Press Release: UpVote Virginia, Nonpartisan Democracy Reform Collective, Launches in Richmond

August 16, 2022

Organization aims to elevate the voices of Virginia voters through making elections stronger and more equitable, including its first flagship issue: Ranked Choice Voting

 

RICHMOND, VA – Today, a newly-formed nonpartisan democracy reform collective called UpVote Virginia officially launched at an event featuring founding Executive Director Liz White, a bipartisan lineup of elected officials, and a panel of nationally-renowned experts on electoral law. 

UpVote Virginia is dedicated to ensuring that Virginia leads the way in improving the structure of our electoral system to better reflect the will of voters, thus providing for a more representative, inclusive, open, and transparent government. The organization aims to build on Virginia’s recent momentum on voting rights by elevating the voices of all Virginia voters through nonpartisan education, advocacy, and grassroots engagement. 

“In Virginia, voters are standing up and affecting change by focusing on foundational, nonpartisan solutions that can improve our democracy,” said founding Executive Director Liz White in a launch video. “Now it’s time to build on this momentum and set the stage for years to come.” See Liz White’s full remarks here.

Newly-installed Board President Kathy Utgoff added, “UpVote Virginia’s focus will always be on voters, not politics. Although we are a movement of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents, our operation will be nonpartisan. We recognize that hyperpartisan influences have often gotten in the way of progress when it comes to preserving the health of our democratic systems and the fairness of our representation.”

In the organization’s previous iteration as OneVirginia2021, thousands of grassroots volunteers successfully campaigned to end single-party control of redistricting, establishing what many nonpartisan experts agree are “some of the fairest district maps in the country.”

“With the launch of UpVote Virginia, we hope to start a new conversation about democracy reform in Virginia. Not only do we have a new name, but we have new leadership, and a new slate of issues that aim to modernize our electoral system while also making our government more transparent and accessible,” said White.

These issues include expanding voter access, campaign finance/ethics reform, fully independent redistricting, and UpVote Virginia’s first flagship issue: Ranked Choice Voting. 

Also known as “instant runoff voting,” Ranked Choice Voting has been gaining momentum in localities and states across America, including right here in Virginia. This is a simple way to ensure that our voting process is more representative of the electorate while also incentivizing candidates who build consensus. Read more about Ranked Choice Voting here.

 At today’s launch event, both Governor George Allen and Congressman Don Beyer spoke about their shared support of Ranked Choice Voting.

In his prepared remarks, Governor Allen noted that the law allowing localities to adopt a Ranked Choice Voting pilot program (HB1103), “was supported by the most conservative Republicans, moderates, and the most liberal Democrats. And that’s because this doesn’t benefit one party over another. It benefits the voters; the people of Virginia [because] their will is better reflected.” See Governor Allen’s full remarks here.

Congressman Beyer said, “George Allen and I aren’t always at the same events, but Ranked Choice Voting brings people together, no matter their political leanings. This is an issue that puts the will of the voters front and center.” He added, “I’ve been a strong supporter of democracy reform for a long time, [because] we know how tenuous and fragile American democracy can be.” See Congressman Beyer’s full remarks here.

The virtual launch event also featured a panel discussion with two national experts on democracy reform: Danielle Allen of Harvard University’s Safra Center for Ethics and Kathay Feng of Common Cause.  See their entire conversation here.

In the coming weeks, Executive Director Liz White will be traveling around Virginia to hold grassroots volunteer recruitment events.

Additional information about UpVote Virginia’s launch, platform, leadership changes, and how to get involved can be found at UpVoteVA.org.

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UpVote Virginia is a registered 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) nonprofit organization dedicated to elevating the voices of Virginia voters through nonpartisan education, advocacy, and grassroots engagement. As a democracy reform collective, UpVote Virginia will focus on multiple issues related to making our elections stronger and more equitable, including its first flagship issue: Ranked Choice Voting. Learn more at UpVoteVA.org.

Virginian-Pilot Letters: Less partisanship

August 5 | James Shull, Norfolk

I know I’m not the only one repulsed by watching our democracy crumble in slow motion as partisan ideologues champion strong-man leaders who would “fix things” by executive action and erode democratic processes. The political structural problem lies heartily within the process of the primaries. As an alternative to this, a structurally superior and constitutionally legal voting method: ranked choice voting. It does much to eliminate the self-perpetuating bipartisan rancor.

Ranked-choice voting promises to reduce the need for both far-right and far-left ideologue candidates to appeal to just the party purists, and instead to build a broader message to a wider span of voters. That’s the rapidly growing quantity of us who feel that both parties have left us behind as they both grow more ideologically unhinged. Further, ranked-choice voting promises not to leave the many, many military voters as basically uncounted when they have to vote early absentee for certain ballot candidates. It makes for more positive campaigning, as candidates will be motivated to pick up secondary votes from resulting runoffs. You can see it working already at state and/or municipal levels in Alaska, Maine, Hawaii, Utah and others.

No matter what political flavor you subscribe to, if you truly are frustrated with the bipartisan wasteland, join us in organizations, such as FairVote and Veterans for Political Innovation, working to make ranked-choice voting the reality at local, state and national elections. Fixing the primaries is within reach. I, for one, am fed up with watching it all come apart.

See the letter here.

Federal judge throws out second redistricting suit seeking new Va. House elections

The sun rises over the Virginia Capitol. (Ned Oliver/Virginia Mercury)

By Graham Moomaw | August 1, 2022

A federal judge on Monday dismissed a last-ditch effort to force new Virginia House of Delegates elections in November, concluding the pandemic-related delay in the state’s redistricting process can’t justify the “extreme” step of ordering an election do-over.

In a 49-page opinion, U.S. District Judge David. J. Novak ruled the plaintiffs in the case don’t have standing to sue the state and the federal courts lack the authority to order a new election. With early voting for the 2022 elections set to begin next month, Monday’s ruling appears to be the end of the line for efforts to hold new House elections this year.

The case centered on the constitutionality of Virginia’s 2021 elections and the state’s seeming inability to redraw its political maps on schedule due to the late arrival of 2020 U.S. Census data. 

The legal challengers argued the state violated Virginians’ voting rights by failing to conduct redistricting on time and allowing impermissibly large differences in population size among House districts that are supposed to contain roughly the same number of people. The state defended the process on largely technical grounds, suggesting the delay was out of its control and the matter has already been resolved by the drawing of new House maps that will be used in the 2023 General Assembly elections.

Novak, the same judge who dismissed a similar suit this year brought by Democratic attorney Paul Goldman, wrote that “the global pandemic delayed the reapportionment process just as it disrupted nearly every aspect of American life.” Virginia will hold its 2023 elections, Novak said, “using different maps drawn by the Supreme Court of Virginia in accord with the Constitution of Virginia.”

“Accordingly, this federal court cannot usurp the authority that the Constitution grants Virginia over its elections and, therefore, cannot grant the relief requested by plaintiffs,” Novak wrote. “At bottom, plaintiffs claim an injury that defendants did not cause and that the court cannot redress.”

The plaintiffs in the second case were Jeff Thomas, a Richmond-area author of several books on state government, Loudoun County NAACP President Michelle Thomas, and Loudoun resident Phillip Thompson, a voting rights activist who closely followed the state’s redistricting process.

The more recent lawsuit brought in new legal issues than those raised by Goldman, allowing arguments that minority voters in Loudoun, one of the state’s fastest-growing localities over the last decade, were particularly harmed by having their votes count less than those of Virginians in more sparsely populated areas.

“Taking away people’s rights seems to be what federal courts are doing these days, consistent with today’s radical reinterpretation of the long-settled right to one-person one-vote,” Jeff Thomas said after the ruling was issued. “It’s not surprising: it’s straight politics.”

