The
Florida amendment is a nightmare: "compact," "does not favor
or disfavor any incumbent or party" (yeah, find me that
district.) A smart court would rule that it is not
adjudicable, but I suspect Florida's courts won't and now every
redistricting will be done by the courts.
Reform also passed in Florida, passing a 60%
threshold. This constitutional
amendment established a list of redistricting criteria. I
suspect it will
have more effect on the state legislative redistricting
since the state
Supreme Court has an automatic review of the legislative
plans (the governor
has no veto role). But, unleash the lawyers on the
congressional side. What
will be more interesting is that the Florida House will make
a
internet-based public mapping tool available (an in-house
creation) and will
accept public submissions. If the state legislature produces
a congressional
redistricting plan that a high school student can beat on
the criteria (or
anyone), unleash the lawyers!
There should be some fascinating redistricting politics this
round, too.
I've been calling this election an embarrassment of riches
for Republicans.
Look at the CD elections map at a news outlet like CNN.
You'll see that
Republicans swept nearly every district they could in states
like FL, OH,
PA, and TX. There are now severely lop-sided congressional
delegations in
these states. How will the Republicans protect all their
incumbents,
especially in these battleground states like OH and PA that
are slated to
lose seats to apportionment? Add to this that the 2012
electorate will look
more like the 2008 electorate than the 2010 electorate. Of
course, I'd
rather have control of the pen -- or computer -- than not,
but it should be
interesting politics to see who ends up on the short end of
the stick.
============
Dr. Michael P. McDonald
Associate Professor, George Mason University
Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution
Mailing address:
(o) 703-993-4191 George Mason University
(f) 703-993-1399 Dept. of Public and
International Affairs
mmcdon@gmu.edu 4400 University Drive - 3F4
http://elections.gmu.edu
Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
-----Original Message-----
From: election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu
[mailto:election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu]
On Behalf Of
bruce@cain.berkeley.edu
Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 2010 1:35 PM
To: David Mason
Cc: Election Law
Subject: Re: [EL] Redistricting in the wake of the mid-term
election
David
This is a nice breakdown, which among other things shows the
significance of
California's decision to pass Proposition 20. In effect it
removes
53 seats from single party Democratic control, and creates
the big gap
between Republican and Democratic controlled
redistrictings. This is the
problem with unilateral disarmament. However noble the
goal, it could cost
the Democrats nationally a few seats they might need in 2012
or whenver the
tide turns again.
Bruce Cain
On Wed, 3 Nov 2010, David Mason wrote:
> Regarding the "TBD" states below. At least in Virginia
new districts
> will be drawn by the current legislature beginning in
January.
> Republican House and Governor, Democratic Senate), with
the 2011 state
> elections contested under the new lines.
>
> On Wed, Nov 3, 2010 at 12:43 PM, Derek Muller
<derek.muller@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> On redistricting, I reached some slightly
different numbers, but
> I thought I'd share them and happily offer them
as another data
> point. I used the EDS figures, and I made a
handful of
> projections (CO and NY, among others).
>
> Single District States (7): AK, DE, MT, ND, SD, VT, WY
>
> Commissions (88): AZ (9), CA (53), HI (2), ID (2), NJ
(12), WA (10)
>
> Democratic control (44): AR (4), IL (18), MD (8), MA
(9), RI (2) [*1],
> WV (3)
>
> [*1] Veto-proof Democratic majority
>
> Divided control (104): CO (7), CT (5), FL (27) [*2], IA
(4), KY (6),
> MN (8), MO (9), NV (3), NM (3), NY (27), OR (5)
>
> [*2] Veto-proof Republican majority, but redistricting
must adhere to
> nonpartisan standards
>
> Republican control (163): AL (7), GA (14), IN (9), KS
(4), ME (2), MI
> (14), NE (3) [*3], NH (2) [*4], NC (13) [*5], OH (16),
OK (5), PA
> (18), SC (7), TN (9), TX (36), UT (4), WI (8)
>
> [*3] Nonpartisan unicameral legislature
>
> [*4] Veto-proof Republican majority
>
> [*5] Governor cannot veto redistricting maps
>
> To be determined by 2011 elections (19): LA (6), MS
(4), VA (11)
>
> Derek
>
> Derek T. Muller
> Visiting Assistant Professor of Law
> Penn State Dickinson School of Law
> Lewis Katz Building
> University Park, PA 16802
> 814-867-3411
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 3, 2010 at 12:25 PM, Rick Hasen
<rick.hasen@lls.edu>
> wrote:
>
> NOVEMBER 03, 2010
>
> Three Judge Court Refuses Intervenors' Request to
Make Findings as
> to any "Irregularities" in the Settlement in the
Georgia v. Holder
> Section 5 Redistricting Case
>
> A very interesting request denied.
