Showing posts with label gerrymandering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gerrymandering. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Guilford County Chairman Skip Alston's Jig Saw Gerrymandered Redistricting Map That Should Be Dead on Arrival

EXHIBIT A

Chairman Skip Alston Proposed Redistricting Map 2011


EXHIBIT B

Chairman Skip Alston Redistricting Map on Precinct Overlay 2011

Above in Exhibit A is the "mystery map" that was turned in to the Guilford County Legal Department from the Chairman of the Guilford County Board of Commissioners Skip Alston.

A 7-9-2011 Greensboro News and Record above the fold headline story titled "Maps Drawn on Party Lines" CLICKHERE . An interesting excerpt:

"Alston said two of the maps he submitted were put together by county staff under his direction. The third, he said, he put together with a group of “political advisers” he declined to name.

“They’re not big players, just some people who know the area and the issues whose opinions I trust,” Alston said. “They’re just an informal advisory committee.”
The Chairman directed the creation of all 3 maps

These mystery people know the area and if you want to see what a GERRYMANDERED JIG SAW REDISTRICTING MAP THAT SHOULD BE DEAD ON ARRIVAL looks like,
take a look at Exhibit A.

Exhibit B is what Alston's map looks like when you add the precincts to the map.

Check out the 6 red circled areas on Exhibit B. This is what a blatantly gerrymandered map looks like where they have to wrap around, barely sliver through to get the desired results.

Looking at the numbered districts in Exhibit A, let's start out by talking about district # 5 where we have the most ridiculous gerrymandered aspect of the whole map.  This district stretches from the most eastern part of Guilford County in the town of Whitsett all the way south and barely underneath High Point precinct 23 to split the City of High Point in half and gerrymander all the way up Eastchester Drive to the intersection of Wendover Avenue. The map in exhibit B shows the 2 red circles where the small sliver of this map draws these citizens into District 5.  They split the Town of Pleasant Garden in half, which if you want to keep communities in a whole district to not disenfranchise, then why split the city in half?

Also in the Skip Alston and his mystery people map is District #2, which stretches all the way up to the Town of Oak Ridge, but as you can see from the map the Town of Oak Ridge is split in half between OR 1 and OR 2 , so now we have 2 smaller municipalities split between commissioners which should be done as little as possible or not done at all. NOTE ( My map that i submitted to the Guilford County Commissioners CLICKHERE is compact and only splits up Jamestown because of the Voting Rights Act to bring the High Point precincts over to have some of the Greensboro majority-minority areas to make them compact and feasible). On my maps Jamestown is split 3 ways which put one Jamestown area with the Adams Farm area while the Jam 5 is put in the southern and southeast district area.

Back to the map  of Chairman Alston's district #2 where we have now a district that should be mainly High Point but goes right to pick up precincts in Greensboro which makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.  So now we could have a situation in High Point where feasibly not one representative could be from the city because #5, #1, and #2 all take in other areas of Guilford County. Wouldn't that be nice to have a City in the top ten in population for North Carolina not have any representative from it's city in county government?

Let's take a closer look at Exhibit A to show you the absurdity of this map. District #5 wraps around #1 to sliver up to split with #2. Then #8 darts north through Greensboro to wrap around #7 and then back up off of battleground to #4 . #3 with just a little area that starts in Greensboro off of Jefferson road that then squeezes down on battleground avenue to a very small area, only to jump into the Stokesdale and Summerfield area of the county and splits Oak Ridge N.C. in half.  Then we have #2 which starts on western side of Guilford County up towards Oak Ridge with the split of Oak Ridge with #2, then east into Greensboro, which makes not one bit of sense.
As you can see from the so called "mystery map" from Skip Alston, with the help from political advisers who want to keep the same non-competitive gerrymandered maps for the next 10 years , this map should be dead on arrival. So in Chairman Alston's own words this map should be "DOA to the DOJ."

It is time for all citizens to speak up about this issue. After seeing this map turned in from the chairman, it is time to fight back for having sensible compact districts in Guilford County, not the absurd complete gerrymandered crap that Skip Alston has thrust upon us.
If you want to see all the maps that have been turned into the Guilford County Legal Department, you will not be able to see them on the Guilford County web site. 

They are still not up.

But you can CLICKHERE for the local GOP maps.

GOP MAP 1
GOP MAP 2
GOP MAP 3
Keith Brown Map
Skip Alston Map
Staff Friendly Map
Staff Market Map

The time is now to let your Guilford County Commissioners know how you feel, and it is also time to let your local municipalities know how you feel about this map, or any of these maps, because it will effect us for the next 10 years or more. Get involved.

Here is a link to the Guilford County web site to let them know how you feel, CLICKHERE

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

ISS - Southern states seek end run around Justice Department over redistricting

ISS - Southern states seek end run around Justice Department over redistricting

North Carolina Republican Party strategy in regards to redistricting has been exposed. Will it work?

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Thursday, June 9, 2011

Reducing Guilford County Commissioners to 9 is Making It's Way Through The NC General Assembly

There has been talk over the years to reduce the size of the Guilford County Commissioners . Now we have Rep. John Blust who has introduced House Bill #467 CLICKHERE  and also a map of new districts CLICKHERE both of these links are from Mark Binker from the Greensboro News and Record.

Just last night the North Carolina House of Representatives passed on the third reading 66-48 Rep. Blust's bill and now it works it's way to the Senate side of the aisle. It will be interesting to see who will read this bill to the North Carolina Senators because the Democratic delegation in Guilford County will probably not offer up this bill in Sen. Robinson or Sen. Vaughan. We will see either Sen. Bingham or possibly majority leader Sen. Berger talk about this bill to the North Carolina Senators.

The adding of the Guilford County Commissioners to being 11 members should have never happened in the first place 20 years ago. But let's take a closer look at the make up of our 100 counties all over this state. First point to make is that Guilford County is the only county and i repeat it is the only county out of 100 who has 11 commissioners.

This bill would reduce the size by 2 members saving the taxpayers of Guilford County $41,400 plus their travel allowance they get. Reducing the Guilford County Commissioners to 9 will make them be in a select group of only 3 other counties out of 100 in the State of North Carolina in Bladen, Pitt and Mecklenburg Counties. So if this bill passes we will be in line with 4% of the counties in North Carolina.

Here is the percentages of the sizes of county boards all over this state.

1% with 11 commissioners which is Guilford County
3% with 9 commissioners with Mecklenburg being a 9 member commission
1% with 8 commissioners
29% with 7 commissioners with Wake and Forsyth County being a 7 member commission
3% with 6 commissioners
61% with 5 commissioners
2% with 3 commissioners

This is a no brainer to pass this bill just looking at the make up of all the counties all over this state. What makes Guilford County so special that they need 11 commissioners? NOTHING.