Though the state suggested any harm from the redistricting delay had already been resolved with the drawing of new House districts, Goldman and Thomas said they were being continually harmed by living under an improperly elected legislative chamber.

Novak rejected those claims, saying any harm was minimal and not sufficient to warrant the extraordinary step of dissolving the current House ahead of schedule.

“Any harm will last only one session of the General Assembly, and could be ameliorated in subsequent terms,” Novak wrote. “Plaintiffs have not specified any particular difficulties they have had or will have with petitioning their delegates that arises from the alleged dilution of their representational strength. Nor have they alleged any actions or inactions by the General Assembly that harmed them.”

The judge faulted the plaintiffs for waiting until June to file the second lawsuit, mere months away from the start of early voting for November’s elections. He also dinged former Attorney General Mark Herring’s office for dragging out the first suit through “inexcusable piecemeal litigation” tactics that delayed it by eight months.

“The court expects more from the Attorney General’s Office, given that it represents the citizens of Virginia,” Novak wrote. “It should seek the speedy and just resolution of disputes affecting the citizens of Virginia, especially those related to the election of Virginia’s representatives. Although the court does not believe that the Attorney General’s Office engaged in any bad faith efforts to stall the litigation, it still finds the litigation conduct unacceptable, and cautions that any such piecemeal litigation in the future will not be tolerated.”

Herring’s office filed an appeal in the early stages of the Goldman case, leading to months of arcane legal wrangling over which issues were before which judges without fundamentally altering the direction of the case.

Attorney General Jason Miyares, a Republican who defeated Herring last year, took over the state’s defense upon taking office in January.

“I’m glad that the court once again agreed with my office, that there is no more uncertainty for voters and legislators, and that we were able to protect the integrity and validity of our 2021 elections,” Miyares said in a statement Monday.

Last month, a federal appeals court upheld Novak’s dismissal of Goldman’s lawsuit.

See the full article here.

FairVote: A Voter’s Perspective on “Gerrymander USA”

By Cristin Merker, July 19, 2022

When my colleagues shared Jesse Wegman and Damon Winter’s new article, “Gerrymander USA,” I knew I wanted to read it based on the topic alone – gerrymandering is an incredibly important issue. I just wasn’t expecting to read this article and discover it was about where I grew up – a large swath of land where “cattle outnumber voters” called the Panhandle of Texas, or the High Plains.

I grew up in Dalhart, Texas – about 30 miles from the small town of Texline that the article uses to represent the (extremely) rural west end of Texas’s 13th Congressional District. I can still remember when a McDonald’s opened when I was in high school -- very few things in my life since then have been able to compete with that level of excitement I had that day. As the article points out, this area is a “right wing fortress.” It was that way when I lived there, when my grandparents lived there, and probably when my great and great-great-grandparents lived there. According to the Cook Partisan Voting Index, the 13th is one of the most Republican districts in the nation. And while I no longer live on the High Plains, I understand the area, the people, and appreciate my time there.

Americans are known worldwide for being an independent people. And there is no American more independently minded than a person who grew up on the High Plains. It’s one of the last regions in the United States to be settled by (non-native) Americans, and the people of this region have always had to scrape by with every ounce of strength in them. The summer days are often over 100 degrees, while winters include large snowfalls and subzero temperatures. The average wind speed is one of the highest in the nation, while the average rainfall is about half the average of the United States. This region was not, and is not, for the faint of heart. 

So naturally, the people of the High Plains don’t take kindly to “city folk” who seemingly have a much easier life. If the representation of the Panhandle was determined by city dwellers in Denton or Dallas, there would be an uproar you could hear all the way to New York City (and talk of secession would increase to, say, 300 times a year instead of the usual 150). 

But that’s not what’s happening. In fact, based on the new U.S. House redistricting lines, it’s quite the opposite. The people of the High Plains are now speaking for those city folk – the urban voters who would drive by a feed yard and call the herd behind the pens “cows” instead of “cattle." So why are the voters in Texline, Texas competing against voters in Denton, Texas for the same single member of Congress?

Because of our single-member, winner-take-all electoral system. Under the current rules, every district line becomes a battle line. And the victor of each battle gets “100 percent of the spoils” – even if it’s not always a fair fight. In fact, the politicians who draw the lines have every incentive to tip the scales towards their side. And in Texas, that’s exactly what’s happened. 

For example: as Wegman points out in the article, over 95% of the state’s population growth in the last decade has been an increase in nonwhite people. But though Texas added two more House districts this cycle, there’s no new district where nonwhite voters have the power to elect a candidate of their choice. Though one cannot assume any group of people are a monolith, this may have something to do with the fact that Texas is run by Republicans and over 65% of nonwhite voters in Texas consider themselves Democrats or “Democrat-leaning.” But regardless of their political leanings, the result is that a great number of Texans feel that they aren’t represented in their own state. 

Even within districts, our elections force us into a monolith. In 2020,  Representative Ronny Jackson won the 13th District with 80% of the vote. Even I, who was a part of the 20% who did not vote for him, will agree that he’s the “winner” of that election based on our current electoral system. 

But where does that leave the 20% of the people who did not vote for Jackson? Or the people who did not even bother to vote because they felt it was a “waste of time?” Don’t roughly 150,000 citizens of District 13 deserve to be heard and represented as well? 

Yes. 

And that election was before city-dwellers in Denton were added to our district! The problem is only getting worse – year after year, new battle lines are drawn and the voices of those who think differently are further diminished.

And that’s exactly why I decided to join FairVote and help build on an incredible three decades of work. Because it’s not just about those in the Panhandle of Texas (and even Denton!) who are not Republicans. It’s also about the Republicans in Massachusetts who haven’t elected a Republican member of Congress in decades. It’s about the Californian who does not identify with any major party. Or the Alaskan who passionately supports an independent party candidate. We all deserve to have our voices heard and represented. It doesn’t mean that everything always goes perfectly our way – but it does mean that all voters will have a greater choice and a stronger voice when it comes to their democracy. And that’s why the Fair Representation Act (FRA) in Congress is so important. It gives our citizens, our democracy, a chance.

The FRA (HR 3863) is comprised of three components: ranked choice voting, multimember districts, and requirements for fair congressional redistricting. As Wegman pointed out, multimember districts can “more accurately capture the true shape of the electorate and let everyone’s voice be heard […] It’s no longer a zero-sum game that leaves out millions of Americans.” It doesn’t mean that the Panhandle of Texas would suddenly become a Democrat stronghold or that Seattle would become a Republican battleground. What it would mean is that more voters would have the opportunity to be heard and represented where they are living, working, and paying taxes. It would mean that those running for office would be incentivized to represent all of their constituents.

I want to be heard. To be represented. But I don’t want that to come at the cost of my neighbor becoming disenfranchised or disillusioned. My neighbor and I don’t need to agree on everything (except that 9:00PM is the official trombone playing cut-off time). But we do both deserve to be given what was promised to us as Americans in our Constitution – equitable representation. 

The Fair Representation Act can help us get there.

 

Photo by Cristin Merker
Click here to read the full article.

NYT Opinion: Gerrymander, U.S.A.

By Jesse Wegman, July 12, 2022

The downtown of Denton, Texas, a city of about 150,000 people and two large universities just north of Dallas, exudes the energy of a fast-growing place with a sizable student population: There’s a vibrant independent music scene, museums and public art exhibits, beer gardens, a surfeit of upscale dining options, a weekly queer variety show. The city is also racially and ethnically diverse: More than 45 percent of residents identify as Latino, Black, Asian or multiracial. There aren’t too many places in Texas where you can encounter Muslim students praying on a busy downtown sidewalk, but Denton is one of them.

