Weekly Opinion Editorial
DEMS FOCUS ON REDISTRICTING!
by Steve Fair
Redistricting is done every ten years. It involves redrawing Congressional district lines to insure all 435 representatives have approximately the same amount of constituents. Federal redistricting is done by the state legislature, who also draw their own legislative district lines. There are 101 state house districts and 48 state senate districts in Oklahoma. Redistricting is always a controversial process.
Earlier this year, a group called People Not Politicians filed an
initiative petition to get redistricting on the November ballot. They proposed having a group of appointees
oversee the redistricting process to cut out gerrymandering. Seven ‘blue’ states have it in their
constitution. Before the group started
gaining signatures, the language of the petition was challenged. The state Supreme Court struck down the
petition. The group changed the language
but ultimately pulled the petition in July.
“Between
the unnecessary lawsuits by politicians and delays due to the COVID-19
pandemic, we are unable to make the ballot this year, and have thus withdrawn
SQ810," People Not Politicians Executive Director Andy
Moore said. Three observations about
redistricting;
First, elections have consequences.
The Party in power gets to wield that power and that includes drawing lines
in redistricting. That is the way it has
always been and the way it should be.
Elected officials are accountable to voters- appointees to their
appointer. The Democrats controlled Oklahoma
government for almost a century. There
was no complaint about redistricting being unfair during that 100 years. What changed?
Clearly it was when Republicans gained control of state government. The redistricting process is not broken in
Oklahoma. It doesn’t need to be changed.
Second, redistricting is a national Democrat priority. Former AG Eric Holder is Chairman of the National
Democratic Redistricting Committee (NDRC).
Their stated purpose is to ‘execute a comprehensive redistricting
strategy that shifts the redistricting power in a way that it creates fair
districts where Democrats can compete.’
Fair meaning drawn where Democrats win, not just compete. NDRC has targeted 13 states with the
objective of flipping the state legislature to Democrat so they control
redistricting. Two of those states-
Texas and Kansas- border Oklahoma. This organization
cares little about fairness- they want to win elections. It is partisanship packaged as impartiality.
Third, Republicans had their own redistricting initiative. Ten years ago, the GOP flipped 20 state
legislative chambers nationally, seizing control of district mapmaking in many
states after the decennial census. Oklahoma had flipped in 2008. The emphasis on redistricting cemented Republican
dominance at the state and congressional levels for most of the last decade. To not take the Democrat strategy seriously
is a mistake, because it worked for the GOP.
Redistricting can be a difficult task, even for the Party in power. Districts have to be contiguous- which means ‘touching.’ They have to have a certain number of people. Incumbents are involved and seldom are two
incumbents drawn into a district. Both
the state senate and house appoint committees to put together a proposal for redistricting
to present to the whole chamber.
Communities lobby to keep a lawmaker who has been an effective voice for
their cause. The word ‘gerrymandering’
is continually heard from the Party not in power. Not everyone will be pleased with redistricting, but under
Oklahoma’s current system, voters can hold those who draw the lines
accountable.
No comments:
Post a Comment