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October 14, 2003

Texas GOP = Communists

By Byron LaMasters

Ok, not really, but check out today's Washington Post Editorial:

The Soviet Republic of Texas

YOU MIGHT THINK America's rigged system of congressional elections couldn't get much worse. Self-serving redistricting schemes nationwide already have left an overwhelming number of seats in the House of Representatives so uncompetitive that election results are practically as preordained as in the old Soviet Union. In the last election, for example, 98 percent of incumbents were reelected, and the average winning candidate got more than 70 percent of the vote. More candidates ran without any major-party opposition than won by a margin of less than 20 percent. Yet even given this record, the just-completed Texas congressional redistricting plan represents a new low.

The plan grabbed headlines as a consequence of the flight by Democrats -- twice -- from the state to prevent its adoption. The Democrats, whose only hope, being in the minority in both houses, was to prevent a quorum, eventually gave in; the legislature has adopted the plan. It's abhorrent on two counts. Texas Republicans, egged on by U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, violated a longstanding tradition by redrawing the map in the middle of a census cycle. Their new rule seems to be, why wait 10 years if you can cram something down your opponents' throats today? And their plan is designed to wipe out moderate and white Democrats from the Texas congressional delegation. We don't know whether the plan violates the Voting Rights Act or will survive legal challenge. What is clear, however, is that it will aggravate the triumph of extremes in Washington while further sovietizing America's already-fixed electoral game.

The map Republicans have produced is a remarkable feat of gerrymandering. The 19th District, once confined to the western side of the state, now snakes halfway across it to scavenge voters from the current district of Democratic Rep. Charles Stenholm. Beneath it now sprawls the once-compact 11th District of Democratic Rep. Chet Edwards, which has been completely redrawn to help a friend of George W. Bush get elected to Congress. The south of the state now looks like a pinstripe suit, with narrow districts snaking from north to south in order to pack Hispanic-majority voters in just a few districts, including a new one. Dallas liberal Martin Frost, meanwhile, suddenly has a new district, 63 percent of whose voters are Republican. The goal here is not subtle. As Republican state Rep. Phil King, who helped draw the map, put it to the Austin American Statesman, "I would suspect that [any Democrat] who is not in a minority district would have a very competitive race."

The current Texas House delegation includes 17 Democrats and 15 Republicans. This balance, no doubt, is a residue of a time when Democrats were more powerful in the state than they are today and reflects deliberate incumbent protection by past legislatures. It also, however, reflects the fact that some Democratic members have effectively represented their increasingly conservative districts and remained popular. The pernicious effect of partisan redistricting in general is the weakening of the center with the creation of "safe" seats for both parties -- which encourages the election of people considerably to the left or right of the state's political center of gravity. Do Texans really want a polarized delegation of 22 conservative Republicans and 10 liberal Democrats, as the current plan envisions? Do they really want a state with a white party and a minority party? Republican politicians are engineering it that way, whatever voters may want. For redistricting -- quite the inverse of elections -- is a process in which politicians get to choose their voters. It is a process that a healthy democracy would seek to reform.

Posted by Byron LaMasters at October 14, 2003 01:03 AM | TrackBack


Comments

This is, you know, Ronald Reagan's old kvetch.

High on my agenda are three things. First, I'm out there stumping to help future presidents - Republican or Democrat - get those tools they need to bring the budget under control. And those tools are a line-item veto and a constitutional amendment to balance the budget. Second, I'm out there talking up the need to do something about political gerrymandering. This is the practice of rigging the boundaries of congressional districts. It is the greatest single blot on the integrity of our nation's electoral system, and it's high time we did something about it. And third, I'm talking up the idea of repealing the Twenty-second Amendment, to the Constitution, the amendment that prevents a president from serving more than two terms. I believe it's a preemption of the people's right to vote for whomever they want as many times as they want.

- President Reagan's Farewell Address, January 11, 1989

I'm also quite sure that Reagan compared Congress to the Soviet Politburo (in re: uncompetitive elections).

Posted by: Jim D at October 14, 2003 10:29 AM

Where were they in 1991 when Bullock was gerrymandering at will, and Republican Wentworth's proposal for an extra-legislative, bipartisan redistricting commission was being scoffed at?

Do Texans really want a polarized delegation of 22 conservative Republicans and 10 liberal Democrats, as the current plan envisions? Do they really want a state with a white party and a minority party?

I dunno, ask the Democrats. The Voting Rights Act secures the current minority legislators - if a certain number of Dems have to go in order to accurately reflect the political affiliation of the citizens of Texas, that doesn't leave much but Anglos to show the door, now does it?

As the WaPo failed to see in their own article:

Republican state Rep. Phil King, who helped draw the map, put it to the Austin American Statesman, "I would suspect that [any Democrat] who is not in a minority district would have a very competitive race."

Duh.

That being said, yes, gerrymandering is evil. Worse than noncompetitive elections (although related to it) is that secure seats encourage extreme partisanship, rather than the moderation required for representative government to function smoothly. In other words, the incumbents have no incentive to reach any middle ground, in fact find it most advantageous to pander to the most extreme partisans on their side of the aisle. What do you get? Sheila Jackson Lee, and gridlock.

Posted by: Mark Harden at October 14, 2003 10:57 AM

Democrats are suffering from a severe case of WHAT COMES AROUND GOES AROUND.

Here in Travis County, Democrats managed to 'pack' all the county Republicans into a single commisioner's court district: Precinct 3. The GOP vote-winner won with well over *twice* the vote of the Democrat winner in Precinct 1; total vote ratio was even higher.

Democrats also of course managed to gerrymander themselves a continued majority of the statehouse (they also packed Terry Keel's district this way in the 1990s), and the Congressional delegation - the one that manages to send 17 democrats and only 15 republicans with a majority of voters voting Republican. It's not just 'incumbency', they packed the Republicans into districts to do it.

What happened wasnt fair. It wasnt unfair. It was politics. For the Democrats to cry 'foul' when they've played like this for years is, well ... that's politics too.

But it becomes hypocrisy when you realize that the FAIR redistricting proposal by Sen Wentworth (R), was *ignored* by the Democrats, who could've taken it up when they had a chance and created bi-partisan redistricting. They didnt bite, now its too late. Greed kills!!

Posted by: Pat McGuinness at October 18, 2003 10:28 PM

Don't you think that GOP=Nazi? That designation seems to fit better & might be much nearer the truth. No doubt if they cannot get away with it,winning the races, it is quite likely elections will need to be (by presidential order of course) suspended entirely (you know, for the good of the country and due to the need for enforcement of that misnomer 'Homeland Security') tho

Posted by: N at February 15, 2004 03:49 PM
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