Drive about seven hours northwest of Denton’s city center and you hit Texline, a flat, treeless square of a town tucked in the corner of the state on the New Mexico border. Cow pastures and wind turbines seem to stretch to the horizon. Texline’s downtown has a couple of diners, a gas station, a hardware store and not much else; its largely white population is roughly 460 people and shrinking.

It would be hard to pick two places more different from one another than Denton and Texline — and yet thanks to the latest round of gerrymandering by Texas’ Republican-dominated Legislature, both are now part of the same congressional district: the 13th, represented by one man, Ronny Jackson. Mr. Jackson, the former White House physician, ran for his seat in 2020 as a hard-right Republican. It turned out to be a good fit for Texas-13, where he won with almost 80 percent of the vote.

This was before the 2020 census was completed and Congress reapportioned, which gave the Texas delegation two more seats for its growing population, for a total of 38. State Republicans, who control the governor’s office and both houses of the Legislature, were free to redraw their district lines pretty much however they pleased. They used that power primarily to tighten their grip on existing Republican seats rather than create new ones, as they had in the 2010 cycle. In the process, they managed to squelch the political voice of many nonwhite Texans, who accounted for 95 percent of the state’s growth over the last decade yet got not a single new district that would give them the opportunity to elect a representative of their choice.

Denton offers a good example of how this played out. Under the old maps, downtown Denton, where the universities lie, was part of the 26th District — a Republican-majority district, but considerably more competitive than the 13th. If Texas politics continue to move left as they have in recent years, the 26th District could have become a tossup. The liberal residents of Denton could have had the chance to elect to Congress a representative of their choosing.

Now that the downtown has been absorbed into the 13th District and yoked to the conservative Texas panhandle, however, they might as well be invisible. Even with the addition of all those younger and more liberal voters, the 13th remains a right-wing fortress, with a 45-point Republican lean, according to an analysis by the website FiveThirtyEight. (The redrawn 26th District, meanwhile, will likely become a few points more Republican in the absence of Denton’s downtown.)

This is the harm of partisan gerrymanders: Partisan politicians draw lines in order to distribute their voters more efficiently, ensuring they can win the most seats with the fewest votes. They shore up their strongholds and help eliminate any meaningful electoral competition. It’s the opposite of how representative democracy is supposed to work.

How is it supposed to work? Politicians are elected freely by voters, and they serve at the pleasure of those voters, who can throw them out if they believe they aren’t doing a good job. Partisan gerrymanders upend that process. Politicians redraw lines to win their seats regardless of whether most voters want them to; in closely fought states like Wisconsin and North Carolina, Republicans drew themselves into control of the legislatures even when Democrats won a majority of votes statewide.

When these gerrymanders become the norm, as they have in the absence of meaningful checks, they silence the voices of millions of Americans, leading people to believe they have little or no power to choose their representatives. This helps increase the influence of the political extremes. It makes bipartisan compromise all but impossible and creates a vicious circle in which the most moderate candidates are the least likely to run or be elected.

Texas Republicans have been especially ruthless at playing this game, but they’re far from alone. Their counterparts in Wisconsin, North Carolina, Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Kansas have taken similar approaches to stack the deck against Democrats. Democrats have likewise gone on offense in states where they control mapmaking, such as in Illinois and Oregon, where lawmakers drew maps for 2022 that effectively erased swaths of Republicans.

The Supreme Court had an opportunity in 2019 to outlaw the worst of this behavior, but it refused to, claiming it had neither the authority nor any clear standards to stop gerrymanders that “reasonably seem unjust.” This was nonsense; lower federal courts and state courts have had no problem coming up with workable standards for years. Court intervention is essential, because voters essentially have no other way of unrigging the system. But the Supreme Court’s conservative majority stuck its head in the sand, giving free rein to the worst impulses of a hyperpolarized society.

As Justice Elena Kagan wrote in dissent: “Of all times to abandon the court’s duty to declare the law, this was not the one. The practices challenged in these cases imperil our system of government. Part of the court’s role in that system is to defend its foundations. None is more important than free and fair elections.”

The Supreme Court isn’t the only institution to shirk its responsibility to make maps fairer. Congress has the constitutional authority to set standards for federal elections, but Republicans have repeatedly blocked efforts by Democrats to require independent redistricting commissions. It doesn’t help matters that most Americans still don’t understand what redistricting is or how it works.

Left to their own devices, states are doing what they can. More than a dozen have created some type of redistricting commission, but the details matter greatly. Some commissions, like California’s and Michigan’s, are genuinely independent — composed of voters rather than lawmakers, and as a result, these states have fairer maps.

Commissions in some other states are more vulnerable to partisan influence because they have no binding authority. In New York, the commission plays only an advisory role, so it was no surprise when Democrats in power quickly took over the process and redrew district lines to ensure that 22 of the state’s 26 seats would be won by their party. The state’s top court struck the Democratic maps down for violating a 2014 amendment to the State Constitution barring partisan gerrymanders — a good decision in a vacuum, perhaps, but the result is more chaos and infighting, because the final maps are forcing several top Democratic lawmakers to face off against one another. Meanwhile in Ohio, where the State Constitution has a similar provision barring partisan gerrymanders, the State Supreme Court repeatedly invalidated Republican-drawn gerrymanders for being unfairly biased, but Republicans have managed to ignore those rulings, and so will end up with the maps they want, at least for this cycle.

The patchwork of litigation and different outcomes around the country only strengthens the case for a national standard, which is nowhere in sight. It’s a maddening situation with no apparent solution — until you widen the lens and look at the larger structure of American government. When you do, it becomes clear that extreme partisan gerrymandering is more a symptom than a cause of democratic breakdown. The bigger problem is that the way we designed our system of political representation incentivizes the worst and most extreme elements of our politics.

On the federal level, at least, there are clear solutions that Congress could adopt tomorrow if it had the will to do so.

First, expand the House of Representatives. As The Times’s editorial board explained in 2018, the House’s membership, 435, is far too small for America in the 21st century. It reached its current size in 1911, when the country had fewer than one-third as many people as it does today, and the national budget was a tiny fraction of its current size. In 1911, each representative had an average of 211,000 constituents — already far more than the founders had envisioned. Today that number is more than 750,000. It is virtually impossible for one person, Ronny Jackson or anyone else, to accurately represent the range of political interests in a district of that size.

Why are we still stuck with a House of Representatives from the turn of the last century? The founders certainly didn’t want it that way; the original First Amendment to the Constitution, which Congress proposed in 1789, would have permanently tied the size of the House to the nation’s population; the amendment fell one state short of ratification.

Still, as the country grew, Congress kept adding seats after every decennial census, almost without fail. After 1911, that process was obstructed by rural and Southern lawmakers intent on stopping the shift in political power to the Northern cities, where populations were exploding. In 1929, Congress passed a law that locked the House size at 435 seats and created an algorithm for reapportioning them in the future.

A bigger House is necessary to more accurately reflect American politics and to bring the United States back in line with other advanced democracies. But on its own, it wouldn’t solve our failure of representation. The larger culprit is our winner-take-all elections: From the presidency down, American electoral politics gives 100 percent of the spoils to one side and zero to the other — a bad formula for compromise at any time and especially dangerous when the country is as polarized as it is today. But at least some of that polarization can be attributed to the manner in which we choose our representatives.

In Congress, districts are represented by a single person, which is harmful in two ways: First, it’s hard to see how one person can adequately represent three-quarters of a million people. Second, even though representatives are supposed to look out for all their constituents, the reality of our politics means most people who didn’t vote for the winner will feel unrepresented entirely.

The solution: proportional multimember districts. When districts are larger and contain three or even five members, they can more accurately capture the true shape of the electorate and let everyone’s voice be heard. And if the candidates are chosen through ranked-choice voting, then Republicans, Democrats and even third parties can win representation in Congress in rough proportion to their vote share. It’s no longer a zero-sum game that leaves out millions of Americans.

