Testimony Begins in Lawsuit Over Legality of Texas Political Districts

ELECTION

Attorneys  for several civil rights groups dug into the districts drawn for Texas  Congressional and State House of Representatives members in a federal courtroom here today, as  they try to convince a three judge panel that the Republicans who  dominate the state government intentionally drew the lines to  discriminate against minority voters, News Radio 1200 WOAI reports.

The state doesn't deny that many Texas political districts are  serpentine to the extreme, but state lawyers claim that the districts  were drawn for Republican partisan advantage, which is legal, and not  for racial or ethnic disadvantage, which is not.  

But the question confronting the three federal judges who are  considering the case will be; at a time when Texas, like many states, is  increasingly dividing politically along racial lines, with more Anglo  residents leaning Republican and most minorities, including Hispanics, African Americans, and Asians, leaning Democrat, how can you  tell the two apart.  

"Look at the districts we have right now," said U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar  (D-Laredo), who's district winds more than 150 miles through remote  south Texas to connect parts of San Antonio with the City of Laredo.   "Every district is very Republican or very Democrat.  Does that really help the system?" 

 Lawyers for the Mexican American Legislative Caucus, one of the groups  challenging the redistricting efforts, today grilled the state's map  makers on districts which wind through swamps, leap over rivers and  bays, and, in many cases, bunch African Americans, Hispanics, and Asians from separate communities and, sometimes, separate  counties into the same district to 'pack,' in the words of  demographers, them together to free up several other districts to create  a majority for the largely Anglo Republican vote.  

Cuellar says this is precisely the reason why such extreme political  polarization exists in America, because many politicians are more likely  to fear a primary challenge from an opponent in their own party who  feels that are 'not Democrat enough' or a 'Republican in name only,' than they are to face an opponent from the other party.  

"So there are people who are not willing to cross the aisle," he said.  "They want to play to their party base."  These judicial panels earlier this year ruled that both sets of district  lines are illegal, because they were drawn with an 'intentional goal'  of diminishing minority votes.  

It's a charge that baffles prominent Republican consultant and Travis County Republican Chairman Matt Mackowiak.  

"Why would we want to reject Hispanic voters," he said.  "We want to get  their votes.  Hispanics are soon going to be a larger number of Texas  voters than Whites are.  We see them as future Republicans and we have  to go get their votes." 

 Several observers say the Democrats' goal in this fight, which has been  underway non stop since Republicans took control of the Texas  Legislature in the 2003 session and immediately redrew the state's  political boundaries, is to get the court to order oversight of some sort, by either the three judge panel itself or the U.S.  Department of Justice, so the Republicans who are likely to still  control the state Legislature after the 2020 Census, will have somebody  'looking over their shoulder' when they redraw the maps again. 

 And behind all this looms a U.S. Supreme Court case out of Wisconsin,  which is set to be heard next term, which will examine whether redrawing  district boundaries for political advantage is legal.  

Mackowiak says, welcome to American politics.  

"The party that is in power always tries to use redistricting to their  advantatge, we see that in Texas on the Republican side, we see that in  California on the Democratic side.  How can it be that 98% of members of  Congress get re-elected every year, when Congress as a 15% approval rating?"                 

   


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