, according to the 2010 census. The state has six Hispanic members of Congress.




Holder Targets Texas in New Voting-Rights Push​

Justice Department Wants to Scrutinize State
for Potential Discrimination​


Attorney General Eric Holder said Thursday that, in the wake of the Supreme Court decision in June knocking down a key piece of voting-rights law, he would aggressively use other surviving parts of that law to continue scrutinizing states to see if they are making it harder for minorities to vote.

At a speech in Philadelphia, Mr. Holder said the Justice Department would seek to continue close examination of election law in Texas—using a legal fight over the drawing of that state's voting districts as justification.

The move is likely to anger conservatives who have long argued that the law has outlived its usefulness and punishes certain states—particularly in the South—based not on their current conduct, but on their past.

Texas marks the first such decision by the Justice Department since the Supreme Court ruling. "It will not be our last,'' Mr. Holder said, <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">signaling the department was also likely to move against some states that have passed new voter-identification laws that critics call discriminatory</span>.

At issue is a process called preclearance, which is part of the 1965 Voting Rights Law. The Supreme Court knocked down a formula that determines which jurisdictions must receive federal preclearance of voting changes, a key part of that law.

Mr. Holder and others have decried that ruling, saying there was still ample need for laws to safeguard minority voting rights. But in Thursday's speech, he signaled the beginning of a new legal approach to try to continue much of the Justice Department's enforcement on the issue.

For states that are subject to preclearance, the Justice Department can move to block any changes to voting rules or procedures with either a discriminatory purpose or effect.

When the Supreme Court effectively nullified Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act by ruling the formula used to identity jurisdictions that must receive preclearance isn't constitutionally valid, it effectively ended the longstanding preclearance standard for a host of states, including Texas.

Now, Mr. Holder said, the Justice Department will use a different section of the law to try to keep Texas subject to preclearance, based in large part on a case last year in which a federal court concluded congressional districts drawn by the Texas state Legislature were discriminatory to Hispanics. He said government lawyers would ask a judge to require that state to obtain prior approval from either the department or a federal court before implementing voting-rule changes.


SOURCE


 
Re: Justice Department Sues Texas Over Voting Re-Districting

Appellate Panel Says Texas ID Law
Broke U.S. Voting Rights Act​


The New York Times
By ERIK ECKHOLM
AUG. 5, 2015


A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday that a strict voter identification law in Texas discriminated against black and Hispanic voters and violated the Voting Rights Act of 1965 — a decision that election experts called an important step toward defining the future reach of the landmark law.

The state of federal voting protections has been uncertain since 2013, when the Supreme Court blocked the act’s most potent enforcement tool, a requirement that numerous states, including Texas, with histories of discrimination receive federal clearance before changing election rules. The Texas ID case — along with another in Texas challenging its redistricting plans and a case in North Carolina over broader changes in election rules — has been closely watched in legal circles to see how courts will interpret the remaining provisions of the landmark federal law.

Wednesday’s decision, hailed by civil rights groups, affirmed an important part of a lower-court ruling. But the appeals panel also said the lower court must re-examine its conclusion last year that Texas adopted the law with a discriminatory purpose. That conclusion could have led to a restoration of federal oversight over Texas voting laws.

The Texas law is regarded by many experts as the strictest of its kind in the country. Known as Senate Bill 14, the law requires voters who show up at the polls to bring a government-issued photo ID. The list of acceptable identification includes a driver’s license, a United States passport, a concealed-handgun license or a so-called election identification certificate, a card similar to a driver’s license that is issued by the State Department of Public Safety.

A greater share of poor people and minorities do not have easy access to birth certificates or other critical documents, the district court found. Student identifications, voter registration forms and utility bills are not considered accepted proof of identity.​

In a 147-page opinion issued in the fall of 2014 after a two-week trial, a district court judge, Nelva Gonzales Ramos, said the law “creates an unconstitutional burden on the right to vote” and blocked its enforcement. She noted the lack of evidence that voter fraud was a threat, while citing expert testimony that about 600,000 Texans, mainly poor, black and Hispanic, lacked the newly required IDs and often faced obstacles in obtaining them.


FULL STORY: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/06/u...s-id-law-broke-us-voting-rights-act.html?_r=0



 
WASHINGTON — The odds of getting re-elected have gotten better for Rep. Renee Ellmers and other Republican freshmen in the House – thanks to GOP calculations in redrawing congressional maps.

. . . newly drawn North Carolina district . . . less swing and more Republican.

Federal court invalidates maps of two NC congressional districts


February 5, 2016


A federal court panel ruled on Friday that two of North Carolina's 13 congressional districts are racial gerrymanders and must be redrawn in two weeks.

An order, written by U.S. Circuit Judge Roger L. Gregory, also bars elections in North Carolina's 1st and 12th congressional districts until new maps are approved.


The ruling, released late on Friday afternoon, throws the North Carolina congressional and legislative maps in flux.

The ruling by the three-judge panel in federal court comes more than two years after David Harris, a registered voter in Durham County, filed a lawsuit with Christine Bowser and Samuel Love, both registered voters from Mecklenburg County, seeking an invalidation of the two districts, which are represented by Democrats — G.K. Butterfield in District 1 and Alam Adams in District 12.

"Today's ruling once again shows the need for North Carolina to establish a nonpartisan system for drawing our state's voting maps," Bob Phillips, executive director of Common Cause North Carolina, which advocates for government transparency and accountability. "For years, partisan gerrymandering has led to costly litigation and deprived North Carolina voters of having a real choice and a voice in our elections. Fortunately, a growing number of citizens and leaders across the political spectrum agree that North Carolina should adopt an independent redistricting process."

The 1st Congressional District according to the lawsuit, is “akin to a Rorschach inkblot” that weaves through 24 counties, containing only five whole counties. The district is mostly in the northeastern part of the state and includes Durham, Elizabeth City, Roanoke Rapids, Rocky Mount, Goldsboro and New Bern.


The length of the district’s perimeter, according to the lawsuit, is 1,319 miles - “almost precisely the distance from Chapel Hill to Austin, Texas.”

The three voters contended that the Republican-led General Assembly that designed the maps in 2011 "ignored the common rural and agricultural interests" of Coastal Plain residents that federal courts have previously recognized. Durham, the newly added urban center, constitutes 25 percent of the district’s population.

The 12th Congressional District is 120 miles long but only 20 miles wide at its widest part. The district includes large portions of Charlotte and Greensboro connected by a thin strip — “averaging only a few miles wide” - that follows Interstate 85.

“A person traveling on Interstate 85 between the two cities would exit the district multiple times, as the district’s boundaries zig and zag to encircle African-American communities, " the federal lawsuit contended.


Critics of the 2011 Republican-led redistricting contend the map lines were drawn to concentrate black voters in districts that reduced their overall political power.

The lawsuit decided on Friday is one of several challenging the maps in federal and state court.

Democrats praised the court’s decision.

“Today’s decision marks an important step towards ensuring the integrity of North Carolina’s democratic process,” Patsy Keever, chairwoman of the N.C. Democratic Party, said in a statement. “It’s clear that Republicans in Raleigh have sought to suppress the vote of those with whom they disagree and rig the electoral process through partisan gerrymandering. This decision is welcome news that should begin to restore basic fairness to North Carolina’s congressional elections.”


Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/politics-government/election/article58776058.html#storylink=cpy
 
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