Just this past month we had the chairman of the Guilford County Commissioners Skip Alston who could care less what the Conservatives 4 Guilford County had to say and Doug Clark from the Greensboro News and Record had this post titled "Alston Shows Why County Redistricting Is Needed" CLICKHERE

In yesterday's article CLICKHERE  we have Chairman Skip Alston say this about this bill


“But it won’t pass the Department of Justice. They’re going to recognize this as a retrogressive move that will dilute the voting strength of minorities,” said Melvin “Skip” Alston, the Democratic chairman of the Guilford Board of Commissioners"



The new talking point you will hear plenty in the next few months with redistricting on the state level comes into play is RETROGRESSIVE which is

1. to go back to an earlier, esp worse, condition; degenerate or deteriorate
2. to move backwards; recede

To hear the chairman state that he knows that what the U.S. Department of Justice is going to do is total hearsay and he has no proof of this. It will be interesting to see if it will pass the DOJ for approval but noting that no other county in the state has 11 board members throws that argument right out the door. Good luck with the retrogressive argument. It is time to reduce the Guilford County Commissioners to 9 and if you would like to e mail your Guilford County Commissioners to let them know how you feel CLICKHERE and you can get all the information you need to reach your commissioner .

UPDATE Mark Binker has a late post on what transpired last night CLICKHERE


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Saturday, May 21, 2011

Historical Maps from Past in Regards to Redistricting in Guilford County N.C.

Below you will see maps of the Guilford County Commissioners from 1990 to the present one in 2001  and if you would like some explanation on what went on back in the 90's please read this blog post from Guarino's blog CLICKHERE  with a title "How the county commissioners board was stacked to favor democrats".
1990 Guilford County N.C. Commissioners Map



1991 Guilford County Commissioners Districts




2001 Guilford County Redistricting Maps



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Thursday, May 19, 2011

FREE SCREENING of Gerrymandering The Movie on May 25th in Cary N.C.




HT: Southern Coalition for Social Justice

Above is a youtube trailer


Gerrymandering--Free Film Screening

Join the North Carolina Center for Voter Education and North Carolinians for Redistricting reform for a free screening of the critically acclaimed documentary. Gerrymandering and an inside look on the significant flaws in our current redistricting process. This film looks at the abuse of power that too often occurs when you have politicians redrawing their own districts lines and choosing their own voters.



Wednesday, May 25 at 7:00 P.M. at the Galaxy Cinema, 770 Cary Towne Blvd., Cary.(919)463-9989


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Thursday, May 5, 2011

Redistricting of Guilford County Commissioners IS ON, How Will The Maps Look, Gerrymandered or Compact?

Guilford County Commissioner Map



Jordan Green from Yes! Weekly CLICKHERE had this to say in the Scuttlebutt section of their weekly paper.

Suburban growth creates need for redistricting of guilford county commission

Suburban growth will require redistricting of Guilford County Commission The district lines for the Guilford County Commission will have to be redrawn based on the 2010 Census, which recorded uneven population growth, County Attorney Mark Payne said. Five out of 11 precincts had strong population growth and will likely have to shed precincts to be rebalanced.
The county saw a suburban growth pattern in the last decade, with three outlying districts demonstrating the most dramatic growth. Payne said District 2, which covers north High Point and is represented by Republican Bill Bencini; District 3, covering the northwest corner of the county and represented by Republican Linda Shaw; and District 4, represented by Democrat Kirk Perkins in the northeast all saw population growth exceeding 30 percent. District 5, running south to southeast and represented by Republican Billy Yow, grew by 17 percent. District 9, drawn to ensure minority representation under the federal Voting Rights Act and represented by Democrat Carolyn Coleman, grew by 13 percent.
Payne said state statute holds that if there is substantial inequality of population the affected board may redefine its districts, adding that federal case law has established that if the variance from smallest to largest district is 10 percent or more redistricting must be done to ensure equal representation. He said the first step will be for the county commission to determine the appropriate process for redistricting.
Redistricting is “discretionary under the statute, but it’s not discretionary under the Voting Rights Act, in my opinion.” Payne said.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Partisan Gerrymandering: Harms and a New Solution from the Heartland Institute

With permission from the Heartland Institute CLICKHERE

John Hood has a online post in regards to redistricting CLICKHERE in the article this is what was said;

"• Leaders of both houses and the new redistricting committees should commit themselves to neutral, binding constraints such as compactness and respecting jurisdictional lines. The goal should be to devise rules that limit the degrees of freedom any political cartographers would have, be they elected or appointed. The leaders should also hold open hearings and welcome suggestions from individuals and organizations of all political stripes."

Compactness should be a integral part of the redistricting process and the Heartland Institute gave Triadwatch permission to post a article in regards to this issue which you can read below.
________________________________________________________________________________

Partisan Gerrymandering: Harms and a New Solution

 Written By: Daniel D. Polsby and Robert D. Popper

Published In: Intellectual Ammunition > May/June 2001

Publication date: 05/01/2001

Publisher: The Heartland Institute
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Editor's note: Just in time for redistricting battles, we present an excerpt from the archives. Heartland Policy Study No. 34, "Partisan Gerrymandering: Harms and a New Solution," was released on March 4, 1991.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Redistricting, at least as it is practiced today, inevitably involves gerrymandering. Broadly defined, "gerrymandering" refers to any manipulation of district lines for partisan purposes. The term is derived from the name of former Massachusetts governor Elbridge Gerry.

The partisan map-maker seeks to draw lines that concentrate the opposition's electoral support in just a few districts (called "packing" or "stacking"), while at the same time creating many more districts where his own party commands a small, but still safe, majority ("cracking"). The net result is that the opposition party's votes are squandered by being thrown into carefully constructed landslides.

The problems of gerrymandering can be stated so luridly that it cannot possibly be ignored. A party in control of districting could at least in theory construct a majority in every district but one, no matter how many districts there were and no matter how voters were dispersed throughout the state. If there were 20 districts, it could assure itself majorities in 19.

To be sure, there is nothing specific in the Constitution that forbids gerrymandering, any more than there is specific language that forbids the excessive, unfair, or abusive exercise of any delegated power. But the very idea of democracy that is embedded in the Constitution certainly forbids legislatures from immunizing themselves against the popular will.

The Legal History of Gerrymandering

While the courts have ruled on gerrymandering, they have failed to stop it. In 1986 the Supreme Court held in Davis v. Bandemer that claims of partisan gerrymandering are justiciable as violations of the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution. The Davis decision is problematic, though, for the precedent it sets with respect to how gerrymandering claims are to be evaluated. The Court chose to emphasize impact over intent, requiring that a gerrymander case be evaluated on the basis of harm to an excluded group's "opportunity to participate" in the political process as a whole.

The Court's standard requires that the successful plaintiff show that the political party to which he belongs has been denied the opportunity to participate in or influence the political process. Inasmuch as conditions this extreme probably do not exist anywhere in the United States, such a standard is tantamount to the proposition that gerrymandering does not exist.

In a series of malapportionment cases, most prominent among them Reynolds v. Sims (1964), the Court established that "the judicial focus must be concentrated upon ascertaining whether there has been any discrimination against certain of the State's citizens which constitutes an impermissible impairment of their constitutionally protected right to vote." In the malapportionment cases, the court found such an impairment where voter districts were constructed with vastly unequal populations, resulting in the intentional "dilution" of the votes of persons living in overpopulated districts.

