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2nd NC redistricting map more pointed than 1st one.

When the first North Carolina redistricting map came out at the beginning of July, Democrats of course bawled like stuck calves. Speaking objectively, this wasn’t a surprise: the way that it was set up, it put four Democratic Congressmen – Larry Kissell, Mike McIntyre, Brad Miller, & Heath Shuler – at a serious disadvantage in the 2012 elections. Put simply, the map threatened to flip NC from 6/7 GOP/DEM to 8/5 GOP/DEM, or even 10/3. If you examine the previous map, you’ll understand why such a dramatic shift; the Democrats went notoriously overboard in gerrymandering in 2000, when they controlled the process. In short, we had a humdinger of a karmic adjustment going on in North Carolina.

But then something interesting happened: Rep. GK Butterfield (D, NC-01) started complaining. Rep. Butterfield is a beneficiary (along with Rep. Mel Watts of NC-12) of the racial gerrymandering system set up in response to the Voting Rights Act; and he made some rather pointed objections to the first map, arguing that it ‘disenfranchised’ some of his former constituents by moving them into majority-white districts. North Carolinan Republicans thought about it – and must have decided that they agreed, because they went into the maps again and redrew both Butterfield’s and Watt’s districts to make them more in line with the VRA’s perceived guidelines.

Of course, that meant that they had to… make some unavoidable choices:

The new map draws Democratic Reps. Brad Miller and David Price together into Price’s 4th district and puts Democratic Reps. Mike McIntyre and Larry Kissell together in Kissell’s 8th district. The first version of the map did not pair any incumbents together and the latest, and likely final version, looks substantially different from that draft and the current map.

Glenn Reynolds thinks that the Department of Justice is going to intervene on this one, but I’m not exactly sure how they can justify a Voting Rights Act violation when the state legislature can clearly show that they have scrupulously preserved minority representation in the state of North Carolina, to the point of swiftly and decisively addressing issues brought forth by existing minority legislators. That doing so puts the thumbscrews to four Democratic legislators is not in fact the state legislature’s problem – and neither should it be the problem of the Justice Department; political parties are not (and should not be) protected classes. Put another way: elections have consequences, and one of them is that when you’ve spent ten years profiting from a blatantly unfair redistricting map, your political opponents are unlikely to be sympathetic when it turns out that you don’t like the new one. And if reinforcing the lesson can be accomplished by giving you what you want, good and hard… well, they’ll be happy to oblige.

Moe Lane (crosspost)

COMMENTS

  • earlgrey

    Littlte by little we have to take the country back. I was hoping that in 2009 everyone would just wake up and realize where we were headed, but that didn’t happen. I guess it will take time. Hopefullly this is a sign of more progress to come.

  • http://impudent.edublogs.org/ kyle8

    Is that most of the racial gerrymandering has helped the GOP, in that it has successfully “Ghettoized” the minority vote. This has allowed many districts that are marginally suburban or rural to go Republican.

  • philhoganjr

    And bigger picture, might I add so much for the democratic beachhead in Virginia and North Carolina. Thankfully the South is back to being a place where liberalism is not welcomed.

  • Adjoran

    They obviously have no reason to intervene, but Holder has never let nagging details like “the law” get in his way before.

  • acat

    when his replacement drops the case?

    Mew

  • Ned Reck

    In the interest of G.K. Butterfield… maybe we can get a third map to be even more pointed than the first two.

    Thanks for postin’, Moe… good news at a time when there ain’t much.

    Ned Reck

  • victrola

    Not a single voter will go into the voting booth and cast a vote one way or another because of state redistricting issues. Ignore the howls and gnashing of teeth, iIf you have control, you take advantage of it, pedal to the medal. Democrats do it every time they can, and so should Republicans.

  • Finrod

    .

  • carolina

    I hope the other newly GOP controlled state legislatures are just as focused.

  • LISA BULLOCK-HOCK

    You think instead of intervening here he would try the Black Panther guys for voter intimidation??? Wouldn’t that be his job???

  • lineholder

    Civitas poll in state has 14 point decrease in Obama approval since May
    http://www.nccivitas.org/2011/civitas-poll-obama-sees-14-point-drop-in-job-approval-rating/

    Plus, there’s a lot going on in the NC General Assembly. Gov. Purdue had vetoed several bills right after the session recess. Now that the assembly is back, along with redistricting, they’re working on over-riding some of those vetoes.

    http://www.ncga.state.nc.us/

  • sarg01

    … you know, the 11 percent that say they approve of Obama’s performance.

  • http://www.hyslip.net thyslip

    I don’t see why the voting rights act would apply to the redistricting, since the Supreme court ruled in 1992, Miller v. Johnson, that a Congressional redistricting plan which had created minority majority districts in Georgia as unconstitutional gerrymander. NC Should stick with the orginial plan

  • dilligas

    I can’t quite make it out, but it appears that between map 2 has drawn me out of the 12th district and allows me to be in a district that an election can actually occur.

  • http://www.erickerickson.org Erick Erickson

    Contact me if you want your account back on, but you’re going to need to stop using our data as your home page to get reactivated. That’s kind of a rather significant copyright violation ? and against us no less.

    Appreciate the support, but we have to draw a line somewhere.