The founders were comfortable with multimember districts, just as they were with a House of Representatives that kept expanding. In fact, such districts were common in the early years of the Republic, but Congress outlawed them at the federal level, most recently in 1967, partly out of a concern that Southern lawmakers were using them to entrench white political power — a problem that ranked-choice voting would solve.

These reforms may sound technical, but they are central to saving representative democracy in America.

Click here to read the full article and see the photo essay by Damon Winter.

LWV-VA wins national Powering Democracy Award

In a press release from July 14, 2022, our incredible partners at the League of Women Voters Virginia announced that they had received the LWVUS Powering Democracy Award “for its redistricting work as part of the 50+ state campaign to create People Powered Fair Maps.”

From meticulously blogging every step of the redistricting process, to training the public to fully participate in hearings and online mapping, the League has been a driving force in Virginia’s new redistricting process - many of their members even do double duty as OneVirginia2021 volunteers!

We are so grateful for their partnership and their wonderful work and could not be prouder of them for receiving this honor.

WaPo Opinion: Ranked-choice voting is a more democratic way to choose candidates

Yesli Vega at a Prince William County Board of Supervisors meeting in September 2020. (Salwan Georges/The Washington Post)

Letter to the Editor
By Grace White, Woodbridge
July 8, 2022

Virginia 7th Congressional District Republicans nominated Yesli Vega when she got more votes than five other candidates. But she received only 29 percent of the vote. This means 71 percent of the voters were at least a little disappointed and demonstrates a flaw in how we usually count votes. When there are numerous candidates, receiving the most votes does not necessarily equate to a broad base of support.

In contrast, the 10th Congressional District Republican Committee used a “firehouse primary” and ranked-choice voting (RCV).

RCV allows voters to rank the candidates in order of preference. The first ballot count only considers first-choice votes. If no candidate receives a majority, the candidate with the least first-choice votes is eliminated and votes are recounted using second-choice votes in place of the eliminated candidate. Repeat elimination and recounting until one candidate achieves a majority.

For 10th Congressional District Republicans, ballot counting went nine rounds before Hung Cao won with 52 percent of the vote. Isn’t this how a democracy is supposed to function?

The General Assembly has authorized localities to use RCV in certain local elections. I urge the Prince William County Board of Supervisors to embrace this pilot program. It is a straightforward way to improve how ballots are cast, and it truly reflects the will of the voters.

See the article here.

FiveThirtyEight: How The Supreme Court Could Turbocharge Gerrymandering — Just In Time for 2024

One case next term could see the Supreme Court embrace an extreme legal theory and upend the long-established way that the country administers its elections. 

SARAH L. VOISIN/THE WASHINGTON POST/GETTY IMAGES

By Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux and Nathaniel Rakich

JUL. 7, 2022, AT 6:00 AM

Do state courts have the power to interpret their own state constitutions? The Supreme Court could be poised to say “no” — at least when it comes to redistricting and election law.

Last week, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case Moore v. Harper in the coming fall term. In that case, Republican legislators in North Carolina are asking the court to overturn the state Supreme Court’s decision to throw out their gerrymandered congressional map and impose one of the court’s own

Their argument rests on an extreme reading of the elections clause of the U.S. Constitution that posits that only state legislatures and Congress have the authority to decide how federal elections are run. Under this school of thought, known as the “independent state legislature” theory, state courts would no longer be able to intervene — even when a legislature violated the state’s constitution, as was found to be the case in North Carolina.

The independent state legislature theory is fewer than 25 years old, and for most of its life, it’s been relegated to the fringes of academia. But it was widely promoted by former President Donald Trump and his allies as they attempted to first undermine — and then overturn — the outcome of the 2020 presidential election. And several Supreme Court justices have already suggested that they’re on board with the theory. During litigation over election laws in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin in 2020, Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch endorsed some version of the idea that state legislatures should have nearly unfettered power over how federal elections are run, and earlier this year, they said in an emergency-docket ruling that they would have ruled in favor of the North Carolina legislature.

If the Supreme Court sides with North Carolina Republicans in this case, it would have massive implications for election law. Depending on how the court rules, state courts might no longer be allowed to strike down legislatures’ proposed congressional maps for being gerrymandered. And if this happens, the way American elections are conducted would change in dramatic and destabilizing ways.

Thomas Wolf, deputy director of the Brennan Center’s Democracy Program, said ruling for the North Carolina Legislature would be “stepping into an arrangement of election law that has never governed the country.” An extreme embrace of the theory by the Supreme Court would hand legislatures power over every aspect of how federal elections are run, to the exclusion of not only state courts but also possibly other state actors like governors and election administrators. “It would be a voter suppressor’s fever dream,” Wolf said.

Partisan gerrymandering could get much more extreme

First and foremost, if North Carolina Republicans prevail at the Supreme Court, state courts would lose some of their power to curtail gerrymandering — or maybe all of it. If the court accepts the independent state legislature theory but rules narrowly, it could allow state courts to overturn maps but not redraw them, according to Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at the University of Texas at Austin. “The idea is that there are certain things state courts can’t do,” Vladeck said. “So a state court could look at the legislature’s map and say, ‘Nope, try again.’”

But several more extreme paths are possible too. One option is that state courts might be barred from overturning maps based on vague sections of their state constitutions — like an equal protection clause — which would hamstring their ability to intervene in many states. Or the Supreme Court might simply rule that state courts can’t get involved in partisan gerrymandering disputes at all. That would directly contradict a 2019 ruling where the court’s Republican appointees said that federal courts couldn’t hear challenges to partisan gerrymandering,1 but they explicitly noted that state courts were still free to intervene. But the court is even more conservative than it was then, which means there might be a majority to turn around and limit state courts’ power.

That could mean a lot more work for the federal courts — exactly the kind of work that the justices said three years ago that they didn’t want federal judges to be doing. But it would also likely result in much more aggressive and unfair gerrymanders.

Read the rest of the article here.

WRIC: State argues 2022 Virginia House elections would create ‘chaos’ in electoral process

Virginia State Capitol (Photo: 8News)

By Dean Mirshahi, WRIC, July 5, 2022

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — State lawyers are arguing that a lawsuit to force 2022 Virginia House elections was filed too late, and that adding elections this year would stir up “procedural and administrative chaos” in the electoral process.

The Virginia Attorney General’s Office has defended state election officials in two federal cases seeking to have the Eastern District of Virginia order House of Delegates elections this November under new legislative districts.

The federal court dismissed the first lawsuit for lack of standing nearly a year after it was filed, but the plaintiff has filed an appeal in that case. State lawyers filed a motion on July 1 to have the latest lawsuit thrown out.

“This is a case about delay,” the attorney general’s office wrote in the filing. “Almost a year after the first lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the 2021 House of Delegates election, seven months after that election took place, and just over four months before the 2022 general election, Plaintiffs filed a lawsuit challenging the 2021 election.”

The new lawsuit was initially filed by author Jeff Thomas and later amended to include Loudoun County NAACP president Rev. Michelle C. Thomas and the local chapter’s former president, attorney Phillip Thompson.

The suit asserts the 2021 elections last November were held under a map drawn using 2010 census data that diluted the vote of those living in overpopulated districts. Unlike the previous case, the plaintiffs say they have legal standing to sue because they live in some of the most overpopulated legislative districts and argue that their votes in 2021 were weakened compared to voters in the least populous district.

Among other arguments, the state claims the court can’t provide injunctive relief to events that took place in the past and now lacks jurisdiction as a result.

U.S. District Judge David J. Novak has been critical of the delays that have held up the legal effort, signaling out the office of former Attorney General Mark Herring for “stall tactics” that led the first lawsuit to go through appeals before the issue of legal standing was resolved.