In brief, malapportionment is not a denial of the right to vote; it is a dilution of that right. What the two concepts have in common is the state's act of discriminatory classification. Both gerrymandering and malapportionment involve state-sponsored discrimination against voters.

Viewed in this light, gerrymandering is a violation of an individual right. It violates the right to be free of governmental diminishment of the potential efficacy of one's vote. The voter's stake in democracy is actually diminished, and he or she is deprived of an important act of power.

Compact Districts Restrain Gerrymanders

Two current standards-­equinumerosity (the requirement that all districts have approximately equal populations) and contiguity (that all parts of a district be adjacent to one another rather than detached or separated by other districts)--cannot, alone, prevent gerrymandering.

"Compactness"--broadly defined, a requirement that district boundaries be without uncalled-for spikes, indentations, or silly meanderings--focuses on and foils a technique that is indispensable to creating effective gerrymanders.

A successful gerrymanderer begins by assuming that his party has a certain amount of support statewide; he then apportions that support strategically among individual districts. The goal is to control the winning and losing margins in every district.

At the threshold, the gerrymanderer encounters a difficulty: friendlies and unfriendlies will be inconveniently dispersed in the area he is trying to gerrymander. Because people do not naturally arrange themselves to suit his purposes, he must help them, putting them where he needs them to be, by drawing districts to contain enough friendlies to outvote the unfriendlies by a comfortable margin. Boundary lines are stretched and shrunk to include certain neighborhoods of voters and exclude others. In this process, districts become non-compact.

If compactness is a constraint, however, a gerrymanderer will find his job noticeably more difficult, although not absolutely impossible. Computers can endlessly crank out district plans that conform to a fixed standard of compactness.

The point of a compactness requirement, however, is not to make gerrymandering logically impossible, but to make it practically useless, so that it becomes an ineffective tool for routine use. But gerrymandering can be limited, and the worst cases can be prevented.

Before making the case that compactness inhibits "effective gerrymandering," it is necessary to clarify the meaning of "effective." An effective gerrymander, for purposes of our argument, is one that has been designed to increase the disparity between a party's actual support among the population and its seats in the legislature, and which actually achieves this result.

No one can say a priori how many seats a party is "entitled to" given a particular level of popular support. But a compactness standard does not seek to answer that question. A compactness requirement, by purely mechanical operation, tends to inhibit gerrymandering.

Good Government and Representation

A requirement of compactness would prevent "effective gerrymandering." Consider a hypothetical state with 20 congressional districts, and with a voting population evenly divided between two parties. With no compactness requirement, the party controlling the districting could readily arrange wins in 19 of those districts. The more that compactness is given as a constraint on the discretion of the map-makers, the greater their difficulty in arranging wins in 19 districts. At a certain level of compactness, only 18 districts will be secure. Tighten up on the compactness requirement some more and only 17 can be counted on. And so on. If the only acceptable plan were the most compact plan (according to whatever definition of compactness one were using), results more like 10-10 or 11-9 are what would usually emerge.

Professor Bruce Cain has offered a critique of the value of compactness--what might be called the "good government" reasons for skepticism. He begins by making a list of all the "good government" values one would like to see embodied by electoral districts. He then argues these values may or may not be furthered by the adoption of a compactness standard, and that, in general, its good effects and bad effects will wash. Thus, for example, the compactness criterion may make it difficult to preserve "communities of interest," however these are defined.

But even if Cain is right in his evaluation of compactness as a "good government" principle, the value of preventing gerrymandering outweighs the independent benefits we can associate with compactness. Although compactness may have some independent value as a principle of democracy, one needs no better reason for embracing the compactness principle than that it makes effective gerrymandering more difficult. Gerrymandering is, after all, a pathology of democratic government. It allows legislators to play unfairly with what is perhaps their most solemn and central power: setting the constitutive terms of the democratic argument.

Cain seeks to strengthen his argument by pointing out that compactness may at times conflict with the "good government" value of proportional representation. It must be conceded, for example, that because single-member districts are naturally skewed against minorities, there are going to be cases in which accurate proportional representation may be more readily accommodated by non-compact districts. In such cases enforcing a compactness standard may seem counter-productive.

The wisdom of deliberately concentrating racial minorities to create minority-dominated districts has been widely and ably debated, and need not be considered here. A race-conscious electoral policy, assuming we are to have one, can be accommodated by a legal compactness standard by the simple expedient of requiring that non-compactness be explained. If the explanation is that non-compactness was forced by the requirements of the Voting Rights Act, this should be legally sufficient.

A Workable Compactness Standard

A workable legal standard of compactness proposed by Joseph E. Schwartzberg defines compactness in terms of the effectiveness of a shape's perimeter in capturing area.

Schwartzberg's standard measures the ratio of a shape's perimeter to its area. Not every ratio of perimeter-to-area, however, will adequately gauge the compactness of that area, as the following example shows.

Consider two squares of different sizes, one with two-mile sides and one with ten-mile sides. The smaller square has a perimeter of eight, an area of four, and therefore a ratio of 2.0. The larger square has a perimeter of forty and an area of one hundred, or a ratio of 0.4. The shapes, although they are identical, have very different scores.

There is a technique, however, that avoids this anomaly: renormalizing the perimeter-to-area ratio against an absolute scale. For any length of a perimeter, whether ten inches or ten miles long, a circle is the geometric shape that encloses the maximum possible area. Every other shape must somewhere make a concession of some kind, and thus its perimeter will not be used with the greatest possible efficiency to capture area. The absolute measure of a shape's efficiency is thus determined by dividing the area of the shape by the area of a circle with a perimeter of equal length. When this formula is applied, all calculations result in a figure between 0 and 1 (1 being the best possible score) and all identical shapes, regardless of size, score the same.

Any deviation from any given shape that changes a district's area and perimeter to the same extent--no matter where the protrusion is added, which way it is oriented, how far it is from the district's center, or how it is shaped--will degrade the district's Schwartzberg score by an identical amount.

The Schwartzberg measure highlights the best features of the other criteria of compactness. It charges points when districts are longer than they are wide; when boundaries are far from the center; when lines are indented; or indeed whenever the district lines are longer than they need to be. The Schwartzberg test even measures "smoothness," taking away points for any irregularities in a boundary, even in a generally compact district.

Despite any theoretical objection to the Schwartzberg criterion, it nevertheless works well in practice. The Schwartzberg standard is so sensitive to any deviation that it is impossible to gerrymander comfortably using either a spike or an indentation. Adding perimeter in a greater proportion than area will always drop the score. In that sense there are no "wrong" results: Districts with appendages or indentations will always score worse than those without.

Conclusion

It is ironic that reapportionment, a project made necessary by fidelity to democratic principles, should become the occasion for so much gamey partisan brawling, but the fact cannot be denied. Ordinary voters believe gerrymandering is one of many ways politicians frustrate, rather than facilitate, the popular will. Ordinary voters, furthermore, are right.