>
> Posted by Rick Hasen at 09:14 AM
>
> "The Impact of the 2010 Elections on the Impending
Redistricting
> Process"
>
> Nate Persily blogs. In addition, Justin's take on this
question is
> here.
>
> Posted by Rick Hasen at 09:05 AM
>
> Judicial Elections: The Crocodile in the Bathroom
Just Got Sharper
> Teeth
>
> The late great California Supreme Court justice Otto
Kaus is perhaps
> best remembered nationally for a statement he made
about judicial
> elections and the in terrorem effect of judges having
to stand for
> reelection (even retention elections): ""You cannot
forget the fact
> that you have a crocodile in your bathtub...You keep
wondering whether
> you're letting yourself be influenced, and you do not
know. You do not
> know yourself that well."
>
> Now, with the news that three Justices of the Iowa
Supreme Court have
> been voted out of office because of their decision in a
gay marriage
> case, I am sure many judges in states with judicial
elections will,
> consciously or not, allow their fear of being voted out
of office
> affect how they rule on hot button issues.
> Some say that the Iowa result is a good result because
it means we are
> holding judges accountable. I disagree. Even in a world
of judicial
> retention elections, in my view it is only proper to
vote against a
> sitting judge when that judge has done something
ethically improper
> (such as taking a bribe) or has consistently issued
rulings that are
> unprincipled or intellectually dishonest. In contrast,
reasonable
> justices can differ on the constitutionality of gay
marriage bans, and
> a judge who votes one way or the other on that issue
should not be
> voted out of office because of a single, principled
vote.
>
> I think the Iowa result is only going to embolden
groups to fight even
> harder in judicial elections next time around. Dahlia
Lithwick and I
> tried to show how ugly the world of judicial elections
has become.
> Voters in Nevada, who did not listen to Justice
O'Connor's wake-up
> call, soundly rejected a ballot measure that would have
moved the
> state from competitive elections to appointment
followed by retention
> election. I am not aware of any state that has moved
from any kind of
> judicial election toward either an appointment model or
a federal
> model of appointment. So I'm not sure what the answer
is, but I'm very
> pessimistic about how elected judges are going to be
able to handle
> the pressure.
>
> Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:56 AM
>
> Will Chair Issa's First Investigative Subpoena Target
the New
> Black Panthers Issue at DOJ?
>
> Al Kamen says "maybe."
>
> Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:35 AM
>
> "Recount Redux: How this year's might look the same
-- and a bit
> different -- from 2008"
>
> Jay Weiner explains Recount 2.0 in Minnesota.
>
> Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:29 AM
>
> "Portland voters rejecting Measure 26-108's publicly
funded
> campaign program"
>
> See here. In contrast, as I noted last night, the
measure to get rid
> of Florida's public financing plan failed to attain the
60% necessary
> as a constitutional amendment.
>
> Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:24 AM
>
> Close Major Races Not Yet Decided/Recount Possible
>
> U.S. Senate, Washington State: Murray leading, likely
to win with
> margin that would avoid recount.