Novak agreed to fast-track the new lawsuit’s schedule, asking the plaintiffs and state to adhere to deadlines for filings so the court can decide on legal standing. The judge also called on the current AG’s office to provide why they have “clean hands” in the state’s previous efforts to keep the case from moving forward.

In the bid to have the lawsuit dismissed, state lawyers argue the case was filed too late and that the Eastern District of Virginia no longer has jurisdiction to rule on its merits.

“Their eleventh-hour filing entirely precludes their relief,” the AG’s office’s motion states. “Waiting more than half a year to challenge the 2021 election stripped this Court of jurisdiction: there is no ongoing conduct to enjoin, leaving this Court without any remedy to redress Plaintiffs’ alleged injuries.”

The state also disputed the plaintiffs’ claims that using districts drawn with 2010 census data for the 2021 House elections violated the Voting Rights Act and the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, pointing to new census data delays at the federal level due to COVID-19.

“These claims fail utterly. Virginia did not violate the Constitution or federal voting-rights laws when delays in the receipt of census data—for which Virginia bore no responsibility—precluded it from conducting redistricting in time for the first election after the decennial census,” the motion to dismiss reads.

The state is calling on the court to bring the lawsuit “to a swift conclusion” with a dismissal, arguing that ordering new House of Delegates elections would lead to “chaos” with the primaries now over and congressional midterms months away.

“And Plaintiffs’ delay precludes equitable relief, which is generally unavailable to those who sleep on their rights and which would be particularly inappropriate given the procedural and administrative chaos it would foment in Virginia’s ongoing electoral process,” the AG’s office’s filing states.

The amended lawsuit calls for primary elections to be held on or before Sept. 13, 2022, and to hold the state House elections on Nov. 8, 2022, when the congressional midterms will be held. If the plaintiffs prevail in court and get through potential appeals, Virginia would have House of Delegates elections three years in a row.

See the story here.

Richmond City Council Hears about Ranked Choice Voting

On Monday, June 6, the Richmond City Council began discussion on a proposal to use ranked choice voting (RCV) for the 2024 City Council elections. The vote was ultimately continued until July, but an impressive slate of speakers brought information, experience, and national perspective to the conversation. The time stamps for those individuals are listed below.

Watch the full video here.

1:13:35 - RCV Paper presented by Councilor Katherine Jordan

1:17:43 - Keith Baumer, Richmond City Registrar

1:23:51 - Del. Sally Hudson, patron of HB1103 (Local RCV option bill)

1:27:53 - Whitney Quesenbery, Director, Center for Civic Design

1:35:00 - Chris Hughes, Policy Director, RCV Resource Center

1:39:15 - Amanda Lopez Askin, Clerk, Doña Ana, NM

1:45:09 - Chris Piper, COO, Elections Group, and former VA Elections Commissioner

1:46:56 - Jonathan Davis, President, Richmond Crusade for Voters

1:52:34 - Del. Sally Hudson, answering questions about HB1103

1:55:23 - Tavarris Spinks, 2nd Ward Chair, Richmond City Dem. Committee

2:00:41 - Jane Newell, President, Richmond Metro Area LWV

2:02:01 - Taylor Thomas, Volunteer Lead, FairVote Virginia

2:04:23 - Councilor Andreas Addison, Richmond’s 1st District

Virginia author files new lawsuit seeking 2022 House elections

Multiple construction zones surround the Virginia State Capitol in Richmond, Va, June 3, 2022. A new tunnel will connect the Capitol with the new General Assembly building. (Parker Michels-Boyce for the Virginia Mercury)

By Graham Moomaw
The Virginia Mercury
June 8, 2022

Jeff Thomas, an author of two books on Virginia government and politics, has filed a new federal lawsuit seeking new Virginia House of Delegates elections this year, an effort to pick up the redistricting-based challenge originally pursued by Democratic attorney Paul Goldman.

Earlier this week, a federal court ruled Goldman lacks standing to sue over the state’s delayed redistricting process, which forced the 2021 House elections to be run under an outdated political map. The state was supposed to have new maps in place by early 2021, but late-arriving U.S. Census data meant the redistricting process wasn’t completed until after the 2021 House elections, effectively creating a two-year extension for the old House districts and many of the incumbents who represent them.

Thomas tried to join Goldman’s lawsuit in October, but the court rejected the effort. In the opinion dismissing Goldman’s lawsuit, the court acknowledged the possibility Thomas could file his own suit in response to the dismissal.

It’s unclear if Thomas’s effort will lead to a different result, but Goldman’s case was dismissed largely on technical grounds based on the specific makeup of Goldman’s House district as it existed in 2021. Goldman’s district was underpopulated when compared to the ideal district size. But Thomas’s Richmond-area district was overpopulated, potentially giving him a stronger claim his vote was illegally diluted by the state’s failure to complete redistricting on time.

The court didn’t rule on the merits of the case brought by Goldman, but Goldman and others have expressed doubt over whether there’s enough time left for an appeal or new lawsuit to work through the legal process and still give election officials a realistic chance to conduct unscheduled Virginia House elections in November. If all legal challenges fail, the House will be up for election in 2023 on the new, properly sized districts.

In his 11-page complaint filed with the same court Wednesday, Thomas asked for speedy consideration of his case “given the time-sensitive nature” and the court’s “acute familiarity” with the issues.

“Plaintiff respectfully submits that there are no facts actually in dispute in this case… and that the facts giving rise to this case would never have come to pass if there were attorneys independently representing the people beyond the reach of politics,” Thomas wrote. “The current unconstitutional scheme benefits 100 incumbents and their political dependents.”

See the full article here.

Redistricting is done for 2022 — and it’s still terribly unfair

Greg Nash
The U.S. Capitol is seen from South Capitol Street on May 31, 2022.

By David Daley
The Hill
June 8, 2022

The redistricting maps are drawn, state and federal courts have had their say, and the playing field for the U.S. House and state legislatures nationwide is largely intact for the next decade. Both parties have claimed victory and can point to real gains. 

Democratic strategists believe much of the Republican advantage over the past decade has been erased, leaving them in a much stronger position than in 2012, and that the national map comes close to parity. Republicans, meanwhile, strengthened districts for incumbents and gained seats in rapidly diversifying states such as Texas, Florida, Georgia and Arizona, and strong-armed state courts in Ohio and Wisconsin to preserve gerrymandered advantages that have lasted 10 years.

But while Team Red and Team Blue debate which side’s lawyers and creative cartographers did a better job of potentially tilting elections their way, the biggest loser is clear: Those of us who longed for fair maps, competitive districts and meaningful elections — and who hoped this redistricting cycle might deliver them.

Not all the news is bleak. Independent commissions in Michigan and Colorado delivered as promised. State courts protected reforms demanded by voters in Virginia and New York, and unraveled an aggressive GOP gerrymander in North Carolina. Divided political control in Pennsylvania forced a fairer outcome than a decade ago, when Republicans held both the legislature and the governor’s office.

Such bright spots, however, proved rare. And while a better-balanced national map is certainly something to celebrate, a stalemate was produced by gerrymandering on steroids in nearly every state under one-party control. That, in turn, will under-represent minority voters, render Republicans in blue states and Democrats in red states all but voiceless, and drive the number of competitive seats nationwide to dreary modern lows.

Take Texas, for example, which gained two seats in Congress because of population growth. Latinos and other communities of color drove 95 percent of those gains — but actually lost political power under new maps that reduce the number of majority Latino and Black seats, while solidifying GOP incumbents. Texas had nine competitive congressional districts in 2020; it will have one in 2022. The eight that disappeared are now safely red.