Anyone who eyeballs a few legislative district maps will quickly learn to recognize gerrymanders, although admittedly with imperfect accuracy. But one need not rely on seat-of-the-pants reckoning to find the sort of non-compactness that implies gerrymandering. Schwartzberg's mathematical standard is a superior way to measure the kind of non-compactness that is associated with gerrymandering.

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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Open Letter To N.C. State Legislators on Redistricting of Senate Seats in Guilford County Read-Copy-Paste To Our Elected Officials


This post is an open letter to our North Carolina State legislators regarding Guilford County redistricting in regards to our state senators that in the past has been unfair and completely unconstitutional.  This is a message about how redistricting needs to change for voters in Guilford County and beyond.  Below the fold is the letter and some links to where you can tell your representatives how you feel. If you would like to copy and paste to send to our elected leaders please do.  If you want to tweak it a bit to include your own angle and/or forward to other North Carlolina voters, please do.

 I would also like to thank Yes! Weekly CLICKHERE page 23 and Brian Clarey for allowing me to be a part of their weekly paper with a scaled down version of this post.

_________________________________________________________________________________

Dear North Carolina Legislators,

I am writing as a resident of Guilford County North Carolina who would like to see a change in the make up of our State Senators who represent Guilford County with the redistricting of 2011 upon us. Right now our county is divided by four senate seats.  The districts and senators are: #26 Senator Phil Berger, #27 Don Vaughan, #28 Senator Gladys Robinson, and #33 Senator Stan Bingham. Let's take a look at what our North Carolina State Constitution has to say about redistricting of North Carolina Senate Seats.

Article II Section 3.
Senate districts; apportionment of Senators.



The Senators shall be elected from districts. The General Assembly, at the first regular session convening after the return of every decennial census of population taken by order of Congress, shall revise the senate districts and the apportionment of Senators among those districts, subject to the following requirements:


(1) Each Senator shall represent, as nearly as may be, an equal number of inhabitants, the number of inhabitants that each Senator represents being determined for this purpose by dividing the population of the district that he represents by the number of Senators apportioned to that district;


(2) Each senate district shall at all times consist of contiguous territory;


(3) No county shall be divided in the formation of a senate district;


(4) When established, the senate districts and the apportionment of Senators shall remain unaltered until the return of another decennial census of population taken by order of Congress.

As you can see from the above segment taken from our state constitution it states that "no county shall be divided in the formation of a senate district". In Guilford County we have not one but two senators who break this state constitutional amendment in Senator Phil Berger from Rockingham County and Senator Stan Bingham from Davidson County. The other 2 senators from Guilford County in Sen. Don Vaughan and Sen. Gladys Robinson are 100% of their district in Guilford County.

According to the new 2010 census numbers the ideal population of our state senators is for each district to be at 190,710. Senator Berger's total population in district #26 in 2000 was 168,953, and the 2010 numbers are 196,857 with a change of +16.5%.  In Senator Berger's district for 2010 with the ideal population being 190,710 he is plus 6,147 which is 3.2% over the number to hit. This number is very significant because in regards to other senators from Guilford County, Senator Vaughan's census numbers  for an ideal population came in way under the threshold at 182,024 with a negative of -8,686 at -4.6%.

Below is a segment from the NCGA web site in regards to Redistricting

Division of Counties Must Be Minimized:



Article II of the State Constitution says that in drawing State House and Senate districts, no county shall be divided. In 1981, the US Department of Justice said that requirement was inconsistent with the Voting Rights Act, so the General Assembly disregarded it for 21 years. Then in 2002 the State Supreme Court in the case of Stephenson v. Bartlett said the "Whole County Provision", found in the State Constitution must be honored to the extent it can be honored, consistent with the Voting Rights Act and other State and federal precepts. The Stephenson decision for the first time said the equal protection clause of the State Constitution contained a presumption for single-member legislative districts, and that presumption should be a limitation on the Whole County Provision. The US Justice Department approved the Stephenson opinion and withdrew its 1981 objection to the Whole County Provision. The Court in Stephenson prescribed a step-by-step method for harmonizing the Whole County Provision with the other laws. First, the General Assembly should draw the districts required by the Voting Rights Act. Second, it should take all the counties with just the right population to be single-member districts and make them one-county single-member districts. Third, it should take all the counties that have just the right populations for one or more districts and divide those counties into compact single-member districts. Fourth, for the remaining counties it should group them into clusters of counties and divide the clusters into compact single-member districts, crossing county lines within the cluster as little as possible.

As you can see from the last statement from this section of the NCGA web site, it states that crossing into county lines within the cluster as little as possible, but we have two senate districts crossing into Guilford County. We also have some numbers from the 2003 redistricting plan that sheds some light on these senate seats:

Senator Bingham had 21,635 Guilford County residents which is 12.81% of his district.Sen Bingham had 5.14% of the Guilford County residents in his district with a total population in 2003 in Guilford County to be 421,048.

Senator Berger had 77,025 Guilford County residents, which is 45.59% of his district. Sen. Berger had 18.29% of the Guilford County residents in his district from the total population in Guilford County at 421,048.

Why are these 2 numbers so significant?  Because as we see what was written from the NCGA web site and stated above "crossing county lines within the cluster as little as possible".  If you add both Sen. Bingham at being in Guilford County at 5.14% and also Sen. Phil Berger at 18.29% that adds up to 23.43% of total residents of Guilford County who are represented by these two senators who cross county lines unconstitutionally, and being at 23.43% of total Guilford County residents is not even close to being as little as possible crossing into Guilford County.  

As a Guilford County resident it would be to the benefit of the redistricting committee to take the state constitution at it's word and not cross county lines but as we have seen from the past and also the voting rights act that is not possible. What is possible is to take the residents of Senator Berger's district who are in Guilford County since he is over the ideal population in 2010 and have them be a part of Guilford County, in either Senator Vaughan's or Sen. Robinson's districts.  Does Sen. Stan Bingham need to be in Guilford County at all at 5.14 % of Guilford County population?  I would say NO.

We have seen in the past where the gerrymandering of these districts have really taken a turn for the worse because of non competition and having party affiliation be a part of the process. This is seen where both Sen. Bingham and Sen. Berger take a huge population of republican voters out of guilford county and keep their districts safe for them . This in turn gives the advantage to the democratic party in Guilford County to keep a strong hold on the other 2 senate seats.In the 2010 elections Sen. Vaughan won by a margin of 60% to 40% and the other race in Sen Robinson had a split 3 way race where it was a 47% to 38% to 13% but the 13 % was actually a democratic party affiliated person in Bruce Davis running as a independent on the ballot for reasons too complex to go into here

Even if you wanted to put on a partisan hat for a moment and look at what is happening in Guilford County it would be to your benefit to have these republicans voters in the districts in Guilford County vote in these senate seats and could possibly have a candidate who could come close to running against these races but having a 60% to 40% split is not helping the cause in having a fair and  compact district to have a competitive race. Why waste your money when the numbers are so far off to compete in these senate seats.

