Justice Dept. Files Voting Rights Suit Against Texas Over New Map



WASHINGTON — The Justice Department sued Texas on Monday over the state’s plan to redraw its voting districts, saying that the plan enacted by the Republican-led legislature would essentially make ballots cast by Black and Latino voters count for less than those of others.

In announcing the suit, Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said that the redistricting plan that Texas approved in October violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which says that voters cannot be denied equal access to the political process based on their race or ethnicity.

The suit was the second in a little over a month to be filed by the Justice Department challenging Texas over voting. The department sued the state in early November over a new voting law that it argued would disenfranchise Texans who do not speak English, people with disabilities, older voters and those who live outside the United States.

The suit filed by the department on Monday also puts other states on notice as they redraw their voting districts, a process that occurs once a decade. Seventeen states have already finalized congressional maps this year, with more expected to complete the process before the spring.

The Texas plan not only “denies Black and Latino voters the equal opportunity to participate in the election process,” some aspects of the plan were created “with discriminatory intent,” Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta said at a news conference.

The lawsuit laid out several examples where minority districts were eliminated altogether or redrawn in such a way that minority voters in urban areas were newly counted in rural, predominantly white areas. In the case of voters in Dallas, those new districts could extend more than 100 miles from the city center.

The suit intensified a running battle between the Biden administration and Texas, a state that defied federal guidance on the use of masks to stop the spread of Covid-19 and that passed a near-total ban on abortion that the Justice Department, in another suit, has called unconstitutional.

Ken Paxton, the state’s attorney general, called the redistricting suit “absurd” and a “ploy” by the administration. “I am confident that our legislature’s redistricting decisions will be proven lawful, and this preposterous attempt to sway democracy will fail,” Mr. Paxton said on Twitter.

The lawsuit, even if it succeeds, is unlikely to change the enacted Texas maps before the midterm elections next November, when control of Congress is at stake. A decade ago, litigation over Republican-drawn districts in Pennsylvania, North Carolina and elsewhere took years before courts ordered new lines drawn. The Texas candidate filing deadline is next week and primary elections are set for March 1.

The federal lawsuit will face significant hurdles in court. Unlike in past decades, Texas did not have to submit its maps for prior clearance by the Justice Department under Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, which the Supreme Court neutered in 2013. The Justice Department now has the burden of proving the Texas maps violate federal law, as opposed to Texas being required to demonstrate they are legal.

Every 10 years, each state in the U.S is required to redraw the boundaries of their congressional and state legislative districts in a process known as redistricting.

  • Redistricting, Explained: Answers to your most pressing questions about redistricting and gerrymandering.
  • Breaking Down Texas’s Map: How redistricting efforts in Texas are working to make Republican districts even more red.
  • G.O.P.’s Heavy Edge: Republicans are poised to capture enough seats to take the House in 2022, thanks to gerrymandering alone.
  • Legal Options Dwindle: Persuading judges to undo skewed political maps was never easy. A shifting judicial landscape is making it harder.

That Supreme Court decision also eliminated the ability to sue states under the Voting Rights Act in federal court in Washington, D.C. Instead, the lawsuit against Texas was filed in El Paso, meaning any appeal would go through the Fifth Circuit, which is stacked with conservative judges.

“They have a major home-court advantage in Texas because you go to the Fifth Circuit,” said Tom Perez, a former head of the Justice Department’s civil rights division and former chairman of the Democratic National Committee who is now running for governor of Maryland. “The oldest play in the far-right playbook, whether it’s voting rights, abortion rights, labor rights — go to court in Texas.”

The lawsuit follows a 2019 Supreme Court ruling that significantly weakened the legal grounds for challenging voter maps. In Rucho v. Common Cause, the court ruled that partisan gerrymandering — maps designed to favor a political party — could not be challenged in federal court (though racial gerrymandering remained unconstitutional).

The Justice Department does have an advantage from one element of the law. Though the lawsuit makes numerous claims that Texas lawmakers drew intentionally discriminatory maps, there is no requirement that the Justice Department prove intent to successfully challenge the Texas maps under the Voting Rights Act.

“The Voting Rights Act sets up vote dilution, and vote dilution does not have to prove intent,” said Thomas A. Saenz, the president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

The lawsuit over redistricting comes as President Biden and congressional Democrats face pressure to challenge Republican state legislatures around the nation that have sought to curb voting access.

Even though the Justice Department has sued Georgia and Texas over laws limiting ballot access, and filed statements of support in lawsuits brought by private plaintiffs in Florida and Arizona about laws in those states, those new statutes could be in effect for multiple election cycles before the courts decide whether they are constitutional.

Mr. Garland said that the Biden administration has only a limited ability to keep states from enacting discriminatory voting laws — even though the Justice Department has prioritized the issue and doubled its enforcement staff — because the 2013 Supreme Court decision ended the department’s authority to approve or deny voting laws and redistricting plans before they went into effect.

He asked Congress on Monday to restore that power to the Justice Department through legislation, and said that the Texas redistricting plan and other measures that the administration believes curbs minority access to the ballot box would not have been enacted if the department had retained that authority.

Currently, there are two bills stuck in the Democrat-controlled, yet deadlocked Congress — the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act — that would seek to both roll back some of the new restrictions on voting and restore the oversight powers of the Justice Department.

But with near-unanimous Republican opposition to both bills, there is little likelihood of passage without reforming Senate rules, a path multiple Democrats, including Senator Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, do not support.

Understand How U.S. Redistricting Works


Card 1 of 8

What is redistricting? It’s the redrawing of the boundaries of congressional and state legislative districts. It happens every 10 years, after the census, to reflect changes in population.

“I don’t know what more it’s going to take before the U.S. Senate realizes that Republicans have zero interest in having fair voting rights in this country,” said Trey Martinez Fischer, a Democratic Texas state representative who organized his colleagues to flee the state in July to delay the passage by Republicans of new voting restrictions in the state.

The 2020 census showed that non-Latino white Texans now comprise less than 40 percent of the state’s population, the Justice Department lawsuit said.

But the lawsuit said that the redistricting plan created by Republicans “refused to recognize the state’s growing minority electorate.”

Texas’s population jumped by 4 million people between 2010 and 2020, and the increase in the number of minority residents accounted for 95 percent of that overall growth.

Career lawyers in the Justice Department’s civil rights division found that the state’s new voting districts “will dilute the increased minority voting strength that should have developed from these shifts,” Ms. Gupta said.

While Texas will gain two additional Congressional seats based on millions of new minority citizens, the Justice Department found that those seats will have white voting majorities.

The redistricting plan also “surgically excised minority communities” from the core of the Dallas-Fort Worth metro area Metroplex “by attaching them to heavily Anglo rural counties, some more than a hundred miles away,” the Justice Department lawsuit said.

Based on the population changes, the lawsuit said that “proportional representation for Latino voters in Texas would be 11 Congressional seats and 45 Texas House seats” but that the new maps provide just seven Congressional seats and 29 Texas House seats.

The Justice Department is asking the courts to force Texas to create and implement a new redistricting plan and to establish interim plans that remedy the components of its current redistricting plan that are deemed to be unlawful.

The department’s lawsuit is the third legal challenge to the newly drawn Texas voting maps. Private plaintiffs, including a group led by former Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., have also filed lawsuits. Mr. Holder, who led the Justice Department during the Obama administration, is chairman of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, a voting rights advocacy group.




Did you miss our previous article...
https://trendinginthenews.com/usa-politics/us-will-not-send-government-officials-to-beijing-olympics