In Alabama, meanwhile, where Blacks make up as much as one-third of the population but can win only one of seven congressional seats (14 percent), Black voters brought litigation under the Voting Rights Act, arguing that they had sufficient numbers to create a second majority-minority seat. A panel of three federal judges agreed, and demanded a new map — but the conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court prevented it from happening this year. 

The high court cited the “Purcell principle” and ruled that it was too close to the election to revise the map now, a curious ruling since it was still winter, and experts can create a map in days. It means that this fall’s election will be conducted on a map that has been determined to be a racial gerrymander. It also creates the likelihood that, after full arguments this fall, the court will weaken Voting Rights Act protections against racially discriminatory districting. (A federal judge in Louisiana this week found its congressional map was created the same way — packing most Black voters into one district and then diluting the rest over several other districts — yet it likely will face the same fate on appeal.)

Alabama isn’t the only state where the 2022 midterms will be held on an effectively unconstitutional map. In Ohio — where more than 70 percent of voters approved a 2015 constitutional amendment requiring fair maps that neither favor nor disfavor either party — the Republicans who dominate the state’s redistricting commission have flouted the state constitution, strong-armed a state supreme court that has declared its maps unconstitutional time and again, and even threatened the Republican chief justice with impeachment for requiring that the process work as voters demanded. 

Yet they got away with it. A federal court said that it would impose one of the maps that the state court found unconstitutional if the commission couldn’t produce another map before then. Given such a backwards incentive, the Republicans simply delayed, refused to meet and ran out the clock — ensuring themselves 12 of 15 congressional seats, or 80 percent, in a state that broke 54-46 for Donald Trump in 2020.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis ran roughshod over his state constitution as well, which forbids drawing maps that are designed to give any party political advantage. DeSantis vetoed maps approved by the legislature and demanded a map engineered to provide his Republican Party with an additional four seats and to eliminate two historic majority-minority seats. Florida’s state supreme court, itself packed with GOP justices, said this month that it would not review the maps before the 2022 election.

Democrats were no angels, either, but state courts — controlled by Democratic jurists who would not countenance this behavior — undid the worst Democratic chicanery in New York and Maryland. That leaves Illinois, Oregon and New Mexico as the most prominent Democratic gerrymanders. The Illinois and New Mexico maps wipe several competitive seats, well, off the map. 

According to the new FairVote Monopoly Politics report, only about 9 percent of districts nationwide will be competitive this fall. Republicans wiped several of those away as well, by cracking blue cities in red states, such as Indianapolis, Salt Lake City, Little Rock, Ark., Oklahoma City and Nashville, Tenn.

That a coast-to-coast, maximally gerrymandered national map is an improvement over the past decade’s signals just how unrepresentative these maps have become. Like so much else in our democracy, redistricting is broken — entrusted to partisans who abuse the process and entrench themselves in office. The courts apparently have abandoned voters, insisting that voters fix it themselves, either by ousting politicians who can’t lose or passing constitutional amendments that politicians hijack or ignore. 

Think it can’t get worse? It can — if the U.S. Supreme Court adopts an extreme theory known as the “Independent State Legislature Doctrine” during its next session. It could eliminate the ability of governors and state courts to review maps, and perhaps put an end to independent commissions, as well. We are drowning and cannot see land.

David Daley is a senior fellow at FairVote and the author of “Ratf**ked: Why Your Vote Doesn’t Count” and “Unrigged: How Americans Are Battling Back to Save Democracy.” Follow him on Twitter @davedaley3.

See the full article here.

Jonathan Davis column: Ranked-choice option builds on Virginia's voting rights momentum

In 2021, election officers worked at the Main Street Station precinct in Richmond.
ALEXA WELCH EDLUND/TIMES-DISPATCH

By Jonathan Davis
Richmond Times-Dispatch
June 2, 2022

Across the United States, some lawmakers appear to be going out of their way to make it more difficult for voters to cast ballots — especially in communities of color. Virginians don’t have to look far to find recent examples of voter suppression.

In North Carolina, voting by mail has been restricted to the point of making it nearly impossible. In Tennessee, the legislature considered a bill that would authorize county election commissions to take voters’ fingerprints under the guise of election integrity. And according to a recent study by the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research, West Virginia is one of 15 states that made absentee voting more difficult during the pandemic.

Thankfully, Virginia has been spared the worst of these recent attacks on voting rights in the wake of the “big lie” that the 2020 presidential election was rigged. Despite our well-documented Jim Crow laws of the last century, Virginia has made great strides in the past few years to expand ballot accessibility and make our democracy function to benefit all voters.

One achievement was the passage of House Bill 1103 in 2020. This legislation gave localities the option to implement a ranked-choice voting pilot program for local governing bodies like city councils or boards of supervisors.

Ranked-choice voting allows voters to list their favorite candidates in order of preference, instead of simply checking one box on a ballot. As results are counted, the lowest-ranked candidate gets eliminated, and voters who selected that candidate instead have their second-choice votes counted. In the end, majority rules because the candidate who first receives more than 50% of the first-place votes is declared the winner.

The Crusade for Voters and other ranked-choice voting proponents prefer this method because it promotes candidates who build consensus, while also giving lesser-known candidates with smaller campaign bank accounts a better opportunity for success. If the ultimate outcome is to truly reflect the will of the people, it is far less likely for voters to feel like they are choosing between the “lesser of two evils.”

HB 1103 gained wide support in the General Assembly, including from Richmond-area lawmakers like Dels. Lamont Bagby, Jeff Bourne, Dolores McQuinn and Schuyler VanValkenburg; and state Sens. Ghazala Hashmi and Jennifer McClellan.

Richmond City Councilwoman Katherine Jordan then drafted a proposal to implement ranked-choice voting for council elections beginning in 2024. The Richmond Crusade for Voters is urging other City Council members to support her paper.

This would simply be a pilot program, meaning there will be an option to go back to the old way of casting ballots if voters don’t like it. But if data from other cities is any indication, ranked-choice voting is easy to understand, popular, and a win for voters across different demographics and ethnic groups — especially in municipalities like Richmond with large minority populations.

Santa Fe, New Mexico, a city of 54% Hispanic or Latino residents, began its ranked-choice program in 2018. It has been an enormous success, with 94% of voters saying they felt satisfied using the new voting system for the first time.

In Oakland, California, ranked-choice voting has resulted in more women and candidates of color being elected to office. In a city the U.S. census lists as more than two-thirds nonwhite, data from a recent analysis of Bay Area localities showed minority candidates won 62% of elections since the new system was adopted, compared to only 38% before the program was introduced.

The highest-profile example was the 2021 elections in New York City, where 58% of residents are nonwhite. Simply put, voters not only found the ballots simple to complete (to the tune of 95%), but when all the votes were counted, New Yorkers elected the city’s second Black mayor, as well as the most diverse, first majority-female council in its history.

It’s easy to understand why ranked-choice voting is the fastest-growing nonpartisan electoral reform in America. More than 50 U.S. cities have adopted such programs. It’s straightforward to implement, popular with voters, and unquestionably beneficial to minorities and women seeking public office.

If members of Richmond City Council are serious about building on the momentum of Virginia’s recent expansion of voting rights, they will move forward with Councilwoman Jordan’s plan to implement ranked-choice voting for upcoming council elections. It is an important step forward for our democracy.

Jonathan Davis is president of the Richmond Crusade for Voters. Contact him at: crusade4voters@gmail.com

Click here to see the full article.

Congressional Primary Info - Check Your New District!

From our friends at the League of Women Voters VA…

June 21 Primary – Redistricting Requires Research

Janet Boyd, Voter Services, LWV-VA

In a few weeks, the June 21 Primary will take place for only seven races throughout Virginia. Republicans are using the state-run primary process for four Congressional Districts (2nd, 3rd, 6th, 7th) and the Democrats are using a state-run primary for one Congressional District (8th) and for races involving City Councils in Roanoke City and Manassas City. 