Thanks for your consideration in regards to the situation in Guilford County and hopefully making these senate districts more compact and fair to the citizens. Hopefully we will see a change for the better because in the past it has not been fair or constitutional. I'll end with a quote from Senate Majority leader Senator Phil Berger in the Triad Business Journal in regards to redistricting, "What you will see is the Republican legislature follow the law". I hope you will follow the law and not cross county lines for senate seats in Guilford County and if you do cross into Guilford County it should be as little as possible - not at the 23.43% that has been done in the past.
_________________________________________________________________________________

Here is a link to a place where you can submit your thoughts on redistricting and if you agree with any piece of what was written please feel free to copy and send to you state house and senate members
CLICKHERE

also here is a link to the chairman of the senate redistricting committee
Sen. Bob Rucho  CLICKHERE

also here is a link to the chairman of the house redistricting committee
senior chairman Rep. David Lewis CLICKHERE

also links to the redistricting committee
Senate CLICKHERE
House CLICKHERE


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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Guilford County Commissioners The Clock Has Started, Where are you on Redistricting of Guilford County

Guilford County Commissioner Map


Redistricting has been on the front burner for the past few weeks with all that is going on the state level and the City of Greensboro having to reconsider the vote on a map that fueled a lot of controversy last week . One thing that has not been on the radar screen is why not any talk of the Guilford County Commissioners and redistricting after the 2010 census numbers came out.

Joe Guarino has a smorgasborg of post in regards to redistricting in Guilford County and here are some links to all of these post and i am glad he has started to talk about this issue especially on the county level because is it something that needs to be talked about for all the citizens of Guilford County . Here are the posts;

-How Local Democrats Manipulated Guilford County District Commissioner Seats, Part 2

CLICKHERE

-How Local Democrats Manipulated Guilford County District Commissioner Seats, Part 1
CLICKHERE

-Guilford County Redistricting: Will There Be A Media Push to Erase Previous Gerrymanders?
CLICKHERE

-An Opportunity To Remedy Gerrymandering Abuses (At Least in Part)
CLICKHERE

-An Open Challenge to John Robinson, Ed Cone, Jordan Green, Joe Killian and Fox 8
CLICKHERE



We know now that on A2 of the Greensboro News and Record for 4-27-2011 Joe Killian had a article titled"Guilford Ask is Redistricting Needed" this article is in the pay wall so no links to the article. In it we have this quote from the Chairman of the Guilford County Commissioners Skip Alston
"I don't think we want to redistrict unless it's absolutely necessary"
We also have a post today from Jordan Green at Yes! Weekly  titled "Redistricting ... on to Guilford County" CLICKHERE. In this post we have Jordan saying that he talked with the GIS planner for Guilford County Stephen Dew and he got word from the County Attorney Mark Payne to see if the county needs to comply and  a ruling very soon.

It will be interesting to see if the County will also have to redistrict but if Stephen Dew rules no redistricting is needed i surely hope he has the numbers to back up this ruling in relation to the 2010 census numbers because plenty of us will be looking at these numbers with a fine tooth comb to make sure you are correct with this ruling.

Greensboro, State of North Carolina and now Guilford County as i said a few months ago let the redistricting games begin.




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Thursday, April 21, 2011

Marymandering Tries To Explain Herself to Fox 8 Sheeka Strickland

 


But before the council meeting Fox 8 WGHP did talk with Greensboro Councilwomen Mary Rakestraw and she had this to say


 

Then we see that at the Greensboro Council meeting this is what was heard by Kee, Vaughan, Mayor Knight, Wade and Rakestraw NOTHING

. This is a new low and in this election year when you hear any of them say they want a more transparent and open government, I would say "Don't Think So", your actions on redistricting were appalling to the citizens of Greensboro.

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Sunday, April 17, 2011

GUEST COLUMN: Redistricting – Let’s follow North Carolina Constitution in setting state Senate districts

Thanks High Point Enterprise for letting me be a part of your paper today
.
 GUEST COLUMN: Redistricting – Let’s follow North Carolina Constitution in setting state Senate districts:

CLICKHERE

"By Keith Brown I am writing as a resident of Guilford County who would like to see a change in the makeup of our state senators who represent Guilford County in the N.C. Senate. Right now, our ..."

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Saturday, April 16, 2011

Redistricting North Carolina--how I'd do it if I were a Republican

Redistricting North Carolina--how I'd do it if I were a Republican Liberal thinking like a republican, novel idea. Christian Dem in NC in daily kos CLICKHERE Bookmark and Share

Rep. Brad Miller Is Toast And Hopefully Gone from Guilford County When Redistricting Happens




The Washington Post had a interesting article online in regards to the redistricting of house members with the title "The most likely redistricting victims" CLICKHERE .  In the article called THE FIX Aaron Blake has a
Top 10 victims in regards to redistricting in 2011 and our gerrymandered make a seat tailored to myself
Rep. Brad Miller was #2 on the list and here is what they had to say about him,


2. Brad Miller (D-N.C.): Ten years ago, as a state senator, Miller helped draw the lines for his own district. Even Democrats admit it’s a pretty blatant gerrymander. Now that Republicans control the process, it will be easy for them to get revenge by cutting off the the skinny fingers where his district reaches into Democratic territory in Raleigh and Greensboro. Such a change would shift the district instantly into a pretty strong Republican seat. Republicans aim to pick off two or three seats in North Carolina, and none should be easier than Miller’s. (Republicans point out that Miller raised just $32,000 in the first quarter and has just $69,000 on hand — not exactly the numbers of someone gearing up to run in a very tough seat.)


It will be interesting to see what happens on the state level in regards to this issue but I have a feeling we might see Rep. Howard Coble become the only representative from Guilford County which to me would be a good thing for the residents of Guilford County.





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Sunday, March 6, 2011

Redistricting In N.C. The GOP's Golden Goose by Washington Post



The Washington Post has a new article out from Chris Cillizza in a online post titled "North Carolina: The GOP's Golden Goose redistricting" CLICKHERE

In the post this is what was said:

_____________________________________________________________________
The Tarheel State stands out as the one state where Republicans will be expecting to gain multiple seats in the election following redistricting, and they could gain three or four if things pan out close to perfectly.



The reason for all that opportunity is two-fold.



One is that the current map was drawn by Democrats in 2001, which means many of the marginal districts were drawn to their liking. "Ten years ago, Democrats drew the most perfect map in the history of gerrymandering," remarked one Republican familiar with the state's lines.


Two is that Democrats stood tough in the state in 2010. While Democrats in swing and conservative-leaning districts across the country went down to defeat, North Carolina Democratic Reps. Heath Shuler, Mike McIntyre and Larry Kissell all won -- though Republicans did unseat Rep. Bob Etheridge.


The result is a map on which Democrats maintain a majority -- seven to six -- of congressional seats in the state. Of the 17 states where Republicans control redistricting, North Carolina is the only state where that is the case.


Because of those two factors -- the Democratic-drawn map and the continued Democratic majority -- there is plenty of room for improvement for the GOP. And the most likely Democrats to bear the brunt are McIntyre, Kissell and Rep. Brad Miller.

As we see in what was quoted from one republican above in that the 2000 redistricting game brought by the  N.C. Democratic Party, the most perfect map in the history of gerrymandering . Hearing the political connections this weekend it seems like the Chairman of the Senate Redistricting Committee Rep. Bob Rucho wants to have this all done by June 1, 2011 . There are a lot of different scenarios to make this a fair process for all to be a part of  we will see what happens after all the numbers from the census are looked at by all in charge but if you would like a link to plenty of information here is a link the the State of North Carolina on redistricting CLICKHERE.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Let the NORTH CAROLINA REDISTRICTING GAMES BEGIN , Census Data out Next Week

_________________________________________________________________________________
From: Coats, Bob [mailto: bob.coats@osbm.nc.gov ]


Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2011 4:13 PM

To: ncdata@lists.ncmail.net

Subject: [NCDATA] 2010 Census Data

Hi Folks –

The US Census Bureau has announced that it will ship the 2010 Census data for North Carolina next week.

The data will be shipped to state leadership on Monday – Wednesday. Receipt must be verified by one member of each party on the distribution list. Following verification the data will be posted on the US Census Bureau’s new American FactFinder at the end of the week.


Bob Coats
(919) 807-4781
Governor’s Census Liaison

Strategic Management
North Carolina Office of State Budget and Management
20320 Mail Service Center
Raleigh , NC 27699-0320
_________________________________________________________________________________



As we see from above e mail on ncdata list serve let the REDISTRICTING GAMES in North Carolina begin. It will be very interesting to see if the Republicans will have a open and transparent process in regards to the redistricting of this whole state. There was a meeting on 2-3-11 called take it to raleigh that met at the Greensboro N.C. chambers here is a clip of  the host of this blog talking about redistricting. One note in that the title says 3-3-11 but should say 2-3-11 sorry for that in title.




Let the redistricting games begin and hopefully we will see more compact and non gerrymandered districts for the citizens of North Carolina.


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Monday, January 24, 2011

A Plan for Redistricting Reform in North Carolina by John Hood


With permission from John Hood of Carolina Journal and John Locke Foundation CLICKHERE  . It is time for all in North Carolina to understand the ramifications of what is going to happen in the next few months in regards to redistricting of the whole state.


                                                           John Hood's Daily Journal



                                                       A Plan for Redistricting Reform


                                                                   By John Hood


                                                              December 21, 2010



RALEIGH – For decades, Republican lawmakers in Raleigh complained that their numbers were kept artificially low by Democratic gerrymanders. For decades, many supported reforms of the redistricting process in North Carolina to improve voter information, foster competition, and break up the insularity of the state’s political class.

Then, in 2010, the GOP overcame a Democratic-skewed electoral map and other barriers, thanks to favorable national trends, unprecedented success at candidate recruitment and fundraising, and the unpopularity of Democratic tax increases and politicians. For the first time since the 19th century, Republicans took control of both houses of the North Carolina General Assembly.

They will now feel a temptation to try to use the redistricting process to keep themselves in power. They should resist it, both on principle and political grounds.

The principle is straightforward: voters must retain ultimate sovereignty in any representative government. Because American polities are organized around winner-take-all districts, rather than a parliamentary system of proportional representation, policymakers should avoid drawing district maps that create large gaps between vote totals and political power.

Electoral gerrymanders aren’t just opportunities for political mischief. They do real damage to self-government. When counties, municipalities, and other geographical communities are shredded into bits of thread and stitched into weird paisley designs on a map, it robs voters of basic information – who represents me? – and makes it harder to ensure effective legislative representation.

I know plenty of politicians and activists, on both sides of the aisle, who agree with these objections to gerrymandering in principle but fail to act on them. Don’t assume they are just power-hungry miscreants. While they may value a fair, competitive electoral system, they are loathe to imperil other goals they value more highly – such as protecting certain government programs or passing new ones they have long favored.

Again, it’s an understandable temptation. But human beings are always surrounded by temptations. Ethical behavior consists largely of resisting temptations and foregoing immediate gratification for the sake of some greater benefit in the future.


So, redistricting reform is a worthy cause. The details are critically important, however. Some brand-new converts to the cause – certain Democratic politicians who have just lost power, for example – seem to think that creating an independent commission to draw districts is redistricting reform. They are mistaken. I favor the use of a carefully constructed commission to apply neutral rules for redistricting. But the rules are the key here, not the process for applying them.

As it happens, North Carolina has already been through a round of redistricting reform, thanks to the Stephenson v. Bartlett litigation of 2001-03. The state supreme court ultimately ruled that, as much as possible, lawmakers were required to harmonize their obligations under the federal Voting Rights Act with the state constitution’s requirement that county lines be respected when drawing districts. The resulting maps were far from perfect, and retained a Democratic tilt, but they were a clear improvement over the egregious gerrymander initially passed by the legislature in 2001.

No such precedent binds lawmakers when drawing North Carolina’s congressional maps. And within populous counties such as Wake, Mecklenburg, Guilford, and Forsyth, county-based constraints are irrelevant. That’s one big reason there are more competitive legislative districts in rural areas than in urban ones.

Democrats now suddenly say an independent commission should draw the 2011 maps. Republicans say the timing is problematic, and they are right. To create a true commission system would require amending the state’s constitution, which currently allocates sole redistricting authority to elected lawmakers. To set up some kind of commission-lite by statute would invite chaos, delay, and likely litigation. Keep in mind that every step has to be approved by the U.S. Justice Department, and that lawmakers could still reject a statutory commission’s maps and start over if they didn’t like them.

Here’s how I suggest the new General Assembly proceed with redistricting reform:


• Leaders of both houses and the new redistricting committees should commit themselves to neutral, binding constraints such as compactness and respecting jurisdictional lines. The goal should be to devise rules that limit the degrees of freedom any political cartographers would have, be they elected or appointed. The leaders should also hold open hearings and welcome suggestions from individuals and organizations of all political stripes.

• Next, they should prepare and vote on maps within the first four months of the 2011 legislative session. That should be enough time to get them cleared by Washington and in place so candidates can start planning their 2012 campaigns.

• Finally, lawmakers should prepare a constitutional amendment codifying these rules and creating a commission system. It should be submitted for voter approval in the 2012 general election, to allow for careful design and deliberation, ensure the highest possible turnout, and remove any doubt as to the public’s preferences.

I mentioned earlier that principle isn’t the only reason why Republicans should avoid the gerrymandering temptation. There’s a political reason, too. As Democrats have recently learned to their dismay, favorable districts are no guarantee of future success, particularly in the latter elections of a decade of rapid population growth. There’s no way of knowing who will be in charge of the General Assembly in 2021.

So think of redistricting reform as an insurance policy. It may cost you a bit up front, but it can protect you against catastrophic loss in the future.

Hood is president of the John Locke Foundation


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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Redistricting in North Carolina from the Hickory Daily Record

A few days ago the Hickory Daily Record  CLICKHERE has a post titled "Redistricting Should Reflect Public Will". It is great to see other newspapers all over this state post articles on this important issue to citizens all over this great state of North Carolina.

In the post this was said:

"It’s not time for revenge; it’s time to realistically reshape the state.



If at all possible, counties should not be broken up into a hodge-podge of districts.


North Carolina is subdivided by counties. Legislative districts should reflect those divisions. Fashioning piecemeal districts to promote one party’s candidate has long been criticized by Republicans.


The GOP majority cannot forget that."

Could not have said it better myself. We will see what happens in the next few months and if the republican party will have a open process on redistricting but it is time to have reasonable districts that adhere to some geographic or county line provisions .




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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Congressman Brad Miller TIme To Get out of Guilford County

HT: Antics Road Show CLICKHERE

Please see the post by jon on this issue above. Redistricting is going to come and go as quickly as we can say go and it is very important for all involved to know how we feel. In the post at antics road show it shows the map of Congressman Brad Miller's district which goes from raleigh all the way dipping down into guilford county as well.

Here is a quote from the post

"The 13th district as drawn is an outrage and an afront to the citizens of Guilford County, that will hopefully be corrected by the current legislature."

Well said and agree 100%. It is time for Congressman Brad Miller to get out of Guilford County .


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Monday, January 17, 2011

North Carolina Redistricting Court Cases from the Past 10 Years, Pender County Case Was Huge

Below is a accumulation of the past 10 years in regards to redistricting court cases in North Carolina that are very significant and one of the most important cases was the Supreme Court case in Pender County which you will see below.
HAT TIP  National Conference of State Legislatures CLICKHERE

North Carolina


Stephenson v. Bartlett, No. 1 CV 02885 (Superior Court, Johnston Co., Feb. 20, 2002)

On February 15, 2002, four days after the Justice Department told the State that its House and Senate district plans met the requirements of the Voting Rights Act, a state court ruled from the bench that the plans violated a provision of the North Carolina constitution that requires counties to be kept whole when drawing state House and Senate districts. The state court declined to enjoin use of the districts for the 2002 election, for which filings were to open on February 18, suggesting that new plans could be drawn by the General Assembly in 2003 to govern elections in 2004 and beyond.

On February 20, in its written order, the court did not discuss, distinguish, or mention the opinion of the federal district court in Cavanagh v. Brock, 577 F. Supp. 176 (E.D. N.C. 1983), that the North Carolina constitutional provision prohibiting dividing counties was unenforceable under § 5 of the Voting Rights Act in the 40 counties subject to that section because it was not precleared, and unenforceable in North Carolina’s other 60 counties because it was not severable. The court enjoined use of the districts for the 2002 election, but stayed its order unless and until the stay was removed by the North Carolina Court of Appeals or North Carolina Supreme Court, and also until the order was precleared under § 5 of the Voting Rights Act. The court requested the parties to submit a proposed deadline for the General Assembly to redraw the districts and offered to draw a remedial plan for the 2002 election if the deadline were not met and if so directed by the appellate court.


Stephenson v. Bartlett, No. 94P02 (N.C. Feb. 26, 2002)

Without lifting the stay of the Superior Court order holding the North Carolina State House and Senate plans enacted in 2001 to be unconstitutional as dividing too many counties, the North Carolina Supreme Court ordered an expedited appeal schedule. Oral arguments were scheduled for April 4 (candidate filing for the May 7 primary was scheduled to end on March 1, mail-in absentee voting was to be underway by late-March).


Stephenson v. Bartlett (Stephenson I), No. 94PA02, 355 N.C. 354, 562 S.E.2d 377 (Apr. 30, 2002), stay denied 535 U.S. 1301 (May 17, 2002) (Rehnquist, Circuit Justice, in chambers)

The North Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the superior court holding that North Carolina State Senate and State House plans were unconstitutional because of a state constitutional provision saying no counties could be divided, but said that the no-divided-counties provision has limited applicability. First, minority districts must be created to satisfy the Voting Rights Act. Then, counties with enough members for exact multiples of seats must be subdivided into single-member districts while respecting the outer boundary of the county. Then, groups of counties must be assembled and divided into single member districts that respect the outer boundary of the group of counties. The new plan must not cause the opportunities for minorities to regress, using the 2001 precleared plan as the benchmark. The district court was ordered to hold an expedited hearing on whether the General Assembly was capable of redrawing the districts in time for the 2002 election. If not, the district court was authorized to impose a temporary plan of its own for use in the 2002 election, subject to being precleared.

Stephenson v. Bartlett, No. 1 CV 02885 (Superior Court, Johnston Co., May 31, 2002)

After the General Assembly enacted new House and Senate plans on May 17, Superior Court Judge Knox V. Jenkins threw them out and drew maps of his own. The court’s House plan was a modification of the one adopted by the General Assembly. The court’s Senate plan was a modification of one submitted to the court by the plaintiffs.

Stephenson v. Bartlett, No. 94PA02 (N.C. June 4, 2002)

The North Carolina Supreme Court denied the State’s request to stay enforcement of the Superior Court’s order and a motion to expedite hearing the State’s appeal. A hearing on the appeal was not likely until January, meaning that the 2002 election was likely to be run using the plans adopted by the Superior Court May 31, 2002.

Board of Elections v. United States, No. 02-1174 (D.D.C. June 27, 2002)

The complaint sought preclearance of both the North Carolina Supreme Court decision of April 30, 2002, in the Stephenson case and the interim plans adopted by the Superior Court May 31, 2002. In the complaint, the State took no position on whether the opinion in Stephenson or the interim plans should be precleared, but said that the federal court was the best forum to resolve those issues. On June 27, 2002, a three-judge court denied the State's motion for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction, saying there was no showing of irreparable harm, since the state court plan would not be implemented without Section 5 preclearance and the federal court for the Eastern District of North Carolina could further compress the election schedule to allow a second primary (presumably buying some time by having less than four weeks between the two primaries). The court declined to decide whether it had jurisdiction to issue the orders, saying that the federal court in two pending cases in the Eastern District of North Carolina, Sample v. Jenkins, No. 20-CV-383 (E.D.N.C. filed June 13, 2002) and Foreman v. Bartlett, No. 01-CV-166 (E.D.N.C. filed Nov. 13, 2001) would have authority to grant relief. The court noted that the Department of Justice would have a decision on the Section 5 submittals of the Stephenson case and the Jenkins plan by the week of July 8, 2002.

Sample v Jenkins, No. 20-CV-383 , (E.D. N.C. July 2, 2002)

A three-judge court unanimously denied the State’s motion for a preliminary injunction to conduct the 2002 state legislative election under the precleared legislatively-enacted 2001 plan, rather than an interim state court ordered plan that was still pending Section 5 preclearance at the Department of Justice.

On July 12, 2002, the Department of Justice precleared both the new interpretation of the North Carolina constitutional requirement to preserve whole counties announced in the Stephenson decision and the new legislative districts drawn by Judge Jenkins.

Stephenson v. Bartlett (Stephenson II), No. 94PA02-2, 357 N.C. 301, 582 S.E.2d 247 (July 16, 2003)

The appeal of the May 31, 2002, decision of the Superior Court holding unconstitutional both the Senate and House plans drawn by the General Assembly was heard on the merits by the North Carolina Supreme Court on March 10, 2003. On March 14, the court certified the matter to the trial court for additional findings of fact. On April 17, 2003, the trial court certified the additional findings of fact to the Supreme Court. On July 16, 2003, the North Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the trial court holding both Senate and House plans invalid. It noted the trial court had found that the House plan violated § 2 of the Voting Rights Act because it did not create a second “VRA” district in Wake County, which plaintiffs’ plan showed it was possible to do, and that the Senate plan violated § 2 of the Voting Rights Act because it did not create “VRA” districts in Wake, Mecklenburg, and Forsyth counties that were as “effective” as those drawn by plaintiffs. No. 94PA02-2, slip op. at 8-9. The trial court had found that both Senate and House plans violated the requirement of the state constitution that “[e]ach . . . district shall at all times consist of contiguous territory.” N.C Const., art. II, §§ 3(2), 5(2). No. 94PA02-2, slip op. at 10. The trial court had opined that “the mathematical concept of ‘point contiguity’ does not meet the Stephenson criteria for contiguity . . . .” and held that “the term ‘contiguity,’ as used in Stephenson, means that two districts must share a common boundary that touches for a non-trivial distance . . . .” No. 94PA02-2, slip op. at 15. The trial court had found that both the Senate and House plans violated the whole-county provision (WCP) of the state constitution, N.C Const., art. II, §§ 3(3), 5(3), because plaintiffs’ plan showed that it was possible to keep more counties whole without violating federal law. No. 94PA02-2, slip op. at 9. The trial court had found that both the Senate and House plans violated the direction of the North Carolina Supreme Court that “non-VRA districts shall be compact” (referring to Stephenson v. Bartlett, 355 N.C. 354, 383, 562 S.E.2d 377, 397 (2002) (“Stephenson I”)). Finally, the trial court had found that both plans unnecessarily divided communities of interest, No. 94PA02-2, slip op. at 11-15, contrary to the mandate of Stephenson I that “communities of interest should be considered in the formation of compact and contiguous districts.” 355 N.C. at 384, 562 S.E.2d at 397.

Stephenson v. Bartlett, 358 N.C. 219, 595 S.E.2d 112 (Apr. 22, 2004)

On November 25, 2003, along with the new legislative redistricting plan it enacted in compliance with the North Carolina Supreme Court’s decision of July 16, 2003, the General Assembly enacted 2003 N.C. Session Law 434, §§ 7-11, codified at N.C.G.S. §§ 1-81.1, 1-267.1, 120-2.3, and 120-2.4, which provided that venue in any action involving redistricting lies exclusively with the Superior Court, Wake County and that legal challenges to legislative redistricting plans must be heard by a three-judge panel appointed by the Chief Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court. No judge who had been a member of the General Assembly could serve on the panel. Redistricting actions pending in a court other than Superior Court, Wake County, had to be transferred to that court. If a court were to find a redistricting plan flawed, the General Assembly would have to be given an opportunity to correct any defects before the court imposed a substitute plan. Plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of the law. The North Carolina Supreme Court held that: (1) the session law establishing three-judge panels for challenges to redistricting plans and placing venue for the challenges in Wake County could be applied to plaintiffs; (2) the three-judge panel requirement did not unconstitutionally create a new court; (3) the venue provision was constitutional; and (4) the three-judge panel requirement did not unconstitutionally infringe on the Chief Justice’s powers.


Pender County v. Bartlett, No. 103A06, 361 N.C. 491, 649 S.E.2d 364 (Aug. 24, 2007), aff’d sub nom. Bartlett v. Strickland, No. 07-689 (Mar. 9, 2009)

The 2003 General Assembly enacted a new legislative redistricting plan, Act of Nov. 25, 2003, ch. 434, 2003 N.C. Sess. Laws (1st Extra Sess. 2003) 1313. Past election results in North Carolina had demonstrated that a legislative district with an African American voting age population of at least 38.37 percent created an opportunity for African Americans to elect a candidate of their choice. In the area that encompassed Pender and New Hanover Counties, it was possible to draw a House district with an African American voting age population in excess of that threshold. In accordance with what the General Assembly said were the requirements of § 2 of the Voting Rights Act, chapter 434 divided Pender County between House District 16 and House District 18, with District 18 having an African American voting age population of 39.36 percent. Pender County sued various officials of the State Board of Elections, the General Assembly, and the executive branch, alleging that chapter 434 violated the whole-county provision (WCP) of the state constitution, N.C Const., art. II, §§ 3(3), 5(3). Defendants responded that the division of Pender County was required by § 2 of the Voting Rights Act, which trumped the State Constitution. The Chief Justice appointed a three-judge panel to consider the case. The panel denied a motion to enjoin use of chapter 434 for the 2004 election. The panel found that House District 18 was a crossover district, where African Americans enjoyed reliable support from some members of the White majority who crossed over racial lines and voted for the minority’s preferred candidate, allowing that candidate to be elected. Therefore, the panel concluded that dividing Pender County was required by § 2 of the Voting Rights Act.


On appeal, the North Carolina Supreme Court reversed. It recognized four distinct types of minority districts: (1) “majority-minority” districts, (2) “coalition” districts, (3) “crossover” districts, and (4) “influence” districts. It observed that the courts of appeals in five federal circuits (4th, 5th, 7th, 10th, and 11th) had held that nothing less than a “majority-minority” district, i.e., a minority population of at least 50 percent of the voting age population, was sufficient to make out a violation of § 2, and that no circuit had held that § 2 could be satisfied by the creation of a coalition, crossover, or influence district. The Court also noted that citizenship must be considered, so that a majority of the voting age population who are citizens is required. It found the use of a “bright line rule” to be more practical than one requiring an assessment of past voting behavior and a prediction of future voting trends. It would provide the General Assembly with a safe harbor when drawing districts and foreclose marginal claims by minority groups with smaller populations. In view of the fact that the General Assembly was not scheduled to reconvene until after the close of filings for the 2008 election, the Court stayed its order requiring the General Assembly to redraw the districts until after the 2008 election.


Bartlett v. Strickland, No. 07-689 (Mar. 9, 2009)

On appeal, a 5-4 majority of the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the North Carolina Supreme Court. In an opinion by Justice Kennedy, joined by Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito, the Court held that § 2 of the Voting Rights Act does not require creation of a district in which a minority population has a fair opportunity to elect a representative of its choice if the minority would constitute less than a majority of the voting age population in the district. On the other hand, the Court said that “Our holding does not apply to cases in which there is intentional discrimination against a racial minority.” Slip op. at 15. The Court also endorsed the voluntary use of crossover districts to comply with § 2 and to maximize minority voting strength. Slip op. at 19-21. Justices Thomas and Scalia concurred in the judgment. Justices Souter, Stevens, Ginsburg, and Breyer dissented.

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