>
> U.S. Senate, Colorado: Bennet ahead by about 7,000
votes with 87% of
> vote counted; automatic recount triggered if margin
about 3,900 votes
> or less (the Denver Post has called this for
> Bennett)
>
> U.S. Senate, Alaska: "Write-in" is ahead of Miller by
over 13,000
> votes. Though Miller has not yet conceded, and there
doubtless will be
> a fair number of votes among the write-ins that
election officials
> will not count for Murkowski (because voter intent was
unclear), this
> one looks like it is beyond the margin of litigation
(which is a good
> thing too, because a close race depending upon voter
intent on
> write-ins could have been very ugly)
>
> Governor, Minnesota: Poor Minnesota. It looks like
we'll have an
> automatic recount, because the Dayton-Emmer contest is
within a half
> of a percentage point. From the Star Tribune story:
"'It looks like
> it's recount part II: And this time it's personal,'
> said state Republican Party Chair Tony Sutton." Yes, it
is a bad
> horror movie meets "Groundhog Day."
>
> In the end nationally, if things break in the Senate
the way they
> appear to be breaking it will be Democrats with 53 in
the Senate to 47
> Republicans in the House. The NYT now has Republicans
+60 in the
> House, with 11 seats yet to be determined. That makes
my predictions
> yesterday morning (Senate, 52-48; House, Republicans
+65-70) pretty
> close, and closer than the 54-55 Republican House gain
predicted by
> Nate Silver yesterday at the same time.)
>
> UPDATE: Ned Foley flags Connecticut governor's race as
a "yellow
> alert" state.
>
> Posted by Rick Hasen at 08:19 AM
>
> What Tuesday Means for Redistricting
>
> [Justin Levitt here, guest posting -- with thanks to
Rick, as always.]
>
> As the red-eye flights of recount lawyers touch down
Wednesday
> morning, attention will inevitably flow to the federal
races still in
> overtime. But there is a bloody redistricting cycle
just ahead with
> the potential to lock down Tuesday's gains for the GOP.
And for those
> looking for ripples from yesterday's elections, there
are a few state
> races, still too close to call, that deserve more
attention for their
> impact on redistricting than they normally receive.
>
> A little context to convey the magnitude of Tuesday's
political shift
> -- and the stakes of the elections still undecided --
for the coming
> redistricting cycle:
>
> In 2001:
> - 121 Congressional seats were drawn in states where
Democrats
> controlled the redistricting process;
> - 95 seats were drawn in states where Republicans
controlled the
> redistricting process; and
> - 212 seats were drawn in states with divided control.
(7 states have
> one district apiece.)
>
> In 2011, based on the preliminary unofficial returns
thus far from
> Tuesday's elections (nice summary here), and
projections for the size
> of each state's 2012 Congressional delegation
(contesting sources here
> and here):
> - 189 Congressional seats will be drawn in states where
Republicans
> are likely to control the redistricting process;
> - 26 seats will be drawn in states where Democrats are
likely to
> control the process;
> - 145 seats will be drawn in states with divided
control . . .
> and
> - 68 seats, more or less, await the results of races
that were too
> close to call early Wednesday morning.
>
> Of course, partisan control is hardly the only factor
driving the
> redistricting process in many of these states, and I
don't mean to
> imply that 189 seats drawn by Republican legislators
will be drawn
> solely to maximize Republican electoral fortunes, or
that they will
> yield 189 Republican seats -- not even close.
> History has shown, though, that unified partisan
control often acts as
> a powerful thumb on the scales when district lines are
drawn.
>
> More analysis of the most important still-undecided
races for
> redistricting, and how we got to where we are now,
after the jump. For
> more detail, there's a more complete description of the
way that each
> state conducts redistricting in the Citizen's Guide to
Redistricting
> (2010 update coming momentarily, I'm told); the Rose
Institute also
> has a handy easy-reference map.
>
> Continue reading "What Tuesday Means for Redistricting"
> Posted by Justin Levitt at 04:49 AM
> --
> Rick Hasen
> William H. Hannon Distinguished Professor of Law Loyola
Law School
> 919 Albany Street
> Los Angeles, CA 90015-1211
> (213)736-1466
> (213)380-3769 - fax
> rick.hasen@lls.edu
> http://www.lls.edu/academics/faculty/hasen.html
> http://electionlawblog.org
>
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