Redistricting line changes means that you need to plan your strategy for voting in these races. You can check Vote411.org to determine whether your registered address includes any of these races. If you plan to vote in person, you should check with the Department of Elections Citizens Portal for your correct polling place location, as many have changed because of redistricting. The registration deadline to vote in the June 21 primary passed May 31.

Are you confused because you don’t have a primary election on June 21? Each Party in Virginia can choose how they want voters to select their preferred candidates for the General Election on November 8. Here are the choices that Parties made for the remaining Congressional House races:  

In the 1st and 4th congressional districts, only one candidate from each party qualified, so no primary is needed. 

No Democratic party candidate qualified for the 9th district, but the district’s Democratic Committee has nominated a candidate who will appear alongside the Republican candidate on the November ballot in the 9th.

Only one Democratic candidate qualified in the 2rd, 3rd, 5th, 7th, 10th, and 11th congressional districts so there is no Democratic primary in those districts; these candidates will appear on the respective November ballots.

Republicans held a Firehouse Primary in the 11th congressional district on May 7; that candidate will appear on the November ballot for the Republican party.

Republicans held Conventions or Firehouse Primaries on May 21 in the 5th, 8th, and 10th congressional districts; the winners will appear on the respective November ballots.

Democrats in the 6th congressional district will hold a Convention on June 11 to select the Democratic candidate for the November ballot in that district.

Check out www.vote411.org for more election information from the LWV.

 

VPAP: Check your new districts for Congress, the House of Delegates, and the State Senate here.

BREAKING: SCOVA Approves Virginia's Electoral Maps

The Supreme Court of Virginia has unanimously approved new district maps for the House of Delegates, the State Senate, and the US House of Representatives.

On behalf of the board, staff and advocates from across Virginia’s political spectrum, OneVirginia2021 thanks the Justices of the Supreme Court of Virginia and Special Masters Bernard Grofman and Sean Trende for their work over the last several weeks, and are gratified to see the court's unanimous approval of Virginia's district maps.

 

While we are still combing through the details of the memo and final district maps, at first glance, we are pleased to see that the Special Masters went above and beyond to incorporate as many specific public comments as possible.

 

We will make a more substantive statement once additional nonpartisan analysis is completed. In the meantime, you can read the memo from the Special Masters and check out the maps for yourself.

A Message to Our Longtime Supporters

 
 

To our supporters:

As you know, the recent news coming out of the Virginia Redistricting Commission has been marred with partisanship and political gridlock. The deadline has passed to submit state legislative maps to the General Assembly for approval, which now moves the process to the Supreme Court of Virginia (SCOVA). Barring a last-minute compromise, the same will happen to Congressional maps in the coming days.

We share your disappointment that the Commission’s months of work resulted in this impasse. This is not what voters expected in their support of Amendment 1, nor is it what we, as an organization, advocated for over the past seven years. 

The formation of this Commission was intended to force entrenched partisans to come together and compromise on a final plan for fair districts. We sincerely believed it would discharge its duties, and we weren’t alone -- this plan was supported by a long list of nonpartisan advocacy groups, anti-gerrymandering experts from across the country, every major newspaper in Virginia, and over 2.7 million voters.  

The authors of Amendment 1 also knew there was a possibility that the partisan divide would be insurmountable, which is exactly why SCOVA was included as a backstop to break a potential stalemate. The alternative would have been to revert back to relying on the General Assembly to write their own rules.

Recent history indicates that courts across the country have drawn fair and representative maps in the past, and we remain confident that SCOVA will do so in this instance. OneVirginia2021 was founded on the mission of drawing fair districts for the next decade, and Virginia is still on track to achieve that goal.

As has been said several times by citizen Commissioners, sending maps to SCOVA does not indicate a failure of the new redistricting process. For us, the real failure would have been to approach redistricting in Virginia the same way we always have while hoping for a different result.

Prior to the passage of Amendment 1, most everyone agreed that Virginia’s redistricting process had been profoundly broken for generations. The status quo was unacceptable, and this was a good faith attempt to repair it. As messy and frustrating as this process has sometimes been, it is impossible to ignore the fact that Virginia has taken a huge, unprecedented step towards independent redistricting. We are proud of the progress Virginia has made in the face of significant political pushback throughout the years.

We know that many of you -- our longtime supporters -- may be feeling deflated. But looking forward, we encourage each and every one of you to remain engaged. 

We would like to invite you to an informational webinar on Thursday, October 28 at 7pm, which we are co-hosting with the League of Women Voters of Virginia, CASA, and the National Black Nonpartisan Redistricting Organization. Click here for more details. 

This redistricting process has served as a real-time learning experience for everyone involved. We look forward to continuing the conversation with reform advocates like you to discuss how Virginia can improve it in advance of the next redistricting cycle. 

Finally, we want to express our profound appreciation to you. Your hard work and financial support over the years has been astounding and we thank you from the bottom of our hearts. 

Sincerely,

Liz White, Executive Director, OneVirginia2021
Sharron Kitchen Miller, President of the Board, OneVirginia2021 Foundation

BRENNAN CENTER: 6 Tips for Making Effective Comments at a Redistricting Hearing

AP Photo/Julie Carr Smyth

AP Photo/Julie Carr Smyth

  1. Give instructions to map drawers

    “For redistricting authorities to be able to consider a given comment it must include two elements: a location and an instruction. For example, one of the most common kinds of comments is to suggest a city or neighborhood be kept together in a single district. Other examples of feasible instructions include a request to draw a group of cities together in a single district, use well-known boundaries like county lines or mountain ranges as borders between districts, or separate two cities into different districts.”

  2. Think small

    “Comments that touched upon a smaller area — on the order of a neighborhood in most cases — were substantially more likely to be adopted in final maps than comments that related to larger areas, like a suggestion to group a set of counties together in the same district.”

  3. Define your community and talk about its need for representation

    “Communities can also be defined by the people within them. For example, one person testifying before the California redistricting commission argued that the people living in “Lamorinda” deserved to be drawn into the same district due to their demographic profiles and high degree of interaction as observed through commuting patterns, little league sports, and the like. The only problem, as one commissioner pointed out, is that you cannot find Lamorinda on the map. Instead, this community is actually a combination of three separate cities in the state: Lafayette, Moraga, and Orinda. That the residents of the area even have a nickname for their community was remarkable for the commissioner at the time, and these cities ended up together in the newly drawn 11th District when the commission unveiled its congressional map for the state.”

  4. Online mapping programs can help persuade.

    “In the 2020 cycle…there are multiple platforms to easily make a map of your local community to share as part of testimony — including references to the same data that the redistricting authorities use when drawing maps — like Dave’s Redistricting AppDistrictr, and Representable, each of which allows you to identify the area including your community. Testimony to a redistricting authority may carry more weight if that information is conveyed along with a visual reference to guide the hands of the line drawers.”

  5. Be prepared for less time.

    “It may be vital to be ready to quickly summarize the main points of your comments before your allotted time expires and not use a question from a commissioner or legislature to clarify your comments. If, however, your comments run long, you can also include longer comments and supplemental materials, like a map, in an email to the commission or legislature too.”

  6. Build neighborhood coalitions

    “These hearings also provide a great opportunity for coalition-building among your neighbors to collectively advocate for a particular district configuration…However, there are dangers that the body receiving testimony from a group of neighbors will also become adept at recognizing repetitive testimony and weigh that content less than they might otherwise…Spending the time to develop authentic testimony, spoken from the heart, is much better than having a number of people deliver identical, scripted testimony.”

    “The public can and should play a role in the redistricting process. With some preparation and coordination among your neighbors, you too can be ready to step up to the podium and explain the contours of your communities to the authorities tasked with drawing new districts.”

    See the full article here.

