No Rest Between Censuses for Congressional Mapmakers
WASHINGTON For just about all of the nations history, politicians would fight over redistricting for a short period after each once-a-decade census, then forget about congressional maps until the next reapportionment.
Now, a string of lawsuits and in-the-works state referendums are poised to redefine the battles over state legislative and congressional lines and leave the country in a state of perpetual redistricting.
The dynamic is an escalation of the scattered redistricting battles over the last decade. Not since 2012 and 2014 have all 50 states congressional lines remained constant for consecutive elections, a streak unlikely to be broken next year. The National Democratic Redistricting Committee estimates that up to 29 seats in 14 states could be redrawn based on lawsuits that have already been filed. Scores more seats could change if the Supreme Court rules later this year that state legislators have ultimate authority to draw the lines.
To prepare for those fights, the partys redistricting committee is changing its leadership for the first time since its formation in 2017. Kelly Burton, the committees president, is leaving to join its six-member board and is being replaced by John Bisognano, who has been executive director. Marina Jenkins, who has served as the committees litigation director, will succeed Mr. Bisognano as executive director.
People used to think about staff that worked on redistricting as redistricting cicadas that come out every 10 years, Mr. Bisognano said in an interview Thursday. We need to keep this movement alive and growing in order to continue to fight back against the gerrymandering that we see coming.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/10/us/politics/redistricting-states-democrats-republicans.html