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Friday, May 23, 2008
An intriguing institutional design question: shadow redistricting commissions
Heather K. Gerken
Three weeks ago I published an op-ed in the Legal Times proposing that we create shadow districting commissions to mitigate the problem of partisanship in redistricting (follow-up blogs can be found here and here). During an informal workshop discussion of the idea here at Yale, I realized that "shadow institutions" -- like my shadow districting commission or Ned Foley's amicus court proposal – present an intriguing set of institutional design questions.
Comments:
The true final solution is proportional representation. Anything less is vulnerable to gerrymandering, and nominally non-partisan redistricting will, for anything short of committee chosen by lottery, (Fat chance of that!) eventually be compromised. More likely start out compromised.
I emphatically agree with Brett about the importance of proportional representation. Non-partisanship, no matter how sincere, cannot resolve the conflict between competitive elections and representative outcomes that is inherent in single-member districts.
Having said that, I think "here to there" mechanisms, especially those based on the Citizens Assembly concept, have a role to play in getting us started in that direction. And redistricting seems like one logical place to begin. While the benefit of fairer district lines is very limited, it is nonetheless real. Given enough grant money, I don't see why a shadow commission couldn't be structured as a Citizens' Assembly in the way Prof. Gerken suggests. The odds of getting such a project done as a shadow institution are much greater than getting it done as official redistricting reform.
We had a positive experience in 2001 shadow mapping the state legislature's Congressional and state legislative plans with the nonpartisan voter organization, MassVOTE (www.massvote.org). We mapped every new plan floated by the House and Senate redistricting committees.
Two results - 1. We became a partner with the Senate defeating a House/Speaker led proposal to remove Rep Marty Meehan, from office by eliminating his district and reshaping the state map for no reason. 2.More of a surprise was his last minute plan to racially gerrymander Boston's 17 House districts, including his own. His intentlept out of our mapping software just in time to get standing and sue. A 3 judge panel found our coalition of voters and voting rights groups. FOr good measure accused him of dissembling on the stand getting him a criminal charge later. The trial changed the dynamics of voting in Boston, encouraging a number of new candidates of color to run - and win. Voter participation rose though other factors were in play. We hope to expand this to other states this time, with more partners along the lines suggested by Professor Gerken.
Without a Legal Times subscription, I can't see your article and find your answer to the question that occurred to me at once: who pays for the shadow redistricting commission?
I see it's intended to be "private"; the funding source could taint the result as putatively "too liberal", "too conservative" etc. But maybe this wouldn't be an expensive undertaking, and no doubt there are creative ways around the problem, e.g., give the governor and majority party opponent the chance to appoint some of the members, presumably without paying for it.
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