    Click here for more information about the Virginia Redistricting Commission’s public hearings.

BOB GIBSON COLUMN: Virginia's redistricting commission shakes off a shaky start

 
Bob Gibson is a member of the Virginia Commission on Civic Education.

Bob Gibson is a member of the Virginia Commission on Civic Education.

 

THE ROANOKE TIMES 9.19.21

By Bob Gibson

Virginia’s new redistricting commission launched this year to a slow and shaky start.

However, sometimes initial misfortune can turn out to be a blessing.

Everything seemed to go wrong at first. With delayed U.S. Census numbers to pandemic pauses, the bipartisan commission appeared jinxed in an atmosphere growing ever more inhospitable to bipartisan cooperation.

But now that the commission is under time pressure to hand the General Assembly its state legislative district maps by Oct. 10, people closely watching the process detect a seriousness of purpose that could yield workable compromises.

Workable compromises that avoid the legacy of decades of gerrymandered districts could give Virginia voters more compact districts that better reflect their communities.

The Census numbers were given state officials in late summer, a delay well past deadlines that would have allowed the commission to redraw state legislative districts in time to hold this year’s elections in 100 newly created House of Delegates districts. This turned out to be not such a disaster, because it gave the commission more time to adjust to the difficult work of drawing 100 new House of Delegates districts, plus 40 state Senate districts and — by Oct. 25 — 11 new congressional districts.

The 16-member commission of eight lawmakers and eight citizens adopted rules that could allow it to reach compromises, but with no guarantees other than an appeal to the Virginia Supreme Court if the Assembly twice fails to accept the commission’s handiwork without any changes.

Two Republican members of the commission, one a legislator and the other a citizen member, resigned, but they were replaced before major votes took place.

The whole enterprise was once seen as unlikely. A bipartisan commission might never have emerged from the legislature, but popped out on the final day of the 2019 session as the General Assembly was seen as soon to switch from GOP control to Democratic majorities.

Republicans, sensing their majorities were slipping away, proposed a last-minute compromise in the form of a constitutional amendment that invited Democrats to continue to vote their minority-party convictions during 2019 and 2020 when they attained power. Enough did to eliminate the majority party’s right to gerrymander.

Virginia’s voters embraced the constitutional amendment and overwhelmingly approved it last November.

The commission’s slow start continued this summer, when partisans initially could not agree on a single outside counsel or consultant but instead appointed separate and partisan specialists to draw two sets of proposed House and Senate districts.

So far, both sets of new lines drawn for Northern Virginia appear far fairer than past gerrymanders. Observers detect a new chance to allow compromise.

Initially, the partisan line drawers decided to provide region by region proposals through the rest of the state. Instead, running out of time for the regional approach, the commission switched to consider twin sets of proposed House and Senate maps for the entire state.

After the new statewide proposed maps are unveiled Sept. 20, the commission plans nine more public hearings before the Oct. 10 deadline for turning revised compromise maps over to the General Assembly for its up-or-down vote on approval.

One difficulty not yet resolved is how much input to allow from the commission’s lawmaker members in proposing changes to maps to align their residences with a friendly district or away from a district shared with another lawmaker. If done behind closed doors, this would be old-fashioned gerrymandering.

When commission member Sen. George Barker, D-Fairfax County, suggested it in the open at an early September meeting, citizen members from his party criticized his departure from the concepts of not considering lawmakers’ addresses and building new districts instead of starting from current districts.

Chris Saxman, a former GOP delegate from Staunton, said commissioners “should not consider incumbents during their deliberations — at all. If they do, it will undermine the entire effort to rebuild trust in our institutions.”

Saxman, who directs the pro-business group Virginia Free, expressed optimism the group can succeed. “I think things will work out eventually with an eventual compromise, which was the goal all along.”

The commission has a very busy schedule, from Monday’s production of statewide proposed legislative maps to the final handover of maps for the General Assembly in 14 days and the production of 11 new congressional districts 15 days later.

Michael Rodemeyer, who chaired a Charlottesville chapter of the redistricting reform group OneVirginia2021, said the eight citizen commission members naturally needed some time to get up to speed. Whatever compromise the commission finally adopts, “we’re still going to get fairer districts with neither party able to rig the system to its own advantage,” he said.

“The more open question is how well the commission will be able to resist the pressure from both parties to protect incumbents, given that its proposal has to pass the General Assembly,” he said. “The decision to start maps from scratch, rather than tinker with existing districts, is a hopeful sign.”

Liz White, executive director of OneVirginia2021, said an uneasy start has been replaced by a better spirit of compromise the past few weeks.

And, if the commission’s handiwork is not accepted by the General Assembly, special masters hired by the Supreme Court of Virginia can be counted on to draw fairer and more compact districts than the legislature’s past ugly and self-serving gerrymanders. Lawmakers may just decide to take their bipartisan commission’s handiwork as safer for all incumbents.

After all, eight lawmakers are on the 16-member commission, but whatever compromise the commission chooses could be a better deal for all incumbents than the even less certain compromise a Supreme Court-driven process might devise.

The court would operate perhaps more strictly by the adopted rule to not consider incumbents and the rule to start drawing districts from scratch.

David Toscano, former House of Delegates minority leader until 2018, said it remains unclear whether the commission can overcome challenges. “Nonetheless, there is still a long way to go before concluding that a plan cannot be drawn and the process ends up in the Virginia Supreme Court.”

And who would be more likely to consider the interests of incumbents, a bipartisan commission with eight lawmakers or a court with none?

See the full article here.

ICYMI: VRC Meetings Week of 9.13.21

VA_Capitol.jpeg

Now that the Census data has been released and maps are being created, the redistricting schedule is going to get increasingly full and fast-paced - and OneVirginia2021 is here to help you keep up! The Virginia Redistricting Commission met in Richmond for three hours Monday and another three hours on Wednesday. Here’s a short recap of everything that happened. 

  • The Commission announced over the weekend that they had decided to change their mapping timeline - they would be spending this week finalizing criteria and honing their guidance to the mapping consultants and then we will see the first draft of statewide maps at the meeting on Monday, Sept. 20.

  • The two sets of counsel presented a memo they created together about the Voting Rights Act and its legal impact on drawing districts. There were several attempts to specify how mapping consultants should consider "coalition districts" (those that are majority non-white, but comprise two or more other racial or ethnic groups) - none of the motions passed, but the consultants are still bound to federal and state law on these issues.

  • The Commission approved the expenditure of up to $50k to incorporate data from the last five statewide primaries that included a candidate of color - this will help inform the Racially Polarized Voting analysis and ensure that the Commission is drawing fair maps for communities of color and complying with federal law.

  • The Commission also voted on a memo from both sets of counsel that clarifies how the mapping consultants should consider (1) political subdivisions, (2) political neutrality, and (3) communities of interest. After lengthy discussion, all parts of the document were unanimously agreed on by the Commission.

  • Most notable in the above decision - the mapping consultants have been explicitly instructed NOT to consider incumbent addresses or political data in their drafts. The Commission may incorporate that information later, but the starting point will be established without regard to this information.

  • We could see the first drafts of statewide maps by Friday night! They will be posted HERE first and accompanying analysis will follow HERE

  • The public can comment on every draft map presented to the Commission, including the ones we are currently living under. This will help the Commission as they make decisions about final district lines. What do you like? What needs to change?

  • You'll be able to find all of the proposed maps and links to data and reports on the NEW maps section of our website.

For a full summary of the meeting, see what our friends at the League of Women Voters of VA have written

P.S. Don’t forget - you can submit feedback to the Commission with our online form or by drawing a map of your community.

P.P.S. You can find the full Commission meeting schedule and links to agendas, materials, and viewing links on our Events page. The next meeting is Monday, Sept. 